867 research outputs found
Clive Small on the real-life "Underbelly"
Over the course of his career, Clive Small, one of NSW\u27s most successful detectives, saw it all. His book, "Smack Express: How organised crime got hooked on drugs" is an insight into drug trafficking and organised crime on Australia\u27s east coast. Written with journalist Tom Gilling, it features an extraordinary range of colourful characters and situations. Take "Aunty", the female drug lord who has been successfully importing kilos of cocaine into Australia for decades. Or the bloke who thought that throwing someone into the boot of a car and driving it to South Australia wasn\u27t kidnapping, because "he never asked to get out of the boot".
Clive Small is a former Assistant Commissioner of Police in NSW, and a former ICAC chief investigator. He resigned from ICAC in 2007 to pursue a defamation case against broadcaster Alan Jones. His investigations included the death of Griffith anti-drugs campaigner Donald McKay, the assassination of Cabramatta MP John Newman and the backpacker murders of Ivan Milat.
Tom Gilling is a former journalist and author. He has written a number of novels and co-authored "The Bagman: Final Confessions of Jack Herbert", about a corrupt Queensland policeman whose evidence in the 1980s Fitzgerald Inquiry had a huge impact on Queensland
Photograph - Burrows, Geoff, Accounting and Business Law, and Clive Morton, co-author, after receiving award for their book ‘The Canecutters’
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/283960Burrows, Geoff, Accounting and Business Law, and Clive Morton, co-author, after receiving award for their book ‘The Canecutters’286830
Item: [2003.0003.00938] "Photograph - Burrows, Geoff, Accounting and Business Law, and Clive Morton, co-author, after receiving award for their book ‘The Canecutters’
Photograph - Burrows, Geoff, Accounting and Business Law, and Clive Morton, co-author, who won award for their book ‘The Canecutters’
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/283981Burrows, Geoff, Accounting and Business Law, and Clive Morton, co-author, who won award for their book ‘The Canecutters’ 27 Feb 1987286851
Item: [2003.0003.00959] "Photograph - Burrows, Geoff, Accounting and Business Law, and Clive Morton, co-author, who won award for their book ‘The Canecutters’
Review of “St. Clive:” An Eastern Orthodox Author Looks Back at C. S. Lewis
Review of C. J. S. Hayward, “St. Clive:” An Eastern Orthodox Author Looks Back at C. S. Lewis (Wheaton, Illinois: C. J. S. Hayward Publications, 2000-19). 381 pages. $49.99. ISBN 9781794669956
CLIVE STAPLES LEWIS’S FANTASTIC STORY
Rad predstavlja priču Lav, Vještica i ormar iz ciklusa Kronike iz Narnije britanskog pisca irskog podrijetla Clivea Staplesa Lewisa (1898.-1963.) s ciljem utvrđivanja osebujnosti Lewisove varijante fantastične priče. Polazi se od odabrane literature gdje se bez iznimke problematizira kršćanski podtekst, koji je Lewis uključio u sve priče narnijskoga ciklusa, te elementi više književnih vrsta pored fantastične priče, kao što su bajka, mit, priča o životinjama i romansa.The paper presents story The Lion, the Witch and the wardrobe from series Chronicles of Narnia, written by British author of the Irish origins Clive Staples Lewis (1898.-1963.) with the aim to establish the singuliarities of Lewis’s fantasy story. There are considered selected literature and sources that without exception speak about Christian subtext, which Clive Staples Lewis incorporated in all of narnian stories, as well as about the elements of various genres alongside fantasy, such as fairy tale, myth, animal stories and romance. In the story The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Clive Staples Lewis used the structure of the fantasy story, marked in the tradition of English children’s literature with Lewis Carroll’s fantasy stories Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice found there. As esteemed scholar and expert for English medieval and renaissance literature Lewis included in his story elements of romance and Christian subtext, influenced by his religious believes that he intended to pass to the young readers as a form of their reading pre-baptism
Initial teacher education and the New Zealand curriculum.
New Zealand teacher educators are faced with the challenge of how to prepare their student teachers to become beginning teachers who are able to base their teaching upon the national curriculum. To meet this challenge, designers of initial teacher education (ITE) programmes need to consider the interface between ITE curriculum and the legislated curriculum for schools. This paper looks at some of the historical influences upon the curriculum in both initial teacher education and schools by examining wider contextual influences. We point out that in ITE there has been an ongoing search for the most appropriate knowledge base for teaching, a search that is made problematic due to differing views of knowledge, teaching and learning We argue that in spite of these differences, there is benefit in an ITE curriculum that has a close relationship with the school curriculum in terms of what is learned and the teaching and learning approaches. New Zealand has a revised national curriculum for schools (Ministry of Education, 2007) that schools are expected to implement from 2010. In preparing student teachers to become beginning teachers, ITE providers are in a phase of designing learning experiences that link ITE curriculum and school curriculum. This process is problematic, for there are various internal and external pressures that lead to a crowded ITE curriculum and challenge ITE autonomy and innovation in curriculum decision-making
Response by Clive Barnett. Book review forum discussion: The Priority of Injustice: Locating Democracy in Critical Theory, by Michael Samers, Joshua Barkan, Kirsi Pauliina Kallio, Jennifer L. Fluri and Clive Barnett
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge via the DOI in this recordThis is the response by Clive Barnett within the book review forum discussion "The Priority of Injustice: Locating Democracy in Critical Theory", by Michael Samers, Joshua Barkan, Kirsi Pauliina Kallio, Jennifer L. Fluri and Clive Barnett which constitutes the whole article cited in this record. The response is on pp. 50-53 of the articl
Contested Statues:The Clive Memorial Fund, Imperial Heroes, and the Reimaginings of Indian History
This article considers the Clive Memorial Fund and the campaigns surrounding proposed statues to Robert Clive in London and Calcutta between 1907 and 1912. The author argues that this campaign was an attempt to glorify Clive's actions, focused on the battle of Plassey and its aftermath, as foundation stones for the Indian Empire. The statues were an anxious attempt to situate Britain as a natural part of Indian history, but the campaign instead provoked a developing Indian counternarrative around resistance to colonial rule, particularly from newspapers in Bengal. Although the fund garnered support in Britain, it was greeted in India with official irritation and widespread Indian opposition, highlighting the importance of considering imperial statues in their imperial frame. This reaction, demonizing Clive's treachery and praising his opponent, Siraj-ud-Daula, the nawab of Bengal, was indicative of the place of history in both Bengali nationalism and imperial self-identity. Using newspapers in Britain and Bengal and the correspondence of the Clive Memorial Committee, the author examines the competing narratives of history that emerged in the campaigns around the fund
Clive Saples Lewis on Love and Pain
U radu predstavljamo poimanje ljubavi i boli sjevernoirskog mislioca Clive Staplesa Lewisa. Prvi dio ima za cilj prikazati razne vrste ljubavi, a to su: ljubav prema onome što je niže od čovjeka, storge, philia, eros i agape. Lewis želi restaurirati ljubav u modernom dobu, slikom ljubavi kakvu ju prikazuje kršćanstvo. Bog koji je čovjeka stvorio i poziva ga u nebesko zajedništvo jest Ljubav. Drugi dio rada prikazuje Lewisovo poimanje boli. Autor promatra bol u kontekstu Božje dobrote, svemoći, pada i ljudske zloće. Bol prema Lewisu ima funkcionalnu zadaću razvlastiti čovjeka njegovog egoizmai vratiti ga Bogu. Misli završavaju optimizmom i nadom u nebesko zajedništvo svih ljudi s Bogom.This work represents the concept of love and pain by the intellectual from the Northern Ireland - Clive Staples Lewis. The first part is dedicated to different aspects of love, which are love for something that is under men, storge, philia, eros and agape. Lewis tends to restore love in modern era, by the image of love as presented in Christianity. God who created the man and invites him into the heavenly fellowship is love. The second part portrays Lewis`s understanding of pain. The author views pain in context of God`s goodness, omnipotence, fall and human evil. According to Lewis, pain has a functional task to dispossess a man of his egoism and return him to God. His thoughts end optimistically with a hope in heavenly fellowship of all men with God
Organizing information : principles and practice
Published in 1987 by Clive Bingley Publishers (London) and written by Christopher Turner, this 158 page hardback book entitled 'Organizing Information: Principles and Practice' addresses one of the prime new tasks which faces the library and information community: how to organize information for retrieval and use by many and varied customers and for many purposes. The procedures of organizing information within an information retrieval system are part of an 'information cycle' and are affected by users, non-users, information producers, the selection of information and the complex role of language in the indexing and searching process. The cycle has interrelating sub-systems and the author identifies the most important of these. Chapters on catalogues and cataloguing, the subject approach to information, selected classification schemes, alphabetical subject approaches, and computerized retrieval systems complete a book that will be a sound basic introduction to a complex operation. It will be of value to students and practitioners alike. Chapters: 1. An introduction to information units; 2. Catalogues and Cataloguing; 3. An introduction to the subject approach; 4. Some classification schemes; 5. Alphabetical subject approaches; 6. Computerized retrieval systems; 7. Management of information-retrieval systems; Bibliography; Inde
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