574 research outputs found
Photograph - Alp, Chris, with Garry Russ at conferring
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/289104Alp, Chris, with Garry Russ at conferring305805
Item: [2003.0003.06165] "Photograph - Alp, Chris, with Garry Russ at conferring
Where Have All the Bootboys Gone? Skinhead Style and Graphic Subcultures
Exhibition of Skinhead graphics, including print material and photographs from the archives of Toby Mott, Gavin Watson and Toast. Limited edition Riso catalogue published, including essays by Garry Bushell, Tom Vague, Matt Worley, Shaun Cole, Russ Bestley and Ana Raposo
Garry Neill Kennedy: Printed Matter / Imprimés 1971-2009, by Peter Trepanier [book review]
The article reviews the book "Garry Neill Kennedy: Printed Matter/Imprimés 1971-2009" by Peter Trepanier, part of the "Occasional Papers" book series.Peer reviewedreview article
The participation of women employed in traditionally male dominated occupations including plumbing: 1975–2013
Author Garry Cruickshank investigates the gender gap in New Zealand’s plumbing profession. Having established that the proportion of female plumbers is almost unchanged since 1975, Cruickshank compares this information with data gathered from other trades and exposes the widespread nature of this trend across traditionally male dominated industries. The author reflects on what could to be done to alter this situation
Crimson clover
prepared by Dr. Don Ball (Extension Agronomist/Alumni Professor, Auburn University) and Dr. Garry Lacefield (Extension Agronomist/Professor, University of Kentucky).Title from PDF front panel (viewed on February 5, 2020).Covers OCLC #1139336431, OCLC #1139347191Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Putting clovers in grass pastures
authors: Dr. Garry Lacefield, Professor Emeritus, University of Kentucky, Dr. Don Ball, Professor Emeritus, Auburn University.Title from PDF front panel (viewed on February 5, 2020).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Yet another review of marine reserves as reef fishery management tools
[Extract] The term "marine reserves" is defined in this chapter
to simply mean "no-fishing" areas in the marine environment, that is, areas permanently closed to fishing. The goal in this chapter is to review some of the major issues of marine reserves as reef fisheries management tools. Other benefits of marine reserves, including maintenance of biodiversity and ecosystem structure and enhanced tourism, have been reviewed many times elsewhere (Table 1). Marine reserves are not being advocated here as the only, or even the optimum, method of reef fisheries management. In fact, it is vital to stress
from the outset that other forms of fisheries and habitat
management should be encouraged and attempted in areas open to fishing. In addition, in many developing nations, managing fisheries on coral reefs requires that the number of fishers be reduced considerably (Munro and Williams, 1985; Russ, 1991; Munro, 1996). Without such measures as finding alternative livelihoods for fishers and reducing rates of human population growth, most attempts at managing reef fisheries will probably be futile in many developing nations.
In the past decade the topic of marine reserves as potential fisheries management tools has produced a burgeoning literature (Tables 1 and 2). There are at least two major reasons for this. First, scientists working in developing nations and/or on the management of coral reef fisheries (e.g., A. C. Alcala, J. A. Bohnsack, G. E. Davis, T. R. McClanahan, N. V. C. Polunin, and C. M. Roberts) have realized that there are probably few other viable management alternatives. In such situations it is almost socially immoral to try to impose fishing effort or catch restrictions on subsistence and artisanal fishers. You cannot tell a fisher in a developing nation ttlat they must throw a fish back into the ocean because it is too small, or that they must catch only four fish per day when they have eight family members to feed. Second, traditional fisheries management (effort, catch controls) has generally failed to prevent massive overfishing globally. The dismal state of
most of 20 stocks of cod in the North Atlantic, exploited by the highly developed nations of Canada, the United States, and Europe, are good examples of this (Myers et al., 1996). Marine reserves are now seen as an insurance policy against such management failures, something Jim Bohnsack was advocating for reef fisheries a decade ago [Plan Development Team (PDT),
1990]
Integrity in Publishing: Some Considerations for Dealing with Complaints about Author Misconduct
Complaints made to editors about an author’s unethical behaviour relating to work submitted for publication or work that has already been published must be dealt with in accordance with The Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). Despite the ramifications of breaches of ethical practice, there is little published information about how complaints relating to author misconduct are managed. This paper provides an overview of the subject and will be of interest to authors and would-be authors
Anchoring effects in the development of false childhood memories
When people receive descriptions or doctored photos of events that never happened, they often come to remember those events. But if people receive both a description and a doctored photo, does the order in which they receive the information matter? We asked people to consider a description and a doctored photograph of a childhood hot air balloon ride, and we varied which medium they saw first. People who saw a description first reported more false images and memories than people who saw a photo first, a result that fits with an anchoring account of false childhood memories
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