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2. Australia's Great Depression: How a Nation Shattered by the Great War Survived the Worst Economic Crisis It Has Ever Faced: By Joan Beaumont. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2022. Pp. 576. A$39.99 paper.
- Author
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McKeough, Michelle
- Subjects
WORLD War I ,FINANCIAL crises ,MENTAL depression ,CHILDREN'S shoes - Abstract
In her introduction, by bringing the book into the present and not allowing the modern welfare state off the hook, Beaumont prepares us to make sense of the Great Depression from a perspective based in the here and now. Beaumont's chapter twenty-six, titled "Women at Risk", further steps outside of existing Depression Era historiography, addressing a highly overlooked sector in most historical examinations of the period. Australia's Great Depression: How a Nation Shattered by the Great War Survived the Worst Economic Crisis It Has Ever Faced: By Joan Beaumont. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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3. Australia and the Pacific: A History: By Ian Hoskins. Sydney: New South, 2021. Pp. 489. A$39.99 paper.
- Author
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Steel, Frances
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN history ,IMAGINATION ,WORLD War II ,NAVIES - Abstract
Yet the relatively small presence of Pacific Islanders in Australia can mask the extent of Australia's presence in Pacific people's lives. The theme of Australia's national amnesia about the Pacific is present one way or another throughout the book. Not all island populations have admittedly had or have that level of access and Hoskins does not ignore the history of such barriers, including the perception of New Zealand as a "back-door". [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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4. The Charteris Oration, Australian Institute of International Affairs, Sydney 29 November 2017.
- Author
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Gyngell AO, Allan
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,LANDSCAPE changes ,PUBLIC opinion ,PROTECTIONISM - Abstract
This article explores the role of public opinion in shaping Australian foreign policy. It emphasizes the need for an informed public and discusses the changing global landscape, with the decline of globalism and the rise of nationalism and protectionism. The article highlights the challenges Australia faces in navigating this changing world and the role of the recently released foreign policy White Paper. It emphasizes the importance of engaging the Australian public, including the new generation of policymakers and the diverse society, in foreign policy discussions and decision-making. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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5. Ladz in the Hood: Features of Pasifika English in Drill Rappers from Western Sydney.
- Author
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Penney, Joshua and Szakay, Anita
- Subjects
ENGLISH language ,RAP musicians ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS ,VOWELS - Abstract
Despite well-established Pasifika communities in Australia, there has been no examination of the English spoken by members of these communities in the sociolinguistic literature. Yet, research shows that Pasifika English may exhibit key differences from local 'mainstream' varieties. In this paper, we present a case study of members of a drill rap group with Pasifika heritage to examine whether Pasifika English features are evident in their speech. We first analyze their monophthong productions and compare these to those of mainstream Australian English speakers. We also analyze their dental fricative realizations to examine whether there is evidence of th-stopping and dh-stopping, commonly described as markers of Pasifika English. Finally, we investigate whether their speech is more syllable-timed than mainstream Australian English. The results show that these speakers produce monophthongs generally consistent with mainstream Australian English vowels, despite some small differences. We also show consistent th-fronting and dh-stopping in their speech, which serves as a marker of their Pasifika heritage. We find a tendency towards more syllable-timed speech; however, this occurs to a lesser extent than has been reported for other Pasifika varieties of English. The results suggest that these speakers index their Pasifika identities by employing indicators/markers of Pasifika English that diverge from mainstream Australian English. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Smuggled: An Illegal History of Journeys to Australia: By Ruth Balint and Julie Kalman. Sydney: NewSouth Publishing, 2021. Pp. 210. A$34.99 paper.
- Author
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Silverstein, Jordana
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN history ,SMUGGLING ,BUREAUCRACY - Abstract
Indeed, by tying together stories of individuals, families, communities, countries, and international systems, Balint and Kalman sensitively show the breadth of the histories within which we all live our lives. Balint and Kalman skilfully show the different ways people understand themselves and their journeys; the way they make sense of what they have endured and achieved. Smuggled: An Illegal History of Journeys to Australia: By Ruth Balint and Julie Kalman. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Science teachers' views and uses of assessment criteria: Australian perspectives.
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Jahan, Israt and Davison, Chris
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SCIENCE teachers ,CLASSROOM activities ,HIGH school teachers ,SECONDARY school teachers ,COMPARATIVE method - Abstract
Assessment policy internationally places significant importance on the use of assessment criteria across all subject areas. However, in order to ensure effective use of criteria, it is critical for teachers to develop an in-depth understanding of them. This paper reports on a study of a range of Australian Science teachers' views and uses of criteria in practical work. Six Science teachers working in secondary schools across Sydney were interviewed, their classroom activities were observed, and the data obtained were analysed using a qualitative constant comparative method. The findings indicate that despite the emphasis on Assessment for Learning (AfL) in assessment policy in Australia, teachers generally consider criteria as a marking tool, for Assessment of Learning (AoL), rather than a learning instrument. Consequently, they use criteria exclusively as a framework for assigning grades. This paper argues that teachers need to consider the use of criteria from a learning perspective in addition to its other multipurpose functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Strategies used to detect and mitigate system-related errors over time: A qualitative study in an Australian health district.
- Author
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Kinlay, Madaline, Zheng, Wu Yi, Burke, Rosemary, Juraskova, Ilona, Ho, Lai Mun, Turton, Hannah, Trinh, Jason, and Baysari, Melissa T.
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MEDICAL informatics ,MANAGEMENT information systems ,INFORMATION resources management ,ELECTRONIC health records ,MEDICAL incident reports - Abstract
Background: Electronic medical record (EMR) systems provide timely access to clinical information and have been shown to improve medication safety. However, EMRs can also create opportunities for error, including system-related errors or errors that were unlikely or not possible with the use of paper medication charts. This study aimed to determine the detection and mitigation strategies adopted by a health district in Australia to target system-related errors and to explore stakeholder views on strategies needed to curb future system-related errors from emerging. Methods: A qualitative descriptive study design was used comprising semi-structured interviews. Data were collected from three hospitals within a health district in Sydney, Australia, between September 2020 and May 2021. Interviews were conducted with EMR users and other key stakeholders (e.g. clinical informatics team members). Participants were asked to reflect on how system-related errors changed over time, and to describe approaches taken by their organisation to detect and mitigate these errors. Thematic analysis was conducted iteratively using a general inductive approach, where codes were assigned as themes emerged from the data. Results: Interviews were conducted with 25 stakeholders. Participants reported that most system-related errors were detected by front-line clinicians. Following error detection, clinicians either reported system-related errors directly to the clinical informatics team or submitted reports to the incident information management system. System-related errors were also reported to be detected via reports run within the EMR, or during organisational processes such as incident investigations or system enhancement projects. EMR redesign was the main approach described by participants for mitigating system-related errors, however other strategies, like regular user education and minimising the use of hybrid systems, were also reported. Conclusions: Initial detection of system-related errors relies heavily on front-line clinicians, however other organisational strategies that are proactive and layered can improve the systemic detection, investigation, and management of errors. Together with EMR design changes, complementary error mitigation strategies, including targeted staff education, can support safe EMR use and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. People of the River: Lost Worlds of Early Australia: By Grace Karskens. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2020. Pp. 688. A$39.99 paper.
- Author
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Goodall, Heather
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples ,ENVIRONMENTAL history ,LANDOWNERS ,GENDER ,SURFACE hardening ,WATERSHEDS ,IMITATIVE behavior - Abstract
Much is speculative - as Karskens explains, there is too little evidence to be otherwise - but where other authors have retreated because of the fear that they would be seen to be speaking I for i Aboriginal people, Karskens has taken up the challenge. People of the River: Lost Worlds of Early Australia: By Grace Karskens. Karskens refuses to accept the assumption so widely made that Indigenous and settler cultures were incompatible and so displacement of Indigenous life was rapid and complete. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Climate Change Impacts on 'Seasonality Index' and its Potential Implications on Rainwater Savings.
- Author
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Imteaz, Monzur A. and Hossain, Iqbal
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RAINWATER ,WATER management ,WATER efficiency ,RATINGS of cities & towns - Abstract
Seasonality Index (SI) is commonly used to define rainfall variability within a year for a locality, which has got significant impact on the water resources planning and management. Both the longer periods of dry and wet conditions are reflected by SI value. As SI is calculated using historical rainfall data, a historical average value is represented for a locality. However, with the emerging impacts of climate change SI values based on historical data are likely to change. This paper presents expected changes in future SI values for the largest city of Australia (Sydney) based on projected future rainfall scenarios for the city. The paper further illustrates potential water savings through rainwater tanks under projected climate change scenarios using an earlier developed daily water balance model, eTank. For the simulations of potential water savings through rainwater tanks, projected daily rainfall data was collected from Australian government data portal for four stations within Sydney. Future potential rainwater savings efficiencies were correlated with the corresponding SI values. It is found that such correlation closely matches with an earlier developed correlation using past historical data, however the future water savings efficiency will be slightly lower than the past water savings efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Establishing an esketamine clinic in Australia: Practical recommendations and clinical guidance from an expert panel.
- Author
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Thornton, Nicollette L. R., Black, Warwick, Bognar, Adrian, Dagge, Daniel, Gitau, Teresia, Hua, Bruce, Joks, Gero, King, Jarrad, Lord, Andrew, Scott, Elizabeth M., Callander, Jelena Smit, Ting, Serena, and Liu, Dennis
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health services , *ADVERSE health care events , *MENTAL depression , *PATIENT selection , *PSYCHIATRIC nursing , *MEDICAL personnel , *MENTAL health personnel - Abstract
Background: Major depressive disorder (MDD) can have severe impacts on function and quality of life. Up to one third of patients will have an inadequate response to their first line of treatment, with subsequent lines of therapy associated with lower remission rates and higher relapse rates. Recently esketamine has become available for Australian patients, and this agent provides an additional treatment option for those with MDD who have had an inadequate response to two or more antidepressant therapies during the current moderate to severe depressive episode. This paper provides an expert panel's practical recommendations and clinical guidance for establishing esketamine clinics in Australia. Methods: An expert panel (n = 11) comprising psychiatrists, mental health care nurses, pharmacists, and individuals with experience establishing esketamine clinics was convened in Sydney. The panel developed practical recommendations and clinical guidance, which were then further refined. Results: Five key areas were identified: practical considerations for esketamine clinic set‐up, including multidisciplinary care considerations; patient selection; administering esketamine; adverse event management and long‐term follow‐up. Conclusions: Guidance presented in this paper should assist Australian clinicians to set up an esketamine clinic, and provide practical advice on the infrastructure and clinical requirements for treatment of patients with this agent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. How information asymmetries exacerbate building defects risks for purchasers of Australian residential multi-owned properties.
- Author
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Crommelin, Laura, Loosemore, Martin, Easthope, Hazel, and Randolph, Bill
- Subjects
CONSTRUCTION defects (Buildings) ,INFORMATION asymmetry ,RESIDENTIAL real estate ,KNOWLEDGE gap theory ,DUE diligence ,INFORMATION theory - Abstract
Increasing urbanization is driving rapid growth in residential multi-owned properties (RMOPs) worldwide. Concerns about the quality of these buildings are also growing in many countries. Yet research into the quality of RMOPs (particularly apartments) remains scant and under-theorized. Addressing this knowledge gap, this paper reports the results of research which employed information asymmetry theory to provide new insights into the prevalence and risks of building defects in the Australian RMOP construction market. Using data about defects in 635 RMOPs built in Sydney between 2008 and 2017 and semi-structured interviews with sixty-six experienced practitioners, the results highlight the severity of the defects crisis. The research identified two types of information asymmetries which exacerbate the risk of buying into a defective building for RMOP customers: data fragmentation and data robustness. From a policy and practical perspective, this highlights the challenges faced by consumers in undertaking 'due diligence' and the need for reforms that address these information asymmetries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Proceedings of the 2nd Implementation Science Health Conference Australia: Sydney, NSW, Australia, 23-24 March 2023.
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SCIENCE conferences ,MEDICAL personnel ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,MEDICAL sciences ,HEREDITARY nonpolyposis colorectal cancer ,SCIENTIFIC method ,BRONCHIOLITIS ,GENERAL practitioners - Abstract
1 Sydney School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney;... I Implementation Science 2023, i B 18(2): b SP a sp Mitchell Sarkies and Hossai Gul contributed equally to this paper SP b sp Andrew Baillie, Lauren Christie, Caleb Ferguson, Julie Gawthorne, Helen Goldsmith, Nicolette Hodyl, Natasha Howard, Karen Hutchinson, Marlena Klaic, Joanna Moullin, Nicole Nathan, Sanne Peters, Nicole Rankin, Ben Smith, Serene Yoong. Only one study reported facilitators to the IMPLEMENTATION of CDS systems, none reported on barriers to the implementation of CDS systems and none reported any information on successful strategies to MAINTAIN implementation of CDS systems. B Methods b A sequence of three studies were conducted via a mixed method methodology and structured by the process model Implementation Mapping (IM) to guide the development of implementation strategies. B Conclusions b Process mapping successfully identifies site-specific variation in complex clinical processes and facilitates a shared understanding of the current systems and factors that affect implementation. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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14. Community Engagement and Diverse River Values: A Case Study of Dyarubbin.
- Author
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Frost, Elise, Williams, Miriam, and McLean, Jessica
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JUSTICE ,COMMUNITIES ,GOVERNMENT liability ,STREAM restoration - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Policy & Research is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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15. Provenance of a Late Permian retroarc foreland basin along the eastern Gondwanan margin: northern Sydney Basin, eastern Australia.
- Author
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Maravelis, Angelos G., Offler, Robin, Botziolis, Chrysanthos, Pantopoulos, George, Scott, Alexandra, Landenberger, Bill, and Collins, William J.
- Subjects
METAMORPHIC rocks ,SEDIMENTATION & deposition ,ANALYTICAL geochemistry ,MUDSTONE ,URANIUM-lead dating - Abstract
The Upper Permian sedimentary successions in the northern Sydney Basin have been the subject of several stratigraphic, sedimentological and coal petrographic studies, and recently, extensive U-Pb zircon dating has been carried out on tuffs in the Newcastle Coal Measures. However, detailed petrographic and geochemical studies of these successions are lacking. These are important because a major change in tectonic setting occurred prior to the Late Permian because of the Hunter-Bowen Orogeny that caused the uplift of the Carboniferous and Devonian successions in the Tamworth Group and Tablelands Complex adjacent to the Sydney Basin. This should be reflected in the detrital makeup of the Upper Permian rocks. This study provides data that confirms major changes did take place at this time. Petrographic analysis indicates that the source area is composed of sedimentary, felsic volcanic and plutonic and low-grade metamorphic rocks. Conglomerate clast composition analysis confirms these results, revealing a source region that is composed of felsic volcanics, cherts, mudstones and sandstones. Geochemical analysis suggests that the sediments are geochemically mature and have undergone a moderate degree of weathering. The provenance data presented in this paper indicate that the southern New England Orogen is the principal source of detritus in the basin. Discrimination diagrams confirm that the source rocks derive from an arc-related, contractional setting and agree with the provenance analyses that indicate sediment deposition in a retroarc foreland basin. This study offers new insights on the provenance and tectonic setting of the Northern Sydney Basin, eastern Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. Yarning as a method for building sexual wellbeing among urban Aboriginal young people in Australia.
- Author
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Bryant, Joanne, Bolt, Reuben, Martin, Kacey, Beadman, Mitchell, Doyle, Michael, Treloar, Carla, Bell, Stephen, Murphy, Dean, Newman, Christy, Browne, Annette, Aggleton, Peter, Beetson, Karen, Brooks, Megan, Wilms, Jessica, Leece, Bronwyn, Stanbury, Linda, Botfield, Jessica, Davis, Ben, and Graham, Simon
- Subjects
- *
ABORIGINAL Australians , *YOUNG adults , *SEXUAL health , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *YARN - Abstract
This paper describes the strategies used by Aboriginal young people to build positive relationships and sexual wellbeing. It does so to counter the risk-focussed narratives present in much existing research and to showcase the resourcefulness of Aboriginal young people. We used peer-interview methods to collect qualitative data from 52 Aboriginal young people living in western Sydney, Australia. Participants reported a strong desire to stay safe and healthy in their sexual relationships and to achieve this they relied heavily on oral communication and yarning strategies. Participants viewed communication as a way to gain or give advice (about bodies, infections, pregnancy, relationships); to assess the acceptability and safety of potential partners; to negotiate consent with partners; to build positive relationships; and to get themselves out of unhealthy relationships. Participants also discussed 'self-talk' as a strategy for building sexual wellbeing, referring to narratives of self-respect and pride in culture as important in establishing Aboriginal young people's positive views of self and as deserving of respectful and safe sexual relationships. These findings suggest that future programmes and interventions based on yarning could be well-regarded, given it is a cultural form of pedagogy and a strategy Aboriginal young people already use to build positive relationships and identities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Food relief providers as care infrastructures: Sydney during the pandemic.
- Author
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Williams, Miriam J., Pilkington, Alinta, and Parker, Chloe
- Subjects
- *
FOOD relief , *STAY-at-home orders , *FOOD security , *FOOD supply , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Australia has a hidden but growing problem with household food insecurity, revealing the failure of conventional food infrastructures to support human flourishing. Disruptions to employment and livelihoods due to pandemic lockdowns have exacerbated household food insecurity, evincing the uneven geography of food access in countries globally, including Australia. Increasing demand for food relief had been observed prior to the COVID‐19 pandemic and has been met by food relief providers, which we consider as infrastructures of care addressing growing levels of hunger. This paper reveals COVID‐19's many impacts on the food relief sector across Metropolitan Sydney, New South Wales. It analyses both a questionnaire of food relief providers in 2022 and media articles, social media posts, reports, and websites. It provides much‐needed insights into the impacts of pandemic lockdowns on the demand for food, interruptions to food provisioning, changes to food supply, and alterations made to suppliers' ways of operating. Those insights show how infrastructures of care are place‐based, responsive, dynamic, and constrained by caring capacities. Such insights are increasingly important for understanding infrastructural failures, documenting the real extent of household food insecurity, and challenging dominant discourses of Australia as a food‐secure nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. ‘The Substance of Paint’: Class and Materiality in the Work of Ralph Balson.
- Author
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Cole, Georgina and Haseman, Shane
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WORKING class ,ABSTRACT painting ,MIDDLE class ,MODERNISM (Art) ,AVANT-garde (Arts) ,AESTHETICS - Abstract
Ralph Balson (1890–1964) was an English plumber and house painter who emigrated to Australia in 1913 and subsequently became a key member of Sydney’s artistic avant-garde. He is credited with having the first solo exhibition of purely abstract painting in Australia in 1941. Despite his role in developing Australian non-objective painting, Balson remained principally a house painter, working on his art practice at weekends. In 1955 he retired on a state pension and became a full-time artist. Balson’s artistic education and methods were critically shaped by his working-class background. He did not travel abroad until 1960 and was an avid auto-didact. His materials, palette, techniques and compositional strategies were likewise informed by his trade. Balson’s profession as a painterdecorator made him conspicuous within the predominantly middle-class Sydney art scene, though his painting partner Grace Crowley considered it an advantage in their pursuit of constructive painting. This paper explores the impact of Balson’s trade on his trajectory towards pure abstraction. While his art was at odds with the predominantly figurative mode of class-conscious art in Australian Modernism, we argue that it is embedded in the experience of class through its creative adaptation of labour into aesthetics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. Let there be light: Daylight saving time and road traffic collisions.
- Author
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James, Jonathan
- Subjects
DAYLIGHT saving ,TRAFFIC fatalities - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of daylight saving time (DST) on fatal road crashes in Australia. I exploit within year transitions to and from DST in a regression discontinuity in time framework. To examine the long run effect of the policy, I use trials of DST implemented in various states, and a DST extension due to the Sydney Olympics. Neither the transition to or out of DST, nor the long run effects of DST have an impact on fatalities on the road. However, there is evidence of reallocation of accidents over the day due to ambient light. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. Skills for the aspiring surgeon in Australia: A needs assessment.
- Author
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Ealing, I., Hong, J., Whereat, S., Builth-Snoad, L., Shree, V., and Laurence, J.
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NEEDS assessment ,SURGICAL education ,SURGERY ,TRAINING of surgeons ,PUBLIC hospitals ,LIKERT scale ,TEACHING hospitals - Abstract
Introduction: The increasing duration of time before the commencement of formal surgical education training (SET) in Australia has emphasised the need for pre-SET "aspiring" surgical trainees to develop greater competency in both generic and specialty-specific skills to fulfil these public hospital positions, however there is no formalised curriculum or guide. This paper investigates current inconsistencies in the training of Australian pre-SET aspiring surgical trainees and attempts to define which skills are required. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with pre-SET supervisors in general and specialty surgery fields at a large tertiary teaching hospital in Sydney, Australia, to assess expectations and competencies of pre-SET surgical trainees. A mixed-method analysis was used with inductive content analysis used for the rich interview data and quantitative analysis of 5-point Likert scale scores for the essential skills syllabus and eligibility requirements. Results: Eighteen interviews were conducted. Three major themes arose from inductive content analysis: participants perceived that pre-SET trainees met basic expectations, significant variability in skill level exists between trainees, and simulation was suggested as a potential solution to address gaps in training. Quantitative analysis of Likert scores suggests that trainee competency was inadequate (or not required) for several skills. For general surgery, trainee competency was deemed inadequate for proctoscopy, rigid sigmoidoscopy and appendicectomy. Conclusions: There is a critical need to clearly define the skills expected of pre-SET trainees and their role within the healthcare system. This study provides insights into the content of that skillset, which could be used to design relevant and useful training programs for pre-SET trainees. The value of simulation training was universally noted by participants. They believed that this could improve competency for pre-SET trainees in technical and non-technical skills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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21. Analysing the impact of COVID‐19 on urban transitions and urban‐regional dynamics in Australia*.
- Author
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Nygaard, Christian A. and Parkinson, Sharon
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,URBAN growth ,HOUSING policy ,CAPITAL cities ,HOME prices ,ECONOMIES of scale - Abstract
In this paper, we draw on insights from economic theory on urban growth, large shocks and spatial dynamics to assess COVID‐19 flow‐on effects and potential disruptive legacy in urban‐regional dynamics. Urban dynamics in Australia are assessed at national, regional and intra‐urban scales. Long‐term and short‐term urban dynamics are analysed against random growth, locational fundamentals and increasing returns theories of urban growth and adjustment. A focus in Australia and elsewhere is the potential effect of COVID‐19 on where people want to live, enabled in part by technological connectivity that releases some workers from proximity to work constraints when choosing a home. Our results suggest that urbanisation trends and adjustments to shocks differ for capital cities and noncapital cities. At the inter‐regional migration level, Australia's largest urban system, Sydney, is characterised by a cointegration relationship between outmigration and Sydney property prices relative to other housing markets. At finer spatial scales, COVID‐19 had a negative impact on house prices within Sydney and may, for some micro‐geographies and/or towns and regional centres, lead to significant change. However, typically this effect on houses (not units) began to dissipate in the period June‐November 2020, when also controlling for housing policy pre‐ and post‐COVID‐19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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22. Shaping Mental Health Reform – Key Tasks for an Incoming Government.
- Author
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Rosenberg, Sebastian and Hickie, Ian
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,MENTAL health ,MENTAL health services ,MENTAL health policy ,SERVICE industries - Abstract
Objective: To describe a recent process by which mental health service sector leaders identified key elements of strategic, systemic and structural mental health reform. These elements could guide an incoming Federal government. Method: The paper describes the process undertaken by the Sydney Mental Health Policy Forum between 2019 and 2022. This work generated principles, key domains and finally a set of actions. Results: Five immediate actions were identified that are cost neutral or require minimal investment. Five further actions requiring realignment of existing funds and/or new funds were also identified. Conclusions: The task of mental health reform in Australia is both large and overdue. Continued investment in fragmented or piecemeal programmes and services will not propel desired change. Reform must facilitate new regional control of planning, funding and responding to community mental health needs. The actions identified by the Forum set out a menu of opportunities to guide reform over the life of the next Parliament, starting now. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
23. Addressing the Health Literacy Needs and Experiences of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Populations in Australia during COVID-19: A Research Embedded Participatory Approach.
- Author
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Zachariah, Dipti, Mouwad, Dana, Muscat, Danielle Marie, Ayre, Julie, Nutbeam, Don, and McCaffery, Kirsten Jo
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CULTURAL pluralism ,MEDICAL communication ,PUBLIC health ,COVID-19 vaccines - Abstract
Communicating health information quickly and effectively with diverse populations has been essential during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, health communication practices are often top down and poorly designed to rapidly meet diverse health literacy, cultural and contextual needs of the population. This paper describes a research and practice partnership focused on health literacy, multicultural health, and community engagement to address COVID-19 in Australia. The partnership became influential in the local and state-based response to the COVID-19 Delta outbreak in Western and South Western Sydney, an area of high cultural and socioeconomic diversity. Our approach, bringing together academic researchers and frontline health staff working with multicultural populations using a model of co-design and community engagement and action via the "4 M model," has been successful. It supported the Western Sydney community to achieve some of the highest vaccination rates in the world (>90%). There is an ongoing need to engage respectfully and responsively with communities to address specific challenges that they face and tailor communications and supports accordingly for successful pandemic management. Combining co-designed empirical research with community engagement and action ensures needs are robustly identified and can be appropriately addressed to support an effective public health response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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24. A coastal reservoir for Greater Sydney water supply in Shoalhaven river - a preliminary study.
- Author
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Rong Ji, Shu-Qing Yang, Sivakumar, Muttucumaru, Enever, Keith, Bin Riaz, Muhammad Zain, and Khalil, Usman
- Subjects
WATER supply ,CLIMATE extremes ,DRINKING water ,WATER storage ,DROUGHTS ,WATER shortages - Abstract
Australia is the driest inhabited continent on earth, and most of its population is concentrated along the coastal line. In recent years, extreme climate events such as floods and droughts have occurred more frequently. Sydney, as the largest city in Australia, requires a reliable water supply. Many solutions have been conducted to secure its water supply. This paper is focused on future water supply for the Greater Sydney area. The analysis supports the concept that in runoff-rich regions like Greater Sydney, there is no water shortage but a lack of water storage. The novel technology, coastal reservoirs, can increase the storage capacity of freshwater in the sea. The average annual discharge at Shoalhaven River mouth is estimated as 1,334 gigalitres. By comparison, the average annual inflow to the Warragamba Dam, which supplies 80% of Sydney's drinking water, is 1,069 gigalitres. This paper discusses how to apply a Coastal Reservoir at the Shoalhaven River mouth to secure additional water supply for ever-growing Greater Sydney. The proposed reservoir with a capacity of 500 gigalitres could supply 1,000 gigalitres of water per year with a reliability of 90%. A preliminary design of the reservoir is demonstrated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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25. Island Design Camps—Interactive Video Projections as Extended Realities.
- Author
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Bongers, Bert
- Subjects
INTERACTIVE videos ,ART festivals ,BRITISH colonies ,BUILT environment ,STREET art ,AUDIOVISUAL materials ,AUDIOVISUAL equipment - Abstract
Over the course of seven years during ten events, the author explored real-time interactive audiovisual projections, using ad hoc and portable projections and audio systems. This was done in the specific location of Cockatoo Island in the waters of a part of Sydney Harbour, Australia. The island offers a unique combination of the remnants of a shipyard industrial precinct, other buildings, and increasingly restored natural environment. The project explored real-time audiovisual responses through projected overlays reminiscing the rich history and past events, interactively resonating with the current landscape and built environment. This included the maritime industrial history, as well as other historical layers such as convict barracks, school, and the significance of the location for Australia's original inhabitants before colonisation by the British started in 1788. But most prominently, the recent use of the island for large scale art projects (such as the Outpost street art festival in 2011, and over a decade of use as part of the Sydney Biennale of Art, and the use of the island for film sets). This was a rich source of image material collected by the author and used to extend and reflect on current realities. By using the projections, overlaying and extending the present reality with historical data in the form of sounds and video, dialogues were facilitated and a conflation of past and present explored. The main activity were the VideoWalks, where the author, using a custom built portable audiovisual projection system and a bank of audiovisual material was able to re-place sound and video of previous events in the present context, in some instances whilst delivering a performative lecture on the way. The explorations are part of the author's Traces project, exploring traces and remnants of past events and how these can inform design approaches. The project over the years also developed an element of recursion, by using footage of an earlier projection into the current, the footage of which was then used in the next event, and so on—up to five layers of extended reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. AUTOMATIC DETECTION AND DIMENSIONAL MEASUREMENT OF MINOR CONCRETE CRACKS WITH CONVOLUTIONAL NEURAL NETWORK.
- Author
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Guo, Y., Wang, Z., Shen, X., Barati, K., and Linke, J.
- Subjects
CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,CRACKING of concrete ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,SURFACE cracks ,LABOR costs ,BUDGET - Abstract
The increasing number of aging infrastructures has drawn attention among the industry as the results caused by critical infrastructure failure could be destructive. It is essential to monitor the infrastructure assets and provide timely maintenance. However, one of the crucial problems is that the budget allocated to the maintenance stage is much less than that for the designing and construction stages. The cost of labor, equipment, and vehicles are significant. Therefore, it is impossible to perform a thorough inspection by human inspectors over each asset. A more efficient method will be needed to solve this problem. This paper aims to provide an automatic approach to detecting and measuring the dimensions of minor cracks that appear on concrete structures with a noisy background. This research also investigates the relationship between image pixel size, accuracy, detection rate of cracks, and shooting distance of images. The proposed method will be able to reduce the cost and increase accuracy. A case study was performed on a concrete sewer with cracks distributed on the surface in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Factors Influencing COVID-19 Vaccine Confidence and Uptake in Australian Adults.
- Author
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Williams, Charles Travers, Saini, Bandana, Zaidi, Syed Tabish R., Kali, Christina, Moujalli, Grace, and Castelino, Ronald
- Subjects
COVID-19 vaccines ,VACCINATION status ,AUSTRALIANS ,VACCINE hesitancy ,TRUST - Abstract
In January 2021, Australia initiated a national COVID-19 vaccine rollout strategy but faced setbacks, leading to negative press and media controversy, which may have diminished vaccine confidence. This study aimed to assess the factors influencing vaccine confidence in Australian adults (≥18 years of age) following the administration of a COVID-19 vaccine. Conducted at Blacktown Hospital, Sydney, a cross-sectional survey with 1053 respondents gauged vaccine confidence and influencing factors. The results showed overall high confidence (mean score 33/40). Trusted sources included the Australian Department of Health (77.8%), NSW Health (76.7%), and general practitioners (53.7%), while social media was distrusted (5.9%). The motivations for vaccination varied: university-educated individuals prioritised personal health (X
2 = 17.81; p < 0.001), while religious and/or older respondents (≥50 years of age) emphasised community (X2 = 11.69; p < 0.001) and family protection (X2 = 17.314; p < 0.001). Multivariate logistic regression revealed use of the Australian Department of Health website as a trusted source of COVID-19 information as the strongest predictor of high confidence (>30; OR 1.43; p = 0.041), while exposure to fake news decreased confidence (OR 0.71; p = 0.025). The study underscores the importance of reliable health information sources in bolstering vaccine confidence and highlights the detrimental effects of misinformation. Promoting awareness of trustworthy health channels is crucial to combat vaccine hesitancy in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The impact of working from home on modal commuting choice response during COVID-19: Implications for two metropolitan areas in Australia.
- Author
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Hensher, David A., Balbontin, Camila, Beck, Matthew J., and Wei, Edward
- Subjects
- *
TELECOMMUTING , *METROPOLITAN areas , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *COVID-19 , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The need to recognise and account for the influence of working from home on commuting activity has never been so real as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Not only does this change the performance of the transport network, it also means that the way in which transport modellers and planners use models estimated on a typical weekday of travel and expand it up to the week and the year must be questioned and appropriately revised to adjust for the quantum of working from home. Although teleworking is not a new phenomenon, what is new is the ferocity by which it has been imposed on individuals throughout the world, and the expectation that working from home is no longer a temporary phenomenon but one that is likely to continue to some non-marginal extent given its acceptance and revealed preferences from both many employees and employ where working from home makes good sense. This paper formalises the relationship between working from home and commuting by day of the week and time of day for two large metropolitan areas in Australia, Brisbane and Sydney, using a mixed logit choice model, identifying the influences on such choices together with a mapping model between the probability of working from home and socioeconomic and other contextual influences that are commonly used in strategic transport models to predict demand for various modes by location. The findings, based on Wave 3 (approximately 6 months from the initial outbreak of the pandemic) of an ongoing data collection exercise, provide the first formal evidence for Australia in enabling transport planners to adjust their predicted modal shares and overall modal travel activity for the presence of working from home. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The relationship between participation in leisure activities and incidence of falls in residential aged care.
- Author
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Huang, Guogui, Wabe, Nasir, Raban, Magdalena Z., Silva, S. Sandun Malpriya, Seaman, Karla, Nguyen, Amy D., Meulenbroeks, Isabelle, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
- Subjects
ELDER care ,LEISURE ,RESIDENTIAL care ,ACCIDENTAL fall prevention ,PARTICIPATION ,OLDER people - Abstract
Background: Active engagement in leisure activities has positive effects on individuals' health outcomes and social functioning; however, there is limited understanding of the link between participation in leisure activities, particularly non-exercise activities, and falls in older adults. This study aimed to determine the relationship between participation in leisure activities and the incidence of falls, and the variation of this relationship by dementia status in residential aged care facilities (RACFs). Methods: A retrospective longitudinal cohort study utilising routinely collected data (January 2021-August 2022) from 25 RACFs in Sydney, Australia, was conducted. The cohort included 3,024 older permanent residents (1,493 with dementia and 1,531 without) aged ≥65 and with a stay of ≥1 week. The level of participation in leisure activities was measured using the number of leisure activities per 1,000 resident days and divided into quartiles. Outcome measures were the incidence rate of all falls and injurious falls (i.e., number of falls per 1,000 resident days). We used multilevel negative binary regression to examine the relationship between leisure participation and fall incidence. Results: For the whole sample, leisure participation was significantly inversely associated with the incidence rate of all falls and injurious falls. For example, residents in the high leisure participation group were 26% less likely to experience a fall compared to those in the low leisure participation group after controlling for confounders (incidence rate ratio = 0.74, 95% confidence interval = 0.60, 0.91). Such inverse relationship was observed in both exercise and non-exercise activities and was stronger among residents without dementia. Conclusions: Leisure participation is associated with a lower rate of falls, a key quality indicator by which RACFs are benchmarked and funded in Australia and many other countries. More recognition and attention are needed for the currently underfunded leisure activities in RACFs in future funding arrangement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Specialised residential care for older people subject to homelessness: experiences of residents and staff of a new aged care home in Australia.
- Author
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Preti, Costanza, Poulos, Christopher J, Poulos, Roslyn G, Reynolds, Najwa L, Rowlands, Allison C, Flakelar, Kyall, Raguz, Angela, Valpiani, Peter, Faux, Steven G, and O'Connor, Claire MC
- Subjects
HOMELESS persons ,ELDER care ,NURSING home patients ,RESIDENTIAL care ,FRAIL elderly ,CARE of people ,NURSING care facilities ,OLD age homes - Abstract
Background: The number of older people experiencing homelessness in Australia is rising, yet there is a lack of specialised residential care for older people subject to homelessness with high care and palliative needs. To address this significant gap, a purpose-built care home was recently opened in Sydney, Australia. Methods: This qualitative study explores the experiences of both residents and staff who were living and working in the home over the first twelve months since its opening. Residents were interviewed at baseline (n = 32) and after six months (n = 22), while staff (n = 13) were interviewed after twelve months. Interviews were analysed using a reflexive thematic analysis approach informed by grounded theory. Results: Three main themes emerged: (1) Challenges in providing care for older people subject to homelessness with high care needs; (2) Defining a residential care service that supports older people subject to homelessness with high care needs, and (3) Perception of the impact of living and working in a purpose-built care home after six months (residents) and twelve months (staff) since its opening. A key finding was that of the complex interplay between resident dependency and behaviours, referral pathways and stakeholder engagement, government funding models and requirements, staff training and wellbeing, and the need to meet operational viability. Conclusion: This study provides novel insights into how the lives of older people subject to homelessness with high care needs are affected by living in a specifically designed care home, and on some of the challenges faced and solved by staff working in the care home. A significant gap in the healthcare system remains when it comes to the effective provision of high care for older people subject to homelessness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Parent involvement in positive behaviour intervention and supports in Australia: teacher and parent/caregiver perspectives.
- Author
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Rose, Michelle, Mooney, Mary, Johnston, Christine, and Parada, Roberto H.
- Subjects
PARENT-teacher relationships ,CAREGIVERS ,CULTURAL awareness ,PARENTAL influences ,PRIMARY schools - Abstract
Positive Behaviour Intervention and Supports (PBIS) is a framework for defining, teaching, and supporting appropriate social and academic behaviour in the school setting. This framework is widely implemented across the world, including Australia. Studies evaluating the effectiveness of PBIS confirm a relationship between implementation fidelity and student outcomes. Abundant literature highlights the significance of parent involvement (PI) on children's social and academic outcomes. However, a consistently and surprisingly under researched component of PBIS is the involvement and influence of parents/caregivers. This article presents the findings of an original qualitative study using stakeholder interviews and artefact analysis to assess parent/caregiver involvement during PBIS implementation in two primary schools in South-West Sydney, Australia. These findings indicate that parent/caregiver involvement in PBIS implementation was interpreted differently by teachers and parents/caregivers and that there is potential for the development of improved methods to engage parents/caregivers more effectively in schools. Reframing parent/caregiver involvement in PBIS to address cultural sensitivities can progressively influence and stabilise this involvement to positively affect the sustainability, effectiveness and fidelity of PBIS. Limitations of the study together with recommendations for future practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Chocolate unicorns and smiling teddy biscuits: analysis of the use of child-directed marketing on the packages of Australian foods.
- Author
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Jones, Alexandra, Shahid, Maria, Morelli, Georgia, Howes, Kylie, Riesenberg, Devorah, Sievert, Katherine, Pettigrew, Simone, and Sacks, Gary
- Subjects
FOOD packaging ,COOKIES ,PACKAGING industry ,CHILD consumers ,CHILDREN'S health ,SMILING - Abstract
Objective: The use of food packaging as a vehicle for marketing to children is under investigated. Our objective was to determine the prevalence and types of child-directed promotional techniques used on food packaging in Australia. Design: Based on existing literature and regulations, we developed a framework to classify on-pack child-directed promotional techniques involving the use of characters and other elements that appeal to children. We analysed the packaging of all products in eight food categories available for sale from supermarkets in 2019 and recorded the use of child-directed promotions on pack. We assessed the number and proportion of products displaying child-directed promotional techniques overall and assessed the healthiness of products using child-directed promotions against four indicators of healthiness to provide summary data overall and for the manufacturers who most frequently employed child-targeted strategies. Setting: Data were collected from the FoodSwitch database in Sydney, Australia. Results: 901/8006 (11·3 %) products displayed one or more child-directed on-pack element. Most frequent was on foods for infants and young children (n 315), confectionery (n 283), snack foods (n 172) and dairy (n 168). Personified characters were the most commonly used element (n 512). Products using child-directed promotional techniques scored poorly on all four indicators of healthiness: mean health star rating 2·34 (out of 5); 81 % ultra-processed and 6·1 % and 4·5 % products eligible to market to children under Western Pacific and Mexican nutrient profiling schemes, respectively. Conclusions: Australian children are targeted by promotional techniques on the packaging of unhealthy food products. Stronger regulation of these techniques is warranted to protect children's health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Telehealth follow‐up consultations for melanoma patients during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Patient and clinician satisfaction.
- Author
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Al‐Rikaby, Ali, Sulaiman, Ahmad, Thompson, Jake R., Saw, Robyn P. M., Boyle, Frances, Taylor, Nicole, Carlino, Matteo S., Morton, Rachael L., Nieweg, Omgo E., Thompson, John F., and Bartula, Iris
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,PATIENT satisfaction ,TELEMEDICINE ,MELANOMA - Abstract
Introduction: The COVID‐19 pandemic caused rapid implementation of telehealth for melanoma follow‐up care in Australia. This study explores Australian melanoma patients and clinicians' level of satisfaction with telehealth. Methods: A cross‐sectional study was conducted across three specialist melanoma centres in Sydney, Australia. Melanoma patients (all stages) and clinicians completed mixed methods surveys seeking socio‐demographic and clinical information and questionnaires to assess satisfaction with telehealth. Additionally, patients completed measures of quality of life, fear of cancer recurrence and trust in their oncologist. Patients and clinicians provided open‐ended responses to qualitative questions about their perceptions of telehealth. Results: One hundred and fifteen patients and 13 clinicians responded to surveys. Telephone was used by 109 (95%) patients and 11 (85%) clinicians. Fifty‐seven (50%) patients and nine (69%) clinicians preferred face‐to‐face consultations, 38 (33%) patients and 3 (23%) clinicians preferred a combination of face‐to‐face and telehealth consultations. Five (4%) patients and nil clinicians preferred telehealth consultations. Patients diagnosed with early‐stage melanoma, using telehealth for the first time, who have lower trust in their oncologist, and having higher care delivery, communication and supportive care concerns were likely to report lower satisfaction with telehealth. Open‐ended responses were consistent between patients and clinicians, who reported safety, convenience and improved access to care as major benefits, while identifying personal, interpersonal, clinical and system‐related disadvantages. Discussion: While telehealth has been widely implemented during COVID‐19, the benefits identified by patients and clinicians may extend past the pandemic. Telehealth may be considered for use in conjunction with face‐to‐face consultations to provide melanoma follow‐up care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Rule-based Design Analysis and Structural Rationalization Study of Ralph Symonds Laminated Timber Arches.
- Author
-
Muslimin, Rizal
- Subjects
STRUCTURAL design ,TIMBER ,LOGIC design ,LAMINATED materials ,MILITARY supplies - Abstract
As the demand for steel increased to supply military construction during World War II, Australian engineers began to push timber capacity for long-span structures, one of which led to the emerging use of glue-laminated timber-bending in the post-war period. This article analyses the laminated timber arches of three Ralph Symonds factories in Sydney, the ground-breaking laminated timber projects in Australia between the 1940s and 1960s. The study interprets the design reasoning behind timber-arch application and the structural reasoning behind timber bending using daylight simulation, structural simulation, and rule-based design analysis. The method used to formulate the rules is outlined and demonstrated. The study clarifies that Symonds's timber-arch designs evolved not only to accommodate space for medium to large-scale manufacturing activities but also to optimize economic, climatic, and structural constraints. The rule-based analysis reveals a consistent design logic applied across different factories, foregrounding Ralph Symonds's signature design language in laminated-timber arches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The inheritance and repetition of colonial practices of dispossession.
- Author
-
Chatterjee, Pratichi
- Subjects
COLONIES ,INNER cities ,INDIGENOUS children ,CENTRAL economic planning ,DECEPTION ,URBAN renewal - Abstract
State processes of land dispossession rely on multiple modes of power such as domination, legitimisation, pacification, and deceit to achieve their aims. This article analyses how governments in Australia have drawn on these varied forms to redevelop inner city areas in Sydney which are important to Indigenous communities. It analyses three redevelopment practices that targeted the suburbs of Redfern and Waterloo between 2005 and 2019. First, domineering planning structures used to marginalise Indigenous housing in Redfern. Second, racist tropes that have worked to legitimise this authoritarian approach and the resulting dispossession. Third, community consultations, that attempted to placate residents impacted by redevelopment, with culturally inclusive participation, but that maintained a deceitful silence on the question of colonisation. The article shows how authoritarian state planning, racialised legitimisation, and colonial pacification and deceit wielded in Redfern and Waterloo, are directly inherited from and/or reproduce historic colonial nation and city building agendas. On this basis, the article claims that settler colonialism can be understood as a self-perpetuating process, where practices of dispossession, developed at a given time, can set precedent for and be reworked into later programmes of land dispossession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Wind-reworked fluvial deposits as an archaeological environment: the Agnes Banks Sand of the Quaternary Hawkesbury–Nepean sequence of southeast Australia.
- Author
-
Gale, S.J. and Wales, N.A.
- Subjects
ALLUVIUM ,SAND dunes ,SAND ,EOLIAN processes ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL discoveries ,FLUVIAL geomorphology - Abstract
The deposits of Sydney's rivers are thought to have experienced widespread aeolian modification during the Quaternary. The resultant sediments form archaeologically important landscapes upon which are found several of the oldest archaeological sites in the Sydney district. Unfortunately, little is known of the processes and products of aeolian reworking. The context of the archaeological discoveries is therefore enigmatic. This study focusses on the Agnes Banks Sand, a Cenozoic sand body that may represent the only sedimentary unit in the Sydney area that preserves reliable evidence of the action of aeolian processes on fluvial sediments. Our work confirms that the sands are indistinguishable from inland dune deposits worldwide, with the deposits reworked from alluvial sediments within and adjacent to the channel of the nearby Nepean River. The sands form east–west-aligned linear dunes, whilst the sediment body fines to the east, a pattern consistent with entrainment by westerly winds. Three other aeolian depositional bodies have been identified alongside the Hawkesbury–Nepean River. Together, these form an assemblage of source-bordering dunes that lies downwind of the river across the northern part of the Cumberland Basin. Deposition here began in Marine Isotope Stages 3–2 and continued into Marine Isotope Stage 1, a period corresponding with a general episode of dune activation across southeast Australia. Although it is widely believed that the Agnes Banks Sand was formed sometime between the Pliocene and the Middle Pleistocene, we present evidence that its deposition post-dates 65 ka and that the deposits are contemporaneous with the other fluvio-aeolian units in the catchment. The true importance of Agnes Banks, however, is as a type locality from which it has been possible to derive sedimentological and geomorphological signatures that may be applied to appraisals of the fluvio-aeolian record within (and perhaps beyond) the Sydney area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A New Method for Postprocessing Numerical Weather Predictions Using Quantile Mapping in the Frequency Domain.
- Author
-
Jiang, Ze and Johnson, Fiona
- Subjects
NUMERICAL weather forecasting ,PRECIPITATION forecasting ,FLOOD forecasting ,WEATHER ,WAVELET transforms - Abstract
Improving lead time for forecasting floods is important to minimize property damage and ensure the safety of the public and emergency services during flood events. Numerical weather prediction (NWP) models are important components of flood forecasting systems and have been vital in extending forecasting lead time under complex weather and terrain conditions. However, NWP forecasts still have significant uncertainty associated with the precipitation fields that are the main inputs of the hydrologic models and thus the resulting flood forecasts. An issue often overlooked is the importance of correctly representing variability over a range of different temporal scales. To address this gap, here a new wavelet-based method for postprocessing NWP precipitation forecasts is proposed. First, precipitation forecasts are decomposed into the frequency domain using a wavelet transform, providing estimates of the amplitudes and phases of the time series at different frequencies. Quantile mapping is then used to correct bias in the amplitudes of each frequency. Randomized phases are used to generate an ensemble of realizations of the precipitation forecasts. The postprocessed precipitation forecasts are reconstructed by taking the inverse of adjusted time-frequency decompositions with the corrected amplitudes and randomized phases. The proposed method was used to postprocess NWP precipitation forecasts in the Sydney region of Australia. There is a significant improvement in postprocessed precipitation forecasts across multiple time scales in terms of bias and temporal and spatial correlation structures. The postprocessed precipitation fields can be used for the modeling of fully distributed hydrologic systems, improving runoff stimulation, flood depth estimation, and flood early warning. Significance Statement: A new method accounting for the timing and spatial errors of NWP precipitation forecasts is proposed, and it can improve the skill of forecasts across multiple time scales, especially at short lead times. The proposed method provides a practical and effective way to correct these errors by incorporating spatiotemporal neighborhood information through the frequency domain using sophisticated wavelet transforms. With systematic timing and spatial errors removed, precipitation forecasts will be more skillful, and hydrological modeling using the postprocessed forecasts can provide higher accuracy of streamflow estimation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Perceptions of Young Adults on the Critical Success Factors of the Build-to-Rent Housing Model in Sydney, Australia.
- Author
-
Abidoye, Rotimi Boluwatife, Ge, Janet, Ahiadu, Albert Agbeko, Adilieme, Chibuikem Michael, and Swanzy-Impraim, Samuel
- Subjects
CRITICAL success factor ,YOUNG adults ,RENTAL housing ,HOUSING ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HOME prices - Abstract
Amid Australia's surging house prices, rental housing has become the safety net for young adults experiencing housing stress. The attention of policymakers is drawn towards the build-to-rent (BTR) housing model, a growing housing option for many young Australian adults. Although BTR's integration into Australia's housing and planning landscape is unfolding, the perception of young adults is lacking in policy reforms for this growing industry. This study examines the perspectives of young adults aged 18 to 34 years on the critical success factors (CSFs) of the BTR housing provision in Australia. The responses are analysed using an explanatory factor analysis, relative importance index, and ANOVA. Our findings show a critically low awareness of BTR among young adults in Australia. Respondents, between 18 and 24 years, are most concerned with public awareness, an indication of their desire for transparency and engagement in decision making at the policy level. Young adults rank regulation and government policy interventions as the most important CSF of BTR housing. This shows that they are more concerned about the affordability of BTR houses. This study concludes that young adults' viewpoints on BTR are important in ongoing policy reforms. There is a need to ensure that this asset class is accessible and affordable to this target group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The health care and societal costs of inherited retinal diseases in Australia: a microsimulation modelling study.
- Author
-
Schofield, Deborah, Kraindler, Joshua, Tan, Owen, Shrestha, Rupendra N, West, Sarah, Hart, Natalie, Tan, Liny, Ma, Alan, Grigg, John R, and Jamieson, Robyn V
- Subjects
MEDICAL care costs ,RETINAL diseases ,GENETIC disorders ,SINGLE-payer health care ,EXTERNALITIES ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases - Abstract
Objectives: To estimate the health care and societal costs of inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) in Australia. Design, setting, participants: Microsimulation modelling study based on primary data — collected in interviews of people with IRDs who had ophthalmic or genetic consultations at the Children's Hospital at Westmead or the Save Sight Institute (both Sydney) during 1 January 2019 – 31 December 2020, and of their carers and spouses — and linked Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) and Pharmaceutical Benefits Schedule (PBS) data. Main outcome measures: Annual and lifetime costs for people with IRDs and for their carers and spouses, grouped by payer (Australian government, state governments, individuals, private health insurance) and type (health care costs; societal costs: social support, National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS), income and taxation, costs associated with caring for family members with IRDs); estimated annual national cost of IRDs. Results: Ninety‐four people (74 adults, 20 people under 18 years; 55 girls and women [59%]) and 30 carers completed study surveys (participation rate: adults, 66%; children, 66%; carers, 63%). Total estimated lifetime cost was $5.2 million per person with an IRD, of which 87% were societal and 13% health care costs. The three highest cost items were lost income for people with IRDs ($1.4 million), lost income for their carers and spouses ($1.1 million), and social spending by the Australian government (excluding NDIS expenses: $1.0 million). Annual costs were twice as high for people who were legally blind as for those with less impaired vision ($83 910 v $41 357 per person). The estimated total annual cost of IRDs in Australia was $781 million to $1.56 billion. Conclusion: As the societal costs associated with IRDs are much larger than the health care costs, both contributors should be considered when assessing the cost‐effectiveness of interventions for people with IRDs. The increasing loss of income across life reflects the impact of IRDs on employment and career opportunities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Retail Suburbanization, Modernization, and Growth in Sydney during Australia's Postwar Boom.
- Author
-
Bailey, Matthew
- Subjects
CAPITAL cities ,SUBURBANIZATION ,GENDER role ,GROCERY shopping ,PUBLIC transit ,SHOPPING centers - Abstract
This article uses Sydney as a case study to examine the process of retail decentralization during Australia's postwar boom, showing how the form and function of capital city retailing changed completely in just a couple of decades. Suburban migration, the emergence of mobile car-driving consumers, socially constructed gender roles, the ongoing importance of public transport networks, planning regimes that sought to concentrate development in designated zones, and business growth strategies that deployed retail formats developed in America all played a role in shaping the form and function of Australian retailing during the postwar boom. In the process, the retail geographies of Australia's capital cities were transformed from highly centralized distribution structures dominated by the urban core, to decentralized landscapes of retail clusters featuring modern retail forms like the supermarket and shopping center that would come to define Australian retailing for the remainder of the century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Moving Towards Inclusive Education: Secondary School Teacher Attitudes Towards Universal Design for Learning in Australia.
- Author
-
Hongyu Chen, Evans, David, and Luu, Betty
- Subjects
TEACHER attitudes ,SECONDARY school teachers ,HIGH school teachers ,INCLUSIVE education ,UNIVERSAL design ,EDUCATION of children with disabilities ,STUDENTS with disabilities ,CHILDREN with disabilities - Abstract
Achieving Sustainable Development Goal 4 is underpinned by the provision of quality inclusive education for all young persons, including persons with disabilities. The universal design for learning (UDL) framework provides the basis for establishing an inclusive pedagogical learning environment in classrooms. However, implementing such an inclusive pedagogical framework continues to be profoundly challenging across all countries, including Australia. Teacher attitude is the most important construct in efforts to create inclusive educational contexts. The aim of this study was to examine secondary school teachers' attitudes towards the UDL framework in Australia. One hundred and twenty mainstream secondary classroom teachers in Sydney completed an online survey. The mean values and standard deviations of a self-designed UDL framework were calculated to examine teacher attitudes. Correlations and multiple regressions were conducted to verify the relationship between teachers' attitudes and their background variables. The main results indicated that Australian secondary school teacher attitudes towards the UDL framework were generally positive, although they still had some practical concerns, such as having inflexible ideas about how to provide instructions. The findings provide useful insights for developing professional teacher training to promote inclusive education, where the UDL framework is a lens for interpreting inclusive education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Legal Pluralism on Dyarubbin: Country-as-Lore/Law in Western Sydney, Australia.
- Author
-
Ngurra, Darug, Dadd, Lexodious, Norman-Dadd, Corina, Narwal, Harriet, Glass, Paul, Suchet-Pearson, Sandie, O'Gorman, Emily, Houston, Donna, Graham, Marnie, Scott, Rebecca, and Lemire, Jess
- Subjects
LEGAL pluralism ,CITIES & towns ,URBANIZATION ,AUTOETHNOGRAPHY ,GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Copyright of GeoHumanities is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Artists of the Atlas: Their Role in Creating Settler-Colonial Australia's Visual Culture.
- Author
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Werskey, Gary and Wilson, Natalie
- Subjects
VISUAL culture ,WORLD War I ,AUSTRALIAN history ,ARTISTS ,NINETEENTH century - Abstract
Discussions of Australian art in the run-up to Federation have long focused on the iconic works of Melbourne's leading impressionist painters. However, it was the wood-engraved pictures of settler-colonial Australia's illustrated press, especially in Sydney, that dominated its visual culture in the second half of the 19th century. Between 1885 and 1900, the influence of Sydney's artist-illustrators reached new heights, thanks to the appearance of the Picturesque Atlas of Australasia. This extravagantly illustrated publication was widely hailed as marking "the birth of art beneath the Southern Cross". The artists of the Atlas succeeded not only in consolidating a settler-colonial iconography of Australia's history, achievements and prospects but also in disseminating it through their later work for the Sydney Mail, the London Graphic and the Bulletin. Led by Julian Ashton, they transformed Sydney into the epicentre of Australian settler art, drawing Tom Roberts and Arthur Streeton into their orbit by the 1890s. Following the illustrated press's abandonment of wood engraving, these artists continued to influence Australia's visual culture via other media up to and including the First World War. Revisiting Sydney's golden age of illustration offers a new window onto the art most Australians saw. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Schools, religion, and affect: unpacking Australian educator discomfort.
- Author
-
Memon, Nadeem, Schulz, Samantha, Kelly, Stephen, and Chown, Dylan
- Subjects
EDUCATORS ,RELIGIOUS diversity ,RELIGIONS ,COMMUNITIES ,TEACHER education ,SOCIAL cohesion ,RELIGIOUS identity ,GROUP identity - Abstract
Religious bigotry, including incidents of discrimination and violence based on religion, continues to rise across Australia. Religion is consequently considered a destabilising factor in Australia's commitment to diversity. But does Australia's religious diversity pose a threat to social cohesion or an opportunity? In Australia's public schools, despite significant curricular and pedagogical advances in the areas of equity and inclusion, it remains unclear how and to what extent educators support the diverse religious identities of learners. Informed by an affective-discursive analytic, this study unpacks a series of emotional encounters at one primary public school in Sydney that serves a community where most families self-identify with a religion. Educators were invited to discuss how their school responds to religious diversity. This article explores the discomforting affects that entangle liberal humanist commitments to freedoms and secular schooling that emerged in focus groups. The article argues that emotional responses to learners' religious diversity, particularly of fear or apprehension, speak to a broader national teacher education context in which how religious and secular beliefs and knowledges should come into conversation remains unsettled. If Australian teacher education is to prepare educators for social cohesion, how can learners' religious identities be genuinely included in curriculum and pedagogy? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. 'You Are Up Against It Down Here'. Providing Domestic and Family Violence Services in Regional Australia.
- Author
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Hanley, Natalia, MacPhail, Catherine, Simpson, Helen, and Stevenson, Sally
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,FAMILY services ,QUALITY of service ,COMMUNITIES ,RURAL geography - Abstract
Problems associated with recognising and reporting domestic and family violence (DFV) have been well established. Challenges around DFV service provision have been addressed by considering particular types of place, typically metropolitan or rural and remote areas. This article examines DFV services from the perspective of service providers in a regional area around 100 kilometres south of Sydney. In this context, DFV service providers reflected on the barriers and challenges of providing services to two target communities: challenges that were representative of nationwide service experiences but exacerbated by specific regional characteristics. Their experiences suggest that competitive, short-term and innovation-focused funding streams have contributed to a siloed service landscape that clients struggle to navigate. Greater attention to service integration would address many of these challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Case Series of Rare Fungal Keratitides: Experiences from a Quaternary Eye Hospital in Sydney, Australia.
- Author
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Xuan, Rachel, Hong, Sheng Chiong, Trinh, Tanya, Coroneo, Minas T., and Petsoglou, Constantinos
- Subjects
PARS plana ,HOSPITALS ,SYMPTOMS ,PATIENT monitoring ,ANTIFUNGAL agents ,DEBRIDEMENT ,VITREOUS body - Abstract
The present article reports on the management of six different and rare cases of fungal keratitides, two of which have never been documented in previous literature. This is a case series of six patients with rare fungal keratitides managed at a quaternary eye referral unit, Sydney Eye Hospital, Australia over a period of 7 months (May to December, 2022). The order of occurrence of fungi isolated was Scedosporium apiospermum, Lomenstospora prolificans, Cladosporium spp., Paecilomyces, Syncephalastrum racemosum and Quambalaria spp. A combination of medical and surgical interventions was employed, including topical and systemic anti-fungal therapy, with one requiring therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty and another eventuating in evisceration. Two patients were successfully treated with corneal debridement and two others required pars plana vitrectomy with anterior chamber washout. It is important to remain vigilant with monitoring patient symptoms and correlating with clinical signs to guide antifungal therapy even in the context of confirmed culture and sensitivity results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Particulate Levels Underneath Landscape Fire Smoke Plumes in the Sydney Region of Australia.
- Author
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Price, Owen F., Rahmani, Simin, and Samson, Stephanie
- Subjects
SMOKE plumes ,PRESCRIBED burning ,WILDFIRE prevention ,SMOKE ,AIR quality monitoring ,AIR quality ,WILDFIRES ,WIND speed - Abstract
Smoke pollution from landscape fires is a major health problem, but it is difficult to predict the impact of any particular fire. For example, smoke plumes can be mapped using remote sensing, but we do not know how the smoke is distributed in the air-column. Prescribed burning involves the deliberate introduction of smoke to human communities but the amount, composition, and distribution of the pollution may be different to wildfires. We examined whether mapped plumes produced high levels of particulate pollution (PM
2.5 ) at permanent air quality monitors and factors that influenced those levels. We mapped 1237 plumes, all those observed in 17 years of MODIS imagery over New South Wales, Australia, but this was only ~20% of known fires. Prescribed burn plumes tended to occur over more populated areas than wildfires. Only 18% of wildfire plumes and 4% of prescribed burn plumes passed over a monitor (n = 115). A minority of plumes caused a detectable increase in PM2.5 : prescribed burn plumes caused an air quality exceedance for 33% of observations in the daytime and 11% at night, wildfire plumes caused exceedances for 48% and 22% of observations in the day and night-time, respectively. Thus, most plumes remained aloft (did not reach the surface). Statistical modelling revealed that wind speed, temperature, and mixing height influenced whether a plume caused an exceedance, and there was a difference between prescribed and wild fires. In particular, in wind speeds below 1 kmhr−1 , exceedance was almost certain in prescribed burns. This information will be useful for planning prescribed burning, preparing warnings, and improving our ability to predict smoke impacts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Our relationships, our values, our culture - Aboriginal young men's perspectives about sex, relationships and gender stereotypes in Australia.
- Author
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Graham, Simon, Martin, Kacey, Beadman, Mitchell, Doyle, Michael, and Bolt, Reuben
- Subjects
GENDER stereotypes ,YOUNG adults ,YOUNG men ,GENDER ,SAFE sex - Abstract
Studies of Aboriginal young people have often followed a deficit approach depicting them as 'risky' and in need of help. In contrast, this study took a strengths-based approach and focussed on what Aboriginal young people value, how they stay safe and how their culture impacts their lives. 16 Aboriginal men aged 16 to 24 years were interviewed in Sydney, Australia. We examined Aboriginal young men's perspectives about relationships, sex and gender. Interviews were conducted by young Aboriginal men in 2019 and 2020. Overall, four features of positive sexual and romantic relationships were discussed: (1) love, connection and support; (2) enjoyment and fun; (3) responsibility, safety and consent; and 4) honesty, respect and trust. Additionally, three topics related to gender roles: (1) becoming a man; (2) sex as a masculine achievement; and (3) inequality and gender stereotypes. Our study suggests that Aboriginal young men are exploring sexual and romantic relationships, and although they value enjoyment and fun, they are aware of broader issues such as consent and respect. The young men acknowledged gender stereotypes faced by young women. Our results could be used by future school safe sex education programmes to better meet the needs of Aboriginal young men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The effect of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) on negotiating casual sex between gay men: disclosure, assumptions, and communication.
- Author
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Kolstee, Johann, Prestage, Garrett, Philpot, Steven, Bavinton, Benjamin, Hammoud, Mohamed, Keen, Phillip, and Holt, Martin
- Subjects
GAY men ,PROMISCUITY ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,DISCLOSURE ,MEDICAL disclosure - Abstract
Background. The disclosure of HIV status and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use can be important in the negotiation of safe sex. With the rapid uptake of PrEP in Australia, norms and expectations about discussion and disclosure may have changed. Methods. We explored the disclosure of PrEP use, HIV status and communication with sex partners by HIV-negative gay men in Sydney, Australia. We conducted semi-structured interviews from October 2017 to May 2018 and analysed data using a codebook thematic analysis approach. Results. Participants had a variety of expectations of what they should tell their partners and what they expected in return. For some participants, PrEP had negated the need for any discussion about HIV. Many participants assumed their partners would find information about their HIV status or PrEP use on their online profiles or that partners would ask, if necessary. Conclusions. Building a stronger, shared understanding among gay men that disclosure and discussion no longer automatically occur before sexual encounters may be useful. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Community values on governing urban water nature-based solutions in Sydney, Australia.
- Author
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Naserisafavi, Niloufar, Coyne, Taylor, Melo Zurita, Maria de Lourdes, Zhang, Kefeng, and Prodanovic, Veljko
- Subjects
- *
BUILT environment , *PUBLIC spaces , *MUNICIPAL water supply , *COMMUNITIES , *URBAN runoff management , *WATERSHEDS , *SOCIAL surveys - Abstract
Since the needs and expectations of communities towards their urban environments often vary, landscape management strategies can often be prone to fail in the absence of social considerations. It is therefore incumbent on policy-makers to investigate and attempt to reconcile diverse community perceptions toward the natural and built environment for more equitable governance. This is of particular interest when planning and managing nature-based solutions (NBS) for river protection. We considered this challenge in understanding human values, perceptions and behaviour in a multilayered ecosystem that includes waterways, NBS, green open spaces, and a built environment. This paper analyses perceptions and behaviour around a public urban park next to the Georges River in Sydney Australia, utilizing a proxy-based approach and a mixed-method comprising community surveys and behavioural mapping. The results showed that while users perceive the significance of the urban river environment differently, naturalistic (ecological), humanistic (recreational) and utilitarian (well-being) values are dominant. Urban river catchments are highly valued for recreational purposes, with a strong perception of potential flooding hazards. Through exploring the literature, we recognized that the dominancy of leisure-related values around urban river catchments can be generalized to similar cases worldwide. While NBS, as an urban stormwater management solution, address some user values (e.g., naturalistic) around urban river catchments, they may lack further delivery of humanistic and utilitarian values due to the poor integration with recreational and cultural spaces. It was also the case around the Georges River, where low prominence of cultural features was observed. We concluded that NBS development around Georges River and other urban river catchments should incorporate socio-cultural considerations and community values, in particular the ones related to leisure. The gaps between users' beliefs and behaviour do not greatly challenge governance, provided that the decision-makers utilise these gaps for optimising management actions. • We used mixed-method approach to show community values in urban environment. • Behavioural mapping was a complementary process in value perception analysis. • Study highlighted the importance of ecological, recreational and utilitarian values. • Existing NBS addresses naturalistic values, but lacks cultural, recreational values. • Management actions need to consider socio-cultural values and landscape integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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