3,073 research outputs found

    Marsden, Terry

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    Terry Underwood

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    Date:1948Terry Underwood arrived in the Northern Territory in 1968 and with her new husband moved to a new home at Riveren. Home consisted of a caravan, a bough shed, camp stove and a tent as the master bedroom. Together they transformed Riveren into a thriving cattle station. Over a span of 30 years she has been involved in many projects which have included: producer/director of plays, talent quests and documentaries, along with appearances on TV and radio. She is also a patron to the Australian Outback Tourism Association and Northern Territory Fashion Awards. In 2005 Underwood was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in the General Division in Queen's Birthday 2005 Honours List for "service to the community, particularly through business and in promotional and cattle industry roles". In her autobiography 'In the middle of nowhere' Underwood captures the essence of her life "Riveren has captured our bodies, hearts and spirits. It lies within the heart of Australia. How privileged we are to call it home. Riveren is where I belong. I know it would not have worked anywhere else with anyone else. In the middle of nowhere has become my everywhere." (Underwood, 1998: 276). Source: In the middle of nowhere. Terry Underwood. Moorebank, NSW : Transworld, 1998.NurseAuthorPhotographerCattle Woma

    The rural web: A synthesis

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    Conventional theories of rural development, coherent with Fordist approaches to the regulation of the economy (Marsden 1992), had been largely inspired to the principles of modernization (van der Ploeg 1995). These principle advocate a) adoption of science-based industrial techniques in the agricultural sector; b) regional specialization of rural areas on primary production, and therefore a clear-cut rural/urban divide; c) out-migration from rural areas as a way to reduce the pressure on land and on rural resources. The restructuring process of the countryside have caused a significant crisis in the interpretative ability of these theories. Following Cloke (1997), the authors suggest that rural change challenges interpretative categories of four theoretical domains: Structure/agency, Society/space, Nature/culture , Self/other

    Teacher and Author Terry Frith

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    Terry Bryant Frith, a former Manatee County teacher, works in her office. Frith, a lifelong Bradenton resident, wrote a book called "Secrets Parents Should Know About Public Schools" which was published by Simon and Schuster

    Regional Spatial Planning, Government and Governance as Recipe for Sustainable Development?

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    Regionalism implying some form of city-region or metropolitan-level planning and governance has long been promoted for multiple reasons albeit with varied success. Experiencing a resurgence in 1990s, regional coordination and cooperation has proven effective in pursuing economic development and bolstering competitiveness. Unfortunately, other voices, such as those promoting regional scale land use planning and management to cultivate more sustainable urban form and settlement patterns became comparatively crowded out. With climate change-related environmental and ecological pressures mounting, the chapter suggests it is time to frame regions as socio-ecological rather than mere socioeconomic spaces, thereby placing greater emphasis on ecosystems and ecological land management and a circular, regenerative economy. Using the city-region of Stuttgart (Germany) as exemplar, our contribution initiates an exploration into whether statutory regional planning in combination with various informal tools and a multi-level governance framework allows actors to begin to embed and implement these emerging ecological sustainability concepts.</p

    Roger McDonald, author in the caravan [picture] /

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    (PIC/3034/28); Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-an14517845-28
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