20,625 research outputs found

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 29 June 1900

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 29 June 1900. C4/C18

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 18 January 1901

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland. 18 January 1901. C4/C19

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 18 December 1900

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 18 December 1900,legal cases and federation. C4/C19

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 9 August 1900

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland dated 9 August 1900. C4/C19

    Griffith the Utopian

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    Background: By invitation, I contributed research text to the SCLQ’s public Exhibition, The Many Hats of Sir Samuel Griffith. Marking the centenary of Griffith’s passing, this eponymous Exhibition is long-running, 23.11.20-29.10.21. It questions the impact and legacy of Griffith’s legal history in seven standalone components. I authored two separate components within the Exhibition’s walk-around textual/object installation. COVID-19 has delayed the upload of the accompanying permanent online archive and the launch event by Federal Court Justice Andrew Greenwood (now 11.5.21). Contribution: This major research contribution concerns the sixth component, ‘Griffith the Utopian’. It recognises a little-recognised influence on Griffith – utopian philosophy, including Marx and George. This component underlines Griffith’s influences and attempted reforms, the contemporary political complexities and ferment, and his abiding desire for social justice and democracy. It is innovative in relating to installed pictorials – an 1885 Queensland satiric news cartoon and More’s 1516’s Utopia – and to diverse intellectual resources and reform initiatives. By foregrounding the intellectual background to Griffith’s political decisions and opinion pieces, the complexities of his political compromises are indicated. This component offers valuable educational perspectives/resources for lawyers, academics, students and the public, and offers continuing legal history interest. Significance: The Exhibition is significant for its public benefit aims and judicial-academic collaboration. This component is notable for juxtaposing Griffith’s little-promoted visionary aspects and reform influences, with his political career and pragmatic decisions. Accompanied by public lectures and Curator’s tours, the acclaim of this on-going Exhibition is attested to by its publicity, permanent online status, and continued attendance during COVID-19.No Full Tex

    Letters to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 26 Feb 1897 - 18 Jan 1901

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    Letters to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 26 Feb 1897 - 18 Jan 1901 regarding legal cases and federation. C4/C187-19

    Griffith the Dantista

    No full text
    Background By invitation, I contributed research text to the SCLQ’s public Exhibition, The Many Hats of Sir Samuel Griffith. Marking the centenary of Griffith’s passing, this eponymous Exhibition is long-running, 23.11.20-29.10.21. It questions the impact and legacy of Griffith’s legal history in seven standalone components. I authored two separate components within the Exhibition’s walk-around textual/object installation. COVID-19 has delayed the upload of the accompanying permanent online archive and the launch event by Federal Court Justice Andrew Greenwood (now 11.5.21). Contribution This major research contribution concerns the seventh component, ‘Griffith the Dantista’. It recognises Griffith’s four main translations and stresses Dante’s influence on Griffith’s remarkable life and enduring achievements – he was Dante’s first Australian translator. This component underlines Dante as a vital outlet and cultural interest for Griffith, particularly during his labours as Chief Justice of the highest courts of Queensland and Australia. It is innovative in relating to the installed rare-book objects/translations, and in stressing this literary dimension of Griffith. By contextualising Griffith’s Dantista contributions, this component offers valuable educational perspectives/resources for lawyers, academics, students and the public, and offers continuing legal history interest. Significance The Exhibition is significant for its public benefit aims and judicial-academic collaboration. This component is particularly notable given the coinciding anniversaries of Griffith’s and Dante’s deaths – Griffith’s 100th and Dante’s 700th. Queensland’s Italian Consul visited the Exhibition and adverted to Dante’s anniversary and this component’s excellence in his emailed congratulations to me. Accompanied by public lectures and Curator’s tours, the acclaim of this on-going Exhibition is attested to by its publicity, permanent online status, and continued attendance during COVID-19.No Full Tex

    Fundamental Limitations of Small Antennas

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    The physical size and material properties of antennas are major limiting factors of the antennas performance. These limitations are usually manifested through parameters such as bandwidth, quality factor and efficiency. The presented research examines these fundamental limitations with specific focus on electrically small antennas, and a new bound for antenna efficiency is developed.Thesis (PhD Doctorate)Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)Griffith School of EngineeringScience, Environment, Engineering and TechnologyFull Tex

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Profit and Proliferation: A Study of Australian and Canadian Nuclear Policy

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    This thesis will investigate how Australia and Canada developed the nuclear export and non-proliferation policies, challenging the idea that middle powers behave similarly in the nuclear realm. Australia and Canada are active participants in the nuclear fuel cycle. Whilst there are some exceptions, there is surprisingly little discussion in contemporary literature comparing Australian and Canadian nuclear policy, and the literature in this area fails to focus on their nuclear policies as a whole. Thus far, there have been cursory attempts at analysing and evaluating certain aspects of their policies, but no substantiative examination has covered the broad framework and key drivers that underpin these policies. This thesis seeks to fill a gap in the literature by providing a study of Australian and Canadian nuclear export and non-proliferation policy.Thesis (PhD Doctorate)Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)Griffith Business SchoolGriffith Business SchoolFull Tex
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