57 results
Search Results
2. Australian Consumption Expenditure and Real Income: 1900 to 2003–2004.
- Author
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HAIG, BRYAN and ANDERSSEN, JENNIFER
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CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,REAL income ,RESEARCH ,ESTIMATES ,PER capita ,ECONOMIC trends - Abstract
This paper provides new data of personal consumption expenditure at current and constant prices from 1900 to 1938–1939. The series is linked in with the official estimates, available from 1948–1949, to provide a broadly consistent series of estimates of consumers’ expenditure from Federation, based on new series of data. We comment on the differences in estimates often used to compare trends in real incomes, and attribute the differences as being mainly due to limitations of official data. We use the present results to describe the changes in the pattern of expenditure by main functional groupings, and compare the changes in real per capita expenditure in Australia with that in the UK and USA since the end of the nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Spatial Variation of Extreme Rainfall Observed From Two Century‐Long Datasets.
- Author
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Wang, H. and Xuan, Y.
- Subjects
SPATIAL variation ,CLIMATE change ,EXTREME value theory ,DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) - Abstract
This paper presents the spatial variation of area‐orientated annual maximum daily rainfall (AMDR), represented by well‐fitted generalized extreme value (GEV) distributions, over the last century in Great Britain (GB) and Australia (AU) with respect to three spatial properties: geographic locations, sizes, and shapes of the region‐of‐interest (ROI). The results show that the spatial variation of GEV location‐scale parameters is dominated by geographic locations and area sizes. In GB, there is an eastward‐decreasing banded pattern compared with a concentrically increasing pattern from the middle to coasts in AU. The parameters tend to decrease with increased area sizes in both studied regions. Although the impact of the ROI shapes is insignificant, the round‐shaped regions usually have higher‐valued parameters than the elongated ones. These findings provide a new perspective to understand the heterogeneity of extreme rainfall distribution over space driven by the complex interactions between climate, geographical features, and the practical sampling approaches. Key Points: Rainfall series are extracted and processed from more than 11,000 regions of interest over the last 100 years in Great Britain and Australia.Spatial distribution of extreme rainfall modeled qualitatively and quantitatively shows impact from location, size, and shape of regions.Methods and findings provide new perspectives for understanding the heterogeneous nature of climate variability and climatic change impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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4. In‐person interventions to reduce social isolation and loneliness: An evidence and gap map.
- Author
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Welch, Vivian, Ghogomu, Elizabeth Tanjong, Dowling, Sierra, Barbeau, Victoria I., Al‐Zubaidi, Ali A. A., Beveridge, Ella, Bondok, Mostafa, Desai, Payaam, Doyle, Rebecca, Huang, Jimmy, Hussain, Tarannum, Jearvis, Alyssa, Jahel, Fatima, Madani, Leen, Choo, Wan Yuen, Yunus, Raudah M., Tengku Mohd, Tengku A. M., Wadhwani, Arpana, Ameer, Abdulah Al, and Ibrahim, Rayan
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,MIDDLE-income countries ,CINAHL database ,LONELINESS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,SOCIAL isolation ,LOW-income countries - Abstract
Background: Social isolation and loneliness can occur in all age groups, and they are linked to increased mortality and poorer health outcomes. There is a growing body of research indicating inconsistent findings on the effectiveness of interventions aiming to alleviate social isolation and loneliness. Hence the need to facilitate the discoverability of research on these interventions. Objectives: To map available evidence on the effects of in‐person interventions aimed at mitigating social isolation and/or loneliness across all age groups and settings. Search Methods: The following databases were searched from inception up to 17 February 2022 with no language restrictions: Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, EBM Reviews—Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, APA PsycInfo via Ovid, CINAHL via EBSCO, EBSCO (all databases except CINAHL), Global Index Medicus, ProQuest (all databases), ProQuest ERIC, Web of Science, Korean Citation Index, Russian Science Citation Index, and SciELO Citation Index via Clarivate, and Elsevier Scopus. Selection Criteria: Titles, abstracts, and full texts of potentially eligible articles identified were screened independently by two reviewers for inclusion following the outlined eligibility criteria. Data Collection and Analysis: We developed and pilot tested a data extraction code set in Eppi‐Reviewer. Data was individually extracted and coded. We used the AMSTAR2 tool to assess the quality of reviews. However, the quality of the primary studies was not assessed. Main Results: A total of 513 articles (421 primary studies and 92 systematic reviews) were included in this evidence and gap map which assessed the effectiveness of in‐person interventions to reduce social isolation and loneliness. Most (68%) of the reviews were classified as critically low quality, while less than 5% were classified as high or moderate quality. Most reviews looked at interpersonal delivery and community‐based delivery interventions, especially interventions for changing cognition led by a health professional and group activities, respectively. Loneliness, wellbeing, and depression/anxiety were the most assessed outcomes. Most research was conducted in high‐income countries, concentrated in the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia, with none from low‐income countries. Major gaps were identified in societal level and community‐based delivery interventions that address policies and community structures, respectively. Less than 5% of included reviews assessed process indicators or implementation outcomes. Similar patterns of evidence and gaps were found in primary studies. All age groups were represented but more reviews and primary studies focused on older adults (≥60 years, 63%) compared to young people (≤24 years, 34%). Two thirds described how at‐risk populations were identified and even fewer assessed differences in effect across equity factors for populations experiencing inequities. Authors' Conclusions: There is growing evidence that social isolation and loneliness are public health concerns. This evidence and gap map shows the available evidence, at the time of the search, on the effectiveness of in‐person interventions at reducing social isolation and loneliness across all ages and settings. Despite a large body of research, with much of it published in more recent years, it is unevenly distributed geographically and across types of interventions and outcomes. Most of the systematic reviews are of critically low quality, indicating the need for high quality reviews. This map can guide funders and researchers to consider the areas in which the evidence is lacking and to address these gaps as future research priorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Mismatch between conservation higher education skills training and contemporary conservation needs.
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Slater, Helena, Fisher, Janet, Holmes, George, and Keane, Aidan
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HIGHER education ,COMMUNICATIVE competence ,TEACHING methods ,EDUCATIONAL objectives ,EDUCATORS ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Scholars have detailed the range of skills required for conservation and voiced concerns that training is not fit for purpose. Still, we have little understanding of what skills conservation education aims to teach. This study uses survey data and content analysis of online module descriptions to examine skills and methods teaching in conservation higher education across the United Kingdom and Australia. We found most conservation‐specific modules aimed to develop disciplinary and communication skills, but fewer than half aimed to develop interpersonal or project management skills. Social science methods training was absent from the core offering of over half of the conservation degrees reviewed. To prepare students for conservation careers and the complex problems they will encounter, the conservation education sector should further focus on building essential nonacademic skills and provide training on the breadth of methods that contribute to effective conservation science. This analysis can help educators to reflect on teaching aims and forge a curriculum that will best prepare students for contemporary conservation challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Peopled landscapes: Questions of coexistence in invasive plant management and rewilding.
- Author
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Atchison, Jennifer, Pickerill, Jenny, Arnold, Crystal, Gibbs, Leah M., Gill, Nicholas, Hubbard, Ella, Lorimer, Jamie, and Watson, Matt
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INVASIVE plants ,LANDSCAPES ,SOCIAL action ,HUMAN behavior ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,SOCIAL processes - Abstract
The concept of 'peopled landscapes' is based on the notion that it is not possible, nor socially or politically desirable, to remove people from the environment in the era of the Anthropocene. As such, it is necessary to document and develop ways to coexist and flourish.This review examines emergent scholarship about peopled landscapes and biodiversity conservation by considering invasive plant management and rewilding as social processes. While invasive plant management and rewilding are often understood as separate, thinking through social scientific research and examples from Australia and the UK, we demonstrate how both forms of human action in landscapes can be more usefully understood as social relations with nature involving social change and social action.Drawing attention to agency, practices and capacity, we show how diverse forms of human and nonhuman actions are recognised, attributed or acknowledged in biodiversity conservation in peopled landscapes.In practice, centring the idea of peopled landscapes (rather than conceiving of the environment as where the impact of people is minimised) shows how invasive plant management and rewilding can be understood as related responses to environmental problems.Flourishing and coexistence in peopled landscapes require recognition of the diverse human and nonhuman agencies that shape the politics of acceptable action, and illustrate the inseparability of environmental and social justice. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Towards Learning Standards in Economics in Australia.
- Author
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Guest, Ross
- Subjects
LEARNING ,ECONOMICS ,HIGHER education ,POSTSECONDARY education ,EDUCATIONAL quality standards ,NOMINATIONS for public office - Abstract
This paper discusses the development of learning standards in higher education economics in Australia. The motivation is twofold. The creation of Tertiary Education Quality Standards Agency in 2011, along with the revised Australian Qualifications Framework specifications published in July 2011, have given the learning standards agenda a new impetus in Australia. Work has been done overseas on learning standards in economics through the UK Benchmarking Statement and the OECD's Assessment of Higher Education Learning Outcomes study. However, a key finding from learning standards projects in Australia in other disciplines is that the Australian academic community needs to take ownership of the standards agenda as a pre-condition for general acceptance and successful implementation. Second, the development of learning standards in economics is an opportunity to drive an evidence-based process of curriculum renewal, including critical reflection on core knowledge, skills and assessment methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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8. Asymmetric Dynamics in Stock Market Volatility.
- Author
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Karunanayake, Indika and Valadkhani, Abbas
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STOCK exchanges ,MARKET volatility ,ECONOMETRICS ,MATHEMATICAL models ,GLOBALIZATION ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
This paper provides some insight into the asymmetric effects of stock market volatility transmission using weekly stock market return data (January 1992-June 2010) of four countries, namely, Australia, Singapore, the United Kingdom and the United States within a MGARCH (multivariate generalised autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity) framework. Our results indicate that negative shocks in each market play a more important role in increasing both volatility and covolatilities than positive shocks. In addition, as expected, we identified that all markets (particularly Australia and Singapore) exhibit significant positive mean and volatility spillovers from the US stock market returns, but not the other way around. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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9. The Role of Universities in the ‘Cultural Health’ of their Regions: universities' and regions' understandings of cultural engagement.
- Author
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DOYLE, LESLEY
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CULTURE ,PARTICIPATION ,CULTURAL activities ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
As Arbo and Benneworth (2007) have alerted us, higher education institutions are now expected not only to conduct education and research, but also to play an active role in the development of their economic, social and cultural surroundings. They call this the ‘regional mission’ of HEIs. This paper is concerned with cultural engagement. Research on universities’ cultural engagement in their regions and the impact of that engagement is still in its infancy, partly because there are different understandings of ‘culture’ and of what ‘engagement’ entails. In this paper, qualitative data from the reports of mixed teams of academics and regional administrators involved in a large international project designed to improve universities’ regional engagement are analysed and discussed. The on-going study — PASCAL Universities' Regional Engagement (PURE) — investigates the role of HEIs in their regions across in a variety of fields such as the economy, community development, the environment and others. This article analyses the data from the study to identify the different perspectives universities and regions have of cultural engagement. The aim here is to demonstrate the value of PURE in facilitating the development of mutual understanding both between universities through a common language and between universities and their regions in respect of mutual expectations. For example, particularly difficult to de-construct is universities’ engagement with disadvantaged communities (Doyle, 2007) but Powell's (2009) work suggests that universities might engage more broadly and effectively ‘through better knowledge sharing and co-creation with business and community partners’ to become ‘real drivers of creative change in developing socially inclusive projects’. Others have written about the educational role of universities in developing a ‘lifelong learning culture’ in their region (European Universities’ Charter on Lifelong Learning, 2008). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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10. The cost of convict transportation from Britain to Australia, 1796-1810.
- Author
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Lewis, Frank
- Subjects
FORMERLY incarcerated people ,PRISONERS ,IMPRISONMENT ,POLICY sciences - Abstract
The article deals with the costs and risks involved in the decision of the British government in 1786 to transport convicts to Australia. The British government's decision, taken in 1786, to transport convicts to Australia has been the subject of a lively debate among historians for the past 35 years. Until 1952 nearly all historians agreed that the colony in New South Wales and Norfolk Island was established for only one purpose: as a receptacle for convicts. The British authorities were averse to building new penitentiaries, and were unable to find alternative destinations for British convicts, consequently they chose Australia as a suitable place to which they should be removed. The question posed at the beginning of this paper was: "Why did Britain transport convicts to Australia"? Although it is impossible to answer definitively, in the sense that it is impossible to read the minds of policymakers, past or current, both the documentary evidence and the statistical evidence tell a remarkably similar story. According to the traditional interpretation of contemporary documents, Australia was seen as a low-cost alternative to new British prisons.
- Published
- 1988
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11. British species that are present in Australia have different traits from British species that are not present in Australia.
- Author
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Earle, Rosa A. D., Atkinson, Joe, and Moles, Angela T.
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SEED viability ,PLANT species ,FLOWER seeds ,SPECIES ,CHI-squared test ,FLOWERING of plants ,SEED yield - Abstract
Aim: Introduced species spreading to natural ecosystems is a leading cause of environmental change and a key feature of the Anthropocene. While there have been many studies of the traits of introduced and invasive species, less is known about the traits that affect a species' chances of reaching and establishing in new areas. We asked whether British species that are present in Australia have different traits to British species that are not present in Australia. Location: Great Britain and Australia. Methods: We compiled a list of all vascular plant species from Great Britain and divided them into those that are present in Australia (395 species) and those that are not present in Australia (1171 species). We compiled data for each species' seed mass, seedbank longevity, maximum plant height, flower size, flower colour and geographical extent in the British Isles. We conducted independent sample t‐tests for continuous variables and Chi‐squared tests for categorical variables to determine differences between groups. Results: We found British species present in Australia have, on average, larger geographic extents in the British Isles, longer periods of seed bank longevity (mean ~3 months as opposed to ~3 weeks), and maximum heights that are on average 36% taller than British species that are not present in Australia. However, British species present in Australia did not have significantly different flower size, flower colour or seed mass from British species that are not present in Australia. Main Conclusions: British species that are present in Australia and British species that are not present in Australia differ in several traits. These differences likely result from a combination of factors including introduction biases, environmental filters during establishment and stochasticity. Our results suggest that humans may be consciously and unconsciously selecting species for introduction. Some of the traits that are associated with an increased chance of a species being transported to/establishing in a new range also contribute to invasiveness. Thus, anthropogenic introduction biases could contribute to an increased risk of ecosystem invasion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Confidence in receiving medical care when seriously ill: a seven-country comparison of the impact of cost barriers.
- Author
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Wendt, Claus, Mischke, Monika, Pfeifer, Michaela, and Reibling, Nadine
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INSURANCE -- History ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,CONFIDENCE ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,MEDICAID ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICALLY uninsured persons ,MEDICARE ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,EMPIRICAL research ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SECONDARY analysis ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective This paper examines how negative experiences with the health-care system create a lack of confidence in receiving medical care in seven countries: Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Methods The empirical analysis is based on data from the Commonwealth Fund International Health Policy Survey 2007, with nationally representative samples of adults aged 18 and over. For the analysis of the experience of cost barriers and confidence in receiving medical care, we conducted pairwise comparisons of group percentages as well as country-wise multivariate logistic regression models. Results Individuals who have experienced cost barriers show a significantly lower level of confidence in receiving safe and quality medical care than those who have not. This effect is most pronounced in the United States, where people who have foregone necessary treatment because of costs are four times as likely to lack confidence as individuals without the experience of cost barriers (adjusted odds ratio 4.00). In New Zealand, Germany, and Canada, individuals with the experience of cost barriers are twice as likely to report low confidence compared with those without this experience (adjusted odds ratios of 1.95, 2.19 and 2.24, respectively). In the Netherlands and UK, cost barriers are only a marginal phenomenon. Conclusions The fact that the experience of financial barriers considerably lowers confidence indicates that financial incentives, such as private co-payments, have a negative effect on overall public support and therefore on the legitimacy of health-care systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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13. Lost Exceptionalism? Comparative Income and Productivity in Australia and the UK, 1861–1948*.
- Author
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BROADBERRY, STEPHEN and IRWIN, DOUGLAS A.
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INCOME ,ECONOMICS ,LABOR productivity ,INDUSTRIAL productivity - Abstract
Australia had one of the highest per capita incomes in the world in the late nineteenth century, although this exceptional position subsequently eroded over time. This paper compares national income and sectoral labour productivity in Australia and the UK between 1861 and 1948 to uncover the underlying sources of Australia's high income and the reasons for its subsequent relative decline. We find that the country's higher per capita income was due primarily to higher labour productivity, because labour force participation, although higher in Australia than in the USA, was lower than in the UK. Australia had a substantial labour productivity lead in agriculture throughout the period, due to the importance of high value-added, non-arable farming, and a smaller lead in industry before World War I. The early productivity lead in industry was largely based on the importance of mining, and disappeared as manufacturing became more important. There was little productivity difference in services. These results reaffirm the importance of Australia's successful exploitation of its natural resource endowments in explaining the country's high initial income. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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14. Reengineering the Child Support Scheme: An Australian Perspective on the British Government's Proposals.
- Author
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Parkinson, Patrick
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CHILD support ,CONTRACT proposals ,CHANGE ,REENGINEERING (Management) ,LEGAL status of children ,CHILD welfare ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
After years of problems with the Child Support Scheme in Britain, the Government has decided to attempt reform again, less than four years after a previous major change was implemented in 2003. The author evaluates these reform proposals, drawing upon his experience in leading a recent major review of child support policy in Australia. While many of the reform measures offer a sensible way forward for child support policy, Britain risks going backwards in terms of community acceptance of the child support obligation. The Government needs to consider the likely impact of its policy settings on private agreements about child support. Ways are proposed both to protect the Treasury and to promote the wellbeing of children by adopting different policy settings that ensure the resident parent has an incentive to bargain for the level of child support required by the new formula. The new formula itself is evaluated in the light of the international research on the costs of children. Ways are also suggested for developing a co-ordinated approach across government to the provision of support services for parents who do not live together. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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15. Brain Politics: Aspects of Administration in the Comparative Issue Definition of Autism-Related Policy.
- Author
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Lee Baker, Dana and Stokes, Shannon
- Subjects
SCIENCE & state ,VACCINE research ,AUTISM ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,SOCIAL sciences & state ,MERCURY - Abstract
The construction of public problems has a lasting influence on implementation in a given policy subsystem. National and sociopolitical contexts influence issue definition differently across nations. However, the degree to which nation-specific issue definition takes place has been insufficiently explored. In recent years, the growing incidence of autism has led to a quest for causal factors. One hypothesis posits that the use of mercury in vaccines may be a culprit. This paper examines the definition of the mercury and autism issue in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Insights into the comparative elements of issue definition are suggested by the case. These insights are of particular importance to administrators, as agencies are deeply involved as objects and actors in the process of issue definition and are often responsible for implementing new and redefined policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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16. Accessibility and functionality of the corporate web site: implications for sustainability reporting.
- Author
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Adams, Carol A. and Frost, Geoffrey R.
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WEB development ,SUSTAINABLE development reporting ,INTERNET publishing ,ELECTRONIC commerce ,ELECTRONIC records ,RECORDS management ,ENTERPRISE resource planning - Abstract
This paper explores the development of the corporate web site as a medium for sustainability reporting. Drawing upon survey data of corporate web sites in Australia, Germany and the United Kingdom and the experiences of six companies, it seeks to identify how issues of accessibility and functionality of the web site affect web based sustainability reporting. The study highlights the diversity of approaches to sustainability reporting on the internet and identifies a number of hurdles faced by managers responsible for sustainability reporting. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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17. Industrial structure and Australia--UK intra-industry trade.
- Author
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Menon, Jayant and Greenaway, David
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INTERNATIONAL trade ,ECONOMETRIC models ,COMMERCE - Abstract
Examines industry-specific hypotheses of the determinants of intra-industry trade in the context of Australia-Great Britain trade. Horizontal and vertical intra-industry trade (IIT) models; High incidence of IIT in technology-intensive industries; Scope for two-way exchanges of quality-differentiated products trade.
- Published
- 1999
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18. The evaluation of podiatrists, with knowledge and training in diagnostic musculoskeletal ultrasound, to describe sonographic images of diabetic foot wounds in the United Kingdom and Australia.
- Author
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Dando, Charlotte, Lane, Georgia, Bowen, Catherine, and Henshaw, Frances
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DIABETIC foot ,PODIATRISTS ,ULTRASONIC imaging ,WOUNDS & injuries ,DIAGNOSTIC ultrasonic imaging ,AEROBIC capacity - Abstract
Aims: Currently, wound management decisions are based largely on visual observations such as photographs, descriptors or measurements which can lack detail and do not always capture the sub-wound area. A previous case series suggests that there is benefit in using ultrasound imaging (USI) to evaluate diabetic foot ulcers (DFU) at point-of-care, however no guidance exists to inform its use. This scoping exercise explores the capacity of podiatrists with experience in interpreting musculoskeletal structures using USI to interpret sonographic images of DFU. Methods: Following a short briefing session, podiatrists with previous musculoskeletal (MSK) USI training were asked to review and report on previously recorded static sonographic images (n = 8) of active DFU. Content analysis was utilised to identify recurring keywords within the podiatrists' reports which were coded and assigned to categories to gain context to the data. Results: Seven podiatrists participated in the study. Four categories were constructed for the purposes of analysis: Frequency of reporting, 2) Language used in reporting, 3) Observations, 4) Clinical impression Frequently, the reported findings between podiatrists were found to be similar, especially those related to bone morphology. However greater variability was seen in the reporting of wound specific soft-tissue observations. Conclusion: This scoping exercise has shown that podiatrists can translate their existing USI skills to make rudimentary reports on clinical findings in DFU. All participants were consistently able to identify and describe characteristics associated with DFU from a single b mode static wound ultrasound image. Findings from this investigation can be used as a foundation for further work to establish accuracy and reliability to validate DFU sonography. In conjunction the development of protocols and training materials will enable the adoption of USI to assess DFU in clinical practice. This will in turn, contribute to improved patient care and establish a new paradigm for wound surveillance which is translatable to other wound types. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. The significance of the personal within disability geography.
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Worth, Nancy
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHICAL societies ,DISCRIMINATION against people with disabilities ,ABLEISM ,DISABILITIES ,GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Drawing on in-depth qualitative data, this article critically examines disability geography as a subfield where the personal is highly valued. The value and the risks inherent in this personal approach will be evaluated, including the usefulness of being an ‘insider’ and the difficulties of being reflexive and critically making use of one's positionality. The article concludes with reflections regarding how disability geography can confront its marginal status, appealing to researchers who claim no experience of disability while also supporting and encouraging those with personal experiences of disability to participate in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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20. The Gender Wage Gap in Four Countries.
- Author
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DALY, ANNE, XIN MENG, KAWAGUCHI, AKIRA, and MUMFORD, KAREN
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WAGES ,GENDER ,HUMAN capital ,LABOR costs - Abstract
In a series of studies written during the 1980s, Bob Gregory and his co-authors compared the gender wage gap in Australia with that found in other countries. They found it was not the difference in human capital endowments that explained different gender wage gaps but rather the rewards for these endowments. They concluded that country-specific factors, especially the institutional environment, were important in explaining the gender wage gap. This study updates Gregory's work by comparing the gender wage gap across four countries, Australia, France, Japan and Britain. Our results concord with those of Gregory: institutions are still important in explaining the relative size of the gender wage gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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- View/download PDF
21. Who comes when the world goes Code Blue? A novel method of exploring job advertisements for COVID‐19 in health care.
- Author
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Watts, Rory D., Bowles, Devin C., Fisher, Colleen, and Li, Ian W.
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HEALTH care industry ,COVID-19 ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,LABOR supply ,ADVERTISING ,MAPS ,NURSES ,RESEARCH funding ,WORLD Wide Web - Abstract
Aim: To explore the health workforce responses to COVID‐19. Design: Analysis of job advertisements. Methods: We collected advertisements for healthcare jobs which were caused by and in response to COVID‐19 between 4 March–17 April 2020 for the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. We collected information on the date of the advertisement, position advertised and location. We categorized job positions into three categories: frontline, coordination and decision support. Results: We found 952 job advertisements, 72% of which were from the United States. There was a lag period between reported COVID‐19‐confirmed cases and job advertisements by several weeks. Nurses were the most advertised position in every country. Frontline workers were substantially more demanded than coordination or decision‐support roles. Job advertisements are a novel data source which leverages a readily available information about how workforces respond to a pandemic. The initial phases of the response emphasise the importance of frontline workers, especially nurses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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22. Class and party in Australia: comparison with Britain and the USA.
- Author
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Kelley, Jonathan and McAllister, Ian
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL parties , *EMPLOYEES , *INCOME , *POLITICAL rights - Abstract
One of the most familiar theories about politics in Australia, as in Britain, is that the political parties are divided fundamentally on class lines. But the strength and nature of the link between class and party remains both controversial and unclear. This paper brings new evidence to bear by applying powerful multivariate techniques to national sample survey data from Australia, Britain and the USA. We distinguish three separate aspects of class: the categorical distinction between blue- and white-collar workers which informs the standard definition of class in political science; an occupational status aspect which ranks jobs on a continuum running from low to high; and conflict aspects, based on 'ownership of the means of production', on the 'exercise of authority in the workplace', and the cleavage between public and private employees. We show, first, that these quite distract aspects of class have different effects. In Australia occupational status has important effects on income and class self-image but is politically irrelevant. The much maligned blue-collar/white-collar distinction is, indeed, financially irrelevant but, none the less, has appreciable effects on class self-image and political preferences, while the conflict aspects have modest but dear effects on income, class self-image and politics. Whether or not an individual is a public employee is consistently important in all three countries. Second, the impact of class on party is relatively modest, albeit cler. Finally, these patterns are quite similar in Australia, Britain and the USA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
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23. Babies at risk on immigrant voyages to Australia in the nineteenth century.
- Author
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Shlomowitz, Ralph and McDonald, John
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CHILD death ,DEATH rate ,VOYAGES & travels ,INFANTS - Abstract
The article presents information on the results from some of the most comprehensive quantitative study yet undertaken of government-assisted immigrant voyages to Australia in the nineteenth century and examines the high death rates suffered by children during these voyages. The extraordinarily high death rate suffered by children was undoubtedly the most noteworthy demographic characteristic of these voyages. Infants, in particular, were at risk: for example, on a typical three-and-a-half month sailing voyage between 1838 and 1853 nearly one-quarter of the infants embarked or born on the voyage would have died, and between 1854 and the close of the 1880s one-seventh would have died. That infants were at greater risk of death while at sea than on land can be shown by a comparison of the two death rates. Whereas the average seaboard infant death rate on government-assisted immigrant voyages to Australia was 792 per 1,000 per annum between 1838 and 1853, and 480 per 1,000 per annum between 1854 and 1892, the infant death rate of the land-based population of Great Britain and Ireland in the nineteenth century was under 150 per 1,000 per annum, and that of the poorer classes probably not much in excess of 200 per 1,000 per annum.
- Published
- 1991
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24. Cost‐effectiveness and financial risks associated with immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy.
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Kim, Hansoo, Liew, Danny, and Goodall, Stephen
- Subjects
IMMUNE checkpoint inhibitors ,PROGRAMMED cell death 1 receptors ,FINANCIAL risk ,MEDICAL care costs ,TECHNOLOGY assessment ,MEDICAL technology - Abstract
The reimbursement of immune checkpoint inhibitors is challenging. Funding these technologies involves the careful balance between awarding innovation and ensuring affordability as increases in drug spending compete directly with other health care and social expenditure. This narrative review examines the recommendations of 2 health technology assessment agencies—the Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee and the British National Institute of Clinical Excellence—to determine the factors that contribute to the approval and rejection of immune checkpoint inhibitors as well as the use of manage entry schemes and risk management strategies to control expenditure. Reimbursement decisions from 6 immune checkpoint inhibitor drugs (ipilimumab, pembrolizumab, nivolumab, durvalumab, atezolizumab, avelumab) covering 10 different cancers were examined. The extrapolation of survival beyond the clinical trial and lack of head‐to‐head evidence are some of the main issues relating to cost effectiveness. Payers managed financial risks using different mechanisms such as risk share agreements and financial caps. This review of the reimbursement decisions and subsequent financial impact in Australia and the UK suggests budgets for immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy have been well managed so far. Through risk agreements and managed entry programmes, the example of immune checkpoint inhibitor therapies illustrates that industry and payers can effectively collaborate to ensure that innovative, but expensive, drugs can be made readily available to patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Breastfeeding and childhood obesity: A 12‐country study.
- Author
-
Ma, Jian, Qiao, Yijuan, Zhao, Pei, Li, Wei, Katzmarzyk, Peter T., Chaput, Jean‐Philippe, Fogelholm, Mikael, Kuriyan, Rebecca, Lambert, Estelle V., Maher, Carol, Maia, Jose, Matsudo, Victor, Olds, Timothy, Onywera, Vincent, Sarmiento, Olga L., Standage, Martyn, Tremblay, Mark S., Tudor‐Locke, Catrine, and Hu, Gang
- Subjects
ADIPOSE tissues ,BODY weight ,BREASTFEEDING ,BREASTFEEDING promotion ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FOOD habits ,GESTATIONAL age ,CHILDHOOD obesity ,RESEARCH funding ,SLEEP ,STATURE ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,BODY mass index ,ACCELEROMETRY ,DISEASE prevalence ,CROSS-sectional method ,SEDENTARY lifestyles ,PHYSICAL activity ,DATA analysis software ,WAIST circumference ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio ,ONE-way analysis of variance - Abstract
This study aimed to examine the association between breastfeeding and childhood obesity. A multinational cross‐sectional study of 4,740 children aged 9–11 years was conducted from 12 countries. Infant breastfeeding was recalled by parents or legal guardians. Height, weight, waist circumference, and body fat were obtained using standardized methods. The overall prevalence of obesity, central obesity, and high body fat were 12.3%, 9.9%, and 8.1%, respectively. After adjustment for maternal age at delivery, body mass index (BMI), highest maternal education, history of gestational diabetes, gestational age, and child's age, sex, birth weight, unhealthy diet pattern scores, moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity, sleeping, and sedentary time, exclusive breastfeeding was associated with lower odds of obesity (odds ratio [OR] 0.76, 95% confidence interval, CI [0.57, 1.00]) and high body fat (OR 0.60, 95% CI [0.43, 0.84]) compared with exclusive formula feeding. The multivariable‐adjusted ORs based on different breastfeeding durations (none, 1–6, 6–12, and > 12 months) were 1.00, 0.74, 0.70, and 0.60 for obesity (Ptrend =.020) and 1.00, 0.64, 047, and 0.64 for high body fat (Ptrend =.012), respectively. These associations were no longer significant after adjustment for maternal BMI. Breastfeeding may be a protective factor for obesity and high body fat in 9‐ to 11‐year‐old children from 12 countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A review of current practices to increase Chlamydia screening in the community - a consumer-centred social marketing perspective.
- Author
-
Phillipson, Lyn, Gordon, Ross, Telenta, Joanne, Magee, Chris, and Janssen, Marty
- Subjects
CHLAMYDIA infection diagnosis ,SEXUALLY transmitted disease diagnosis ,BEHAVIOR modification ,CHLAMYDIA infections ,COMMUNICATION ,DATABASES ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,MEDICAL screening ,MEDLINE ,META-analysis ,ONLINE information services ,PATIENT education ,RESEARCH funding ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Background: Chlamydia trachomatis is one of the most frequently reported sexually transmitted infections (STI) in Australia, the UK and Europe. Yet, rates of screening for STIs remain low, especially in younger adults. Objective: To assess effectiveness of Chlamydia screening interventions targeting young adults in community‐based settings, describe strategies utilized and assess them according to social marketing benchmark criteria. Search strategy: A systematic review of relevant literature between 2002 and 2012 in Medline, Web of Knowledge, PubMed, Scopus and the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health was undertaken. Results: Of 18 interventions identified, quality of evidence was low. Proportional screening rates varied, ranging from: 30.9 to 62.5% in educational settings (n = 4), 4.8 to 63% in media settings (n = 6) and from 5.7 to 44.5% in other settings (n = 7). Assessment against benchmark criteria found that interventions incorporating social marketing principles were more likely to achieve positive results, yet few did this comprehensively. Most demonstrated customer orientation and addressed barriers to presenting to a clinic for screening. Only one addressed barriers to presenting for treatment after a positive result. Promotional messages typically focused on providing facts and accessing a testing kit. Risk assessment tools appeared to promote screening among higher risk groups. Few evaluated treatment rates following positive results; therefore, impact of screening on treatment rates remains unknown. Discussion: Future interventions should consider utilizing a comprehensive social marketing approach, using formative research to increase insight and segmentation and tailoring of screening interventions. Easy community access to both screening and treatment should be prioritized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Dying with motor neurone disease, what can we learn from family caregivers?
- Author
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Ray, Robin A., Brown, Janice, and Street, Annette F.
- Subjects
CAREGIVERS ,DIGNITY ,DO-not-resuscitate orders ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MOTOR neuron diseases ,TERMINAL care ,ATTITUDES toward death ,SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Background Increasingly, people with neurodegenerative illness are cared for at home until close to death. Yet, discussing the reality of dying remains a social taboo. Objective To examine the ways, family caregivers of people living with motor neurone disease (MND) experienced the dying of their relative and to identify how health practitioners can better prepare families for end-of-life care. Design Secondary analysis was undertaken on data sets generated from two longitudinal qualitative studies employing similar data collection and analysis methods. Combining data sets increased participant numbers in a low incidence disease group. Setting and participants Primary studies were undertaken with family caregivers in England and Australia. Interview and observational data were collected mostly in home. Participants who discussed dying and death formed the sample for secondary analysis. Results Combined data revealed four major themes: planning for end of life, unexpected dying, dignity in the dying body and positive end to MND. Despite short survival predictions, discussions among family members about dying were often sporadic and linked to loss of hope. Effective planning for death assisted caregivers to manage the final degenerative processes of dying. When plans were not effectively communicated or enacted, capacity to preserve personhood was reduced. Discussion and Conclusion Returning death and dying to social discourse will raise the level of community awareness and normalize conversations about end-of-life care. Strategies for on-going, effective communication that facilitates advance care planning among patients, their families and practitioners are essential to improve dying and death for people with MND and their family caregivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Market risk exposure of merger arbitrage in Australia.
- Author
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Hall, Jason, Pinnuck, Matthew, and Thorne, Matthew
- Subjects
ARBITRAGE ,RISK exposure ,MERGERS & acquisitions ,TARGET companies ,BIDDERS - Abstract
We investigate the risk-return characteristics of merger arbitrage in the Australian market for corporate control, whereby hedge fund managers acquire companies subject to a takeover offer. On average, a strategy of buying target companies and short-selling bidders making scrip offers would have generated an annual return of 30 per cent from 1985 to 2008, excluding transaction costs, compared to the return on the broader market of 12 per cent. However, performance is not market neutral, being positively associated with market returns during downturns and inversely related to market movements during rising markets. The payoffs to this strategy are analogous to a short straddle, whereby the investor is short a call and put option at the same exercise price. These results are consistent with large-sample evidence from the United States and the United Kingdom and have not previously been documented in Australia, in which prior evidence is based only on cash deals during the 1990s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. RELIGIOUS AND SECULAR DEATH: A PARTING OF THE WAYS.
- Author
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TONTI‐FILIPPINI, NICHOLAS
- Subjects
BRAIN death ,ORGAN donation ,MEDICAL ethics ,PHILOSOPHY of medicine ,MORTALITY ,RELIGION - Abstract
ABSTRACT Most organized religions have indicated a level of support for organ donation including the diagnosis of death by the brain criterion. Organ donation is seen as a gift of love and fits within a communitarian ethos that most religions embrace. The acceptance of the determination of death by the brain criterion, where it has been explained, is reconciled with religious views of soul and body by using a notion of integration. Because the soul may be seen as that which integrates the human body, in the absence of any other signs of human functioning, loss of integration is considered to be an indication that soul and body have separated. To some extent this view would seem to be informed by an Aristotelian notion of the soul, but it fits well enough with religious notions of the person continuing after death. There have been several developments internationally that indicate that the acceptance of so-called 'brain death' by organized religions has been challenged by new developments including the acceptance of a lesser standard than loss of all brain function and a rejection by the US President's Council on Bioethics of the notion of loss of integration as an explanation of death by the brain criterion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. An Australian perspective.
- Author
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Smith, Anthony J.
- Subjects
CLINICAL pharmacology ,PHARMACOLOGISTS - Abstract
Discussing the future of UK clinical pharmacology, eight Australasian clinical pharmacologists emphasized the need to make the discipline 'indispensable' in key areas. The visibility of clinical pharmacology in Australasia has been improved by working with the Consumers' Health Forum in Australia in the construction of the national Policy on Quality Use of Medicines and, later, of the formal National Medicines Policy. Our expertise in clinical pharmacology, combined with the Health Forum's political skills, proved a potent force for launching these policies. A second example was the construction of the national prescribing curriculum in partnership with the National Prescribing Service. This is being used in all medical schools with senior students. At a local level we found that taking over clinical toxicology services (that other clinicians wanted to jettison) provided a stimulus to clinical research and later the formation of a productive subgroup to study the special problems of envenomation. Fourthly, we note that no clinical pharmacology unit in UK is designated as a WHO collaborating centre. Considerable difference can be made to national problems with medicines by clinical pharmacologists willing to work for periods within developing countries. This has given a greater profile to several groups in Australia. The principle of stepping out of conventional settings and actively seeking collaboration with other groups beyond our discipline has enhanced the profile of the discipline in Australasia and could do the same in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. International Perspectives on Emergency Department Crowding.
- Author
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Pines, Jesse M., Hilton, Joshua A., Weber, Ellen J., Alkemade, Annechien J., Al Shabanah, Hasan, Anderson, Philip D., Bernhard, Michael, Bertini, Alessio, Gries, André, Ferrandiz, Santiago, Kumar, Vijaya Arun, Harjola, Veli-Pekka, Hogan, Barbara, Madsen, Bo, Mason, Suzanne, Öhlén, Gunnar, Rainer, Timothy, Rathlev, Niels, Revue, Eric, and Richardson, Drew
- Subjects
HOSPITAL emergency services ,EVALUATION of medical care ,PUBLIC health ,PATIENTS ,CROWDS ,EMERGENCY medicine ,PRIMARY health care ,RESOURCE allocation ,WORLD health - Abstract
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2011; 18:1358-1370 © 2011 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Abstract The maturation of emergency medicine (EM) as a specialty has coincided with dramatic increases in emergency department (ED) visit rates, both in the United States and around the world. ED crowding has become a public health problem where periodic supply and demand mismatches in ED and hospital resources cause long waiting times and delays in critical treatments. ED crowding has been associated with several negative clinical outcomes, including higher complication rates and mortality. This article describes emergency care systems and the extent of crowding across 15 countries outside of the United States: Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Iran, Italy, The Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Catalonia (Spain), Sweden, and the United Kingdom. The authors are local emergency care leaders with knowledge of emergency care in their particular countries. Where available, data are provided about visit patterns in each country; however, for many of these countries, no national data are available on ED visits rates or crowding. For most of the countries included, there is both objective evidence of increases in ED visit rates and ED crowding and also subjective assessments of trends toward higher crowding in the ED. ED crowding appears to be worsening in many countries despite the presence of universal health coverage. Scandinavian countries with robust systems to manage acute care outside the ED do not report crowding is a major problem. The main cause for crowding identified by many authors is the boarding of admitted patients, similar to the United States. Many hospitals in these countries have implemented operational interventions to mitigate crowding in the ED, and some countries have imposed strict limits on ED length of stay (LOS), while others have no clear plan to mitigate crowding. An understanding of the causes and potential solutions implemented in these countries can provide a lens into how to mitigate ED crowding in the United States through health policy interventions and hospital operational changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Estimating the Wage Elasticity of Labour Supply to a Firm: What Evidence is there for Monopsony?
- Author
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BOOTH, ALISON L. and KATIC, PAMELA
- Subjects
LABOR supply ,MONOPSONIES ,WAGES - Abstract
In this article, we estimate the elasticity of the labour supply to a firm, using data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey. Estimation of this elasticity is of particular interest not only in its own right but also because of its relevance to the debate about the competitiveness of labour markets. The essence of monopsonistically competitive labour markets is that labour supply to a firm is imperfectly elastic with respect to the wage rate. The intuition is that, where workers have heterogeneous preferences or face mobility costs, firms can offer lower wages without immediately losing their workforce. This is in contrast to the perfectly competitive extreme, in which the elasticity is infinite. Therefore, a simple test of whether labour markets are perfectly or imperfectly competitive involves estimating the elasticity of the labour supply to a firm. We find that the Australian wage elasticity of labour supply to a firm is around 0.71, only slightly smaller than the figure of 0.75 reported by for the United Kingdom. These estimates are so far from the perfectly competitive assumption of an infinite elasticity that it would be difficult to make a case that labour markets are perfectly competitive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A Comparison of Private Schooling in the United Kingdom and Australia.
- Author
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Ryan, Chris and Sibieta, Luke
- Subjects
PRIVATE schools ,PRIVATE education ,BRITISH education system ,PRIVATE school costs - Abstract
The article focuses on the comparison nature of private schooling in Australia and Great Britain. It mentions that only a small portion of pupils are attending private schools or independent schools in Great Britain, in which the Independent Schools Council (ISC) reported a total of 6.5 percent or 628,000 pupils schooling in the 2600 independent schools in the country. It explores factors which affects the engagement of pupils in private schools in Australia such as fees and school quality.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. What Determines Private School Choice? A Comparison between the United Kingdom and Australia.
- Author
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Dearden, Lorraine, Ryan, Chris, and Sibieta, Luke
- Subjects
PRIVATE schools ,SCHOOL privatization ,SCHOOL attendance ,SCHOOL children ,PUBLIC schools - Abstract
The article presents the authors' insights on the comparison of private school choice in Australia and Great Britain. They say that private school attendance in Great Britain has remained at an almost constant six to seven percent of school children population while in Australia, it has increased to almost one third of school children in 2011. They cite the study of F. Green and colleagues which show education and earnings difference between private and public schools in Great Britain.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Comparison of adult oral health in Australia, the USA, Germany and the UK.
- Author
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Crocombe, L. A., Mejia, G. C., Koster, C. R., and Slade, G. D.
- Subjects
DENTAL surveys ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research - Abstract
Background: Australian adults reportedly have poor oral health when compared to 28 other OECD countries. The Australian ranking was based on edentulism and caries experience data from selected age groups that apparently were collected in 1987–88. The objective of this study was to compare the oral health of Australian adults with that of three other western countries that have comprehensive oral health survey data. Methods: Published data were obtained from the NHANES 2003–2004, the Fourth German Oral Health Study 2005 and the UK Adult Dental Health Survey 1998. Data from the Australian NSAOH 2004–06 were analysed to generate comparable age-specific estimates using nine dental clinical indicators, two measures of oral hygiene behaviour and two of dental attendance. Results: Australia had the best oral health based on two clinical indicators, was equal first on three indicators and ranked second in the remaining clinical indicators. Australia ranked first or second based on dental flossing, use of mouthwash and frequency of dental attendance. Conclusions: The oral health of the Australian adult population was among the best of the four nations studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Creativity and performativity: counterpoints in British and Australian education.
- Author
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Burnard, Pamela and White, Julie
- Subjects
CREATIVE ability education ,OUTCOME-based education ,EDUCATION policy ,CREATIVE teaching - Abstract
This article explores the complex interplay of power between performativity and creativity agendas—a mutual tension that resides in British and Australian education. Accountability constraints and conflicting policy debates are problematised against the wider imperatives of similar government agendas. This 'counterpoint' of freedom and control has significant implications for pedagogy and, through accommodating performativity, teacher agency and professionalism are under threat. The authors propose a 'rebalancing' where pedagogy transforms from a site of struggle for control, to one where a higher trust is placed in teacher professionalism. The idea of 'rebalancing pedagogy' offers a way for teachers to navigate and be supported through the opposing demands of performativity and creativity. It acknowledges the importance of teacher agency and where teaching is judged against the characteristics of a systemic approach that facilitates the building of creative learning communities capable of supporting any curricula or content-focused programmes in and beyond schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Deliberative Democracy: An Introduction.
- Author
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Bächtiger, André, Steenbergen, Marco R., and Niemeyer, Simon
- Subjects
DELIBERATIVE democracy ,CONTENT analysis ,ABORTION - Abstract
The article discusses various reports published within the issue, including one by Simon Niemeyer and John Dryzek on deliberative democracy in Australia and another by Judith Bara, Albert Weale and Aude Biquelet on the use of computer-assisted textual analysis (CATA) to assess positions of Members of Parliament on abortion in Great Britain.
- Published
- 2007
38. Achieving High Quality, Comparable Financial Reporting: A Review of Independent Enforcement Bodies in Australia and the United Kingdom.
- Author
-
BROWN, PHILIP and TARCA, ANN
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING ,INVESTMENTS ,SECURITIES trading ,COMPLIANCE auditing ,ACCOUNTING standards ,GREAT Britain. Financial Reporting Review Panel - Abstract
This article provides a review of the activities of two quite different types of national enforcement body, the U.K.'s Financial Reporting Review Panel (FRRP) and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC). We present material (some not available elsewhere) about their activities over the period 1998–2004 and show that both types of body can fulfil an enforcement role, albeit subject to political forces. We also assess the relevance of the bodies’ past activities for comparable international enforcement following the adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) in 2005. A review of cases reveals that for both bodies approximately half were related to recognition and measurement issues, where interpretation can be crucial. Although there is potential for cross-country differences to arise, they may be mitigated by the participation of both bodies in international enforcement coordination activities. Past activities suggest that the scope of the bodies’ activities and the extent of comparability of enforcement decisions are likely to reflect political views held within the government, corporate sector and accounting profession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Medical Workforce Planning: Some Forecasting Challenges.
- Author
-
Maynard, Alan
- Subjects
PHYSICIAN supply & demand ,WORKFORCE planning ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,ECONOMIC demand ,SUPPLY-side economics ,EMPLOYMENT policy ,SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
The article focuses on medical workforce planning in Australia. The question of whether non-doctor inputs are complements or substitutes to the medical-care production function is an issue in the discussion about policy change. Another issue is how the productivity of the physician workforce can be improved. Topics include factors contributing to the increased demand for health services, labor supply trends in Australia and Great Britain, forecasting demand for workers, and the elements in supply estimation such as skill mix, pay, and migration trends.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Assessing Conservation Management's Evidence Base: a Survey of Management-Plan Compilers in the United Kingdom and Australia.
- Author
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PULLIN, ANDREW S. and KNIGHT, TERI M.
- Subjects
NATURE conservation ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,SUSTAINABLE development ,BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Copyright of Conservation Biology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell 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
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Electoral Context and MP Constituency Focus in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.
- Author
-
Heitshusen, Valerie, Young, Garry, and Wood, David M.
- Subjects
LEGISLATORS ,DEMOCRACY ,POLITICAL science - Abstract
The job description for legislators in western democracies includes constituency-focused activities such as casework and district visits. Unfortunately we have a limited theoretical and empirical understanding of the factors affecting legislators' constituency-oriented activities, in large part because most studies focus on single nations; even studies that are comparative do not span a variety of electoral systems. In this article we examine the constituency focus of MPs in six chambers that do provide such variance: the Australian House and Senate, Canadian House, Irish Dáil, New Zealand House, and the British House of Commons. We find that electoral considerations and incentives provided by different electoral systems, as well as other factors, affect the priority that MPs place on constituency service. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A Methodology for Calculating the Allowance for Loan Losses in Commercial Banks.
- Author
-
Gray, Robert P. and Clarke, Frank L.
- Subjects
LOAN loss reserves ,BANKING industry ,COLLECTING of accounts ,INTERNATIONAL accounting standards - Abstract
Severe disturbances in the financial markets in many countries during the 1980s and 1990s caused many stakeholders to examine whether commercial banks had adequate reserves for future loan losses. In the United States, bank regulators considered an adequate Allowance for Loan Losses a‘safety and soundness’ issue while the SEC became increasingly concerned over the possibility of banks using the Allowance as a method to‘manage earnings’. Both regulators demanded more rigorous calculations from banks to support their accounting entries. Also the FASB and the IASB have expressed concerns about a lack of harmonization and convergence in standards. An analysis of measurement standards in the United States, Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom and Australia, as well as by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the IASB, reveals the partially conflicting goals for the Allowance: (a) promote harmonization (IASB), (b) increase transparency (SEC), (c) promote safety and soundness (bank regulators) and (d) maintain reasonable flexibility in recognition of the subjective aspects in determining an appropriate Allowance (bankers). The article offers a methodology which an individual bank may utilize to reconcile the conflicting goals of all interested parties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Bureaucracy, Network, or Enterprise? Comparing Models of Governance in Australia, Britain, the Netherlands, and New Zealand.
- Author
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Considine, Mark and Lewis, Jenny M.
- Subjects
BUREAUCRACY ,PUBLIC administration ,MIXED economy ,CIVIL service - Abstract
Theories of democratic government traditionally have relied on a model of organization in which officials act impartially, accept clear lines of accountability and supervision, and define their day-to-day activities through rules, procedures, and confined discretion. In the past 10 years, however, a serious challenge to this ideal has been mounted by critics and reformers who favor market, network, or "mixed-economy" models. We assess the extent to which these new models have influenced the work orientations of frontline staff using three alternative service types—corporate, market, and network—to that proposed by the traditional, procedural model of public bureaucracy. Using surveys of frontline officials in four countries where the revolution in ideas has been accompanied by a revolution in methods for organizing government services, we measure the degree to which the new models are operating as service-delivery norms. A new corporate-market hybrid (called "enterprise governance") and a new network type have become significant models for the organization of frontline work in public programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Influence of U.S. GAAP on the Harmony of Accounting Measurement Policies of Large Companies in the U.K. and Australia.
- Author
-
Parker, Robert H. and Morris, Richard D.
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING standards ,INTERNATIONAL accounting standards ,BROKERS' accounting ,STANDARDIZATION - Abstract
U.S. GAAP has increasingly become an influence on accounting practices in other countries, even aside from those traditionally considered under direct U.S. influence. The change arises from the large number of U.S. accounting standards, non-U.S, companies listing on U.S. stock exchanges, and the amount of U.S. direct investment abroad. As the impact of U.S. GAAP varies across countries, it may affect international accounting harmony. This idea is tested by examining the level of international harmony for eleven accounting measurement policies in matched pairs of large companies from Australia and the U.K., two countries with historically strong cultural and economic links. It is argued that, in recent decades, accounting practice in Australia, more so than in the U.K., has become increasingly U.S.-oriented. The concepts of harmony of Tay and Parker (1990) and Archer et al. (1996) are employed. International harmony is measured by the between-country C index and chi-square test; national harmony by van der Tas's (1988) H index. While considerable national harmony is found in the U.K. for seven and in Australia for five accounting policies, there is considerable or complete international harmony for only three policies. Evidence is presented of the influence of U.S. GAAP as one factor explaining the poor degree of U.K./Australia international harmony. Australian companies appear to follow U.S. GAAP to a greater extent than do U.K. companies. The state of partial harmony thus existing restricts international comparability of accounting reports and may cause problems for regulators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Australasian monetary policy: A comparative perspective.
- Author
-
Bean, Charles
- Subjects
MONETARY policy ,PRICE inflation ,BRITISH economic policy ,CENTRAL banking industry ,INTEREST rates ,ACCOUNTING ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Revolutionary changes have occurred in the conduct of monetary policy in New Zealand and Great Britain over the last decade; Australian arrangements, too, have changed, albeit in an evolutionary fashion. In all three countries the description of the central bank's objectives is effectively in two parts: an Act of Parliament that sets out the constitutional and legal basis for the central bank and spells out general objectives; and an agreement or remit that gives more precise content to those objectives. In both Australia and Great Britain operational decisions on interest rates are taken by a nine-member committee, whereas in New Zealand the burden of decision making rests entirely on the Governor. Holding the central bank to account is not as straightforward as it looks. Given the fact that all three have numerical inflation targets, it would seem that all that is required is to look at inflation outturns and evaluate whether the targets have been achieved. Ex post accountability also needs to be complemented by ex ante accountability in which the central bank's view of the economic situation is compared with that of independent outsiders.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Trade Union Mergers in British and Australian Television Broadcasting.
- Author
-
Campling, John T. and Michelson, Grant
- Subjects
LABOR union mergers ,TELEVISION broadcasting - Abstract
Discusses the trade union mergers in British and Australian television broadcasting. Union merger activity examination in commercial television; Membership pattern changes; Trade unions restructuring.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. BRITISH AND AUSTRALIAN LABOUR LAW: THE BACKGROUND TO THE 1982 BILLS.
- Author
-
Rawson, D. W.
- Subjects
LABOR laws ,INDUSTRIAL laws & legislation ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,LABOR unions - Abstract
This article examines the labor law in Great Britain and Australia. For most of this century, trade unionism and industrial relations more generally, developed under two quite different traditions of law and policy in Britain and in Australia; traditions which in some respects were polar opposites. In Australia, unions were seen as being part of a set of systems of compulsory arbitration, which operated at the federal level and also in most of the States. These systems were established as the outcome of ambitious ventures in public policy by governments of the early twentieth century, which consciously invoked the myths and the power of the law. Trade unions, and the corresponding organizations of employers, were made subject to public regulation. Though they were not seen as part of the machinery of the state, they were seen as existing primarily to serve public purposes as defined by governments and by courts.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Australian role in Britain's return to the gold standard.
- Author
-
Tsokhas, Kosmas
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,GOLD standard ,MONETARY policy - Abstract
The article presents an analysis of the role of domestic monetary problems and external borrowing on the decision of Australia to return to the gold standard in January 1925. R.S. Sayers has argued that decisions by Australia and other dominions to return to gold were the result of British encouragement and leadership. D.E. Moggridge noted that Australia and South Africa had decided to return to gold in January 1925, whereas the Bank of England preferred that no announcement be made before March 1925. Once market expectations developed that sterling would be returning to gold, Great Britain's freedom of action would have been substantially reduced, and delay could have led to currency speculation. Moggridge added that the parallel movement of currencies abroad to stability and to gold was also of some moment and the British had to take into consideration the fact that Australia had privately decided to return to gold and only delayed its announcement in response to British promises of a decision. S.V.O. Clarke noted that British Prime Minister Winston Churchill was under pressure from Australia to return to gold as soon as possible, and that he did not want a British decision to be preceded by unilateral action by Australia or any other dominion.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Elementary School Mathematics Productivity in Twelve Countries.
- Author
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Walberg, Herbert J., Harnisch, Delwyn L., and Shiow-Ling Tsai
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS education ,ELEMENTARY schools ,EDUCATION ,STUDENTS - Abstract
The mathematics achievement scores of 28,274 students in 1443 Australian, Belgian, English, Finish, French, German, Israeli, Japanese, Dutch, Scotch, Swedish, and US. elementary schools were correlated with, and regressed on socioeconomic status, highest math course taken, weekly hours of homework, interest in mathematics, and several other variables with both individuals and schools within each country as units of analysis. The results corroborate recent syntheses of small- scale studies of productive factors in academic learning as well as regression analyses of large-scale surveys. Among directly alterable variables, the amount and the quality or vigour of instruction including homework most strongly influence achievement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Balancing Act: Issues in the Funding of Public and Private Schools in Australia.
- Author
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Cobb-Clark, Deborah
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL finance ,BRITISH education system ,COST effectiveness ,PUBLIC spending ,PRIVATE schools - Abstract
The article focuses on the policy forum which is committed to explore the issues in the debate on the funding mechanism supporting the schools in Australia. It says that the nature of private education in Australia and Great Britain was compared by Ryan and Sibieta. It adds that the cost-effectiveness of expenditures on government schools was investigated by Jensen, Reichl and Kemp. Moreover, the social benefits of government-supported and independent schooling were reviewed by Daniels.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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