32 results
Search Results
2. OSWALD TOYNBEE FALK: KEYNES’ MODEL ECONOMIST?
- Author
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MILLMOW, ALEX
- Subjects
LETTERS ,BIOGRAPHICAL sources ,INVESTORS ,PHILOSOPHY of economics ,HISTORY of economics -- 20th century - Abstract
Oswald ‘Foxy’ Falk was the enigmatic figure who understood, probably more than any other person, how the mind of Maynard Keynes operated. Regrettably, Falk never wrote a memoir on Keynes or even expanded upon his long professional association with him. Equally, there has been relatively little written of Falk in the economics literature. This article attempts, at least, to address that gap. The character and philosophy of Falk are examined through the prism of a lengthy correspondence he had with another businessman who knew Keynes, William Sydney Robinson. Their letters reveal why Keynes fell out with his former business partner but also, more importantly, how, in talking about the great and the good, lesser mortals are inclined to tell the occasional mistruth. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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3. Histories of legal scholars: the power of possibility.
- Author
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Bartie, Susan
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HISTORY of legal education ,LEGAL education ,LAW schools ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper makes two claims. First, it claims that there are various trends within academic law that discourage legal scholars from learning about their predecessors. These trends are explained. Secondly, it claims that there are a number of benefits which could flow from addressing this neglect. Several of these benefits have been acknowledged elsewhere. For example, some scholars maintain that ideas are best treated historically before being dealt with analytically. The more scholars read whole bodies of their predecessors' works, the better their interpretations and understandings of such works become, thus strengthening the intellectual integrity of the discipline. While agreeing with this argument, the purpose of the second section of this paper is to articulate other, perhaps less obvious, benefits. It is argued that by learning about a wider range of past academic endeavour, legal scholars are encouraged to challenge existing notions of academic standing and consider not only what the legal academy has become but also what it ought to be. Learning about scholarly predecessors could help scholars better contextualise current challenges. Such learning could be empowering in the context of a discipline whose scholarly practices have meant that there has been little reason to look to the past. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Child Poverty, Child Maintenance and Interactions with Social Assistance Benefits Among Lone Parent Families: a Comparative Analysis.
- Author
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HAKOVIRTA, MIA, SKINNER, CHRISTINE, HIILAMO, HEIKKI, and JOKELA, MERITA
- Subjects
POVERTY reduction ,CHILD rearing ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ENDOWMENTS ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL support ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHILDREN - Abstract
In many developed countries lone parent families face high rates of child poverty. Among those lone parents who do get child maintenance there is a hidden problem. States may retain all, or a proportion, of the maintenance that is paid in order to offset other fiscal costs. Thus, the potential of child maintenance to alleviate poverty among lone parent families may not be fully realized, especially if the families are also in receipt of social assistance benefits. This paper provides an original comparative analysis exploring the effectiveness of child maintenance to reduce child poverty among lone parent families in receipt of social assistance. It addresses the question of whether effectiveness is compromised once interaction effects (such as the operation of a child maintenance disregard) are taken into account in four countries Australia, Finland, Germany and the UK using the LIS dataset (2013). It raises important policy considerations and provides evidence to show that if policy makers are serious about reducing child poverty, they must understand how hidden mechanisms within interactions between child maintenance and social security systems can work as effective cost recovery tools for the state, but have no poverty reduction impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Professional Standards for Australian Special Education Teachers.
- Author
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Dempsey, Ian and Dally, Kerry
- Subjects
TEACHER education ,EVALUATION of teaching ,TEACHING methods ,SPECIAL education standards ,SPECIAL education ,TEACHERS ,POPULATION geography ,JOB performance ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,UNITED States. Individuals with Disabilities Education Act ,PROFESSIONAL licenses - Abstract
Although professional standards for Australian teachers were developed several years ago, this country is yet to develop such standards for special education teachers. The lack of standards for the special education profession is associated with the absence of a consistent process of accreditation in Australia and a lack of clarity in the pathways that teachers may pursue to achieve accreditation. In this paper, we review professional standards for special education teachers in the UK and the US, and the related yet limited work completed in Australia. Substantial commonalities across these jurisdictions demonstrate that much of the groundwork has been completed in the important task of developing special education standards in this country. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Five Power Defence Arrangements and the reappraisal of the British and Australian policy interests in Southeast Asia, 1970-75.
- Author
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Benvenuti, Andrea and Dee, Moreen
- Subjects
MILITARY policy ,MILITARY history ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Working from recently declassified Australian and British government files, this paper examines the archival evidence on policy thinking in London and Canberra towards the Five Power Defence Arrangements (FPDA) during the period 1970-75. The article argues that one of the main reasons for the Heath government's decision to deploy a token military force in Southeast Asia as part of a multilateral defence arrangement with Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and Singapore was the desire to uphold these Commonwealth connections. By contrast, Canberra was beginning to question the value of such arrangements in a rapidly changing Southeast Asian strategic environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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7. The continuing implications of the 'crime' of suicide: a brief history of the present.
- Author
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Tait, Gordon and Carpenter, Belinda
- Subjects
SUICIDE ,CORONERS ,SOCIAL stigma ,WELL-being ,HISTORY - Abstract
The long history of suicide as a criminal offence still has a significant contemporary effect on how it is perceived, conceptualised and adjudged. This is particularly the case within countries where suicide is largely determined within a coronial system, such as Australia, the UK and the US. This paper details the outcomes of a study involving semi-structured interviews with coroners both in England and Australia, as well as observations at inquests. It focuses around the widely held contention that the suicide rates produced within these coronial systems are underestimations of anywhere between 15 to 50 per cent. The results of these interviews suggest that there are three main reasons for this systemic underestimation. The first reflects the legacy of suicide as a criminal offence, resulting in the highest standard of proof for findings of suicide in the UK, and a continuing stigma attached to families of the deceased. The second is the considerable pressure brought to bear upon coroners by the family of the deceased, who, because of that stigma, commonly agitate for any finding other than that of suicide. The third involves the rise of 'therapeutic jurisprudence', wherein coroners take on the responsibility of the emotional well-being of the grieving families, which in turn affects the likelihood of reaching a finding of suicide. The conclusions drawn by the paper are also twofold: first - with respect to the stigma of suicide - it will take a lot more than simple decriminalisation to change deeply held social perceptions within the community. Second, given that suicide prevention programmes and policies are based on such deeply questionable statistics, targeted changes to coronial legislation and practice would appear to be required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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8. Managing without default retirement in universities: a comparative picture from Australia.
- Author
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Blackham, Alysia
- Subjects
RETIREMENT age ,PERFORMANCE management ,WORKFORCE planning ,LABOR costs ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
The abolition of the default retirement age is creating challenges for UK employers, and universities in particular. Operating without mandatory retirement may have consequences for performance management, the creation of opportunities for new generations of workers, the scope for workforce planning and employment costs. Drawing on comparative experiences of Australian universities, which have been operating without mandatory retirement since the 1990s, this paper critically examines whether these consequences have materialised in Australia. It draws out a number of lessons for UK universities from the Australian experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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9. Pandemic paranoia in the general population: international prevalence and sociodemographic profile.
- Author
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Ellett, Lyn, Schlier, Björn, Kingston, Jessica L., Zhu, Chen, So, Suzanne Ho-wai, Lincoln, Tania M., Morris, Eric M. J., and Gaudiano, Brandon A.
- Subjects
KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,AGE distribution ,WORLD health ,SURVEYS ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,T-test (Statistics) ,SEX distribution ,INCOME ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,FACTOR analysis ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,PREDICTION models ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PARANOIA - Abstract
Background: The term 'pandemic paranoia' has been coined to refer to heightened levels of mistrust and suspicion towards other people specifically due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In this study, we examine the international prevalence of pandemic paranoia in the general population and its associated sociodemographic profile. Methods: A representative international sample of general population adults (N = 2510) from five sites (USA N = 535, Germany N = 516, UK N = 512, Australia N = 502 and Hong Kong N = 445) were recruited using stratified quota sampling (for age, sex, educational attainment) and completed the Pandemic Paranoia Scale (PPS). Results: The overall prevalence rate of pandemic paranoia was 19%, and was highest in Australia and lowest in Germany. On the subscales of the PPS, prevalence was 11% for persecutory threat, 29% for paranoid conspiracy and 37% for interpersonal mistrust. Site and general paranoia significantly predicted pandemic paranoia. Sociodemographic variables (lower age, higher population size and income, being male, employed and no migrant status) explained additional variance and significantly improved prediction of pandemic paranoia. Conclusions: Pandemic paranoia was relatively common in a representative sample of the general population across five international sites. Sociodemographic variables explained a small but significant amount of the variance in pandemic paranoia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. What's in a name? Similarities and differences in international terms and meanings for older peoples' housing with services.
- Author
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HOWE, ANNA L., JONES, ANDREW E., and TILSE, CHERYL
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MEDICAL care for older people ,COMMUNITIES ,CONGREGATE housing ,MEDICAL care ,NURSING care facilities ,RECREATION ,RETIREMENT ,TERMS & phrases ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,SENIOR housing ,RESIDENTIAL care ,LIFESTYLES ,INDEPENDENT living - Abstract
The diversity of terms and meanings relating to housing with services for older people confounds systematic analysis, especially in international comparative research. This paper presents an analysis of over 90 terms identified in literature from the United Kingdom, the United States of America, Canada, Australia and New Zealand reporting types of housing with services under the umbrella of ‘service integrated housing’ (SIH), defined as all forms of accommodation built specifically for older people in which the housing provider takes responsibility for delivery of one or more types of support and care services. A small number of generic terms covering housing for people in later life, home and community care, and institutional care are reviewed first to define the scope of SIH. Review of the remainder identifies different terms applied to similar types of SIH, similar terms applied to different types, and different terms that distinguish different types. Terms are grouped into those covering SIH focused on lifestyle and recreation, those offering only support services, and those offering care as well as support. Considerable commonality is found in underlying forms of SIH, and common themes emerge in discussion of drivers of growth and diversification, formal policies and programmes, and symbolic meanings. In establishing more commonality than difference, clarification of terminology advances policy debate, programme development, research and knowledge transfer within and between countries. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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11. A gradual separation from the world: a qualitative exploration of existential loneliness in old age.
- Author
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Carr, Sam and Fang, Chao
- Subjects
FRAIL elderly ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,EXPERIENCE ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,LONELINESS ,INDEPENDENT living ,AGING ,QUALITY of life ,RESEARCH funding ,SEPARATION anxiety ,RETIREMENT ,EMOTIONS ,ATTITUDES toward death ,OLD age - Abstract
This study sought to explore qualitatively experiences of existential loneliness (EL) in 80 older people living in retirement communities across the United Kingdom and Australia. Qualitative semi-structured interviews permitted in-depth exploration of issues such as biographical narrative, close relationships, loss, feelings of loneliness and retirement living. It was our intention to conduct a large-scale, deep-listening exercise that would provide further clues about EL in older people and the circumstances that give rise to such feelings. Data provided rich insight into older people's inner lives. Core themes identified loss of close attachments, lack of physical touch and intimacy, deterioration of health and body, and lack of an emotional language through which to express EL as central to older people's experiences. Furthermore, there was a suggestion that the move to retirement living was for many people inextricably connected to their experience of EL. Our data further support and extend the notion that EL can be thought of as a gradual sense of separation from the world and that ageing intensifies a myriad of social, emotional and physical circumstances that prompt its emergence. This sense of existential isolation need not be thought of as exclusive to those experiencing extreme frailty or who face death imminently – our data pointed to a clear and gradual emergence of EL throughout later life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. The Awkwardness of Australian Engagement with Asia: The Dilemmas of Australian Idea of Regionalism.
- Author
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HE, BAOGANG
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,REGIONALISM ,CRITICAL analysis ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
Australia has experienced difficulties engaging with Asia-Pacific regional integration. Despite Australian attempts to punch above its weight in regional forums and to be a regional leader, it is still not regarded as a full member or as quite fitting into the region. It is an ‘awkward partner’ in the Asian context, and has experienced the ‘liminality’ of being neither here nor there. The former Rudd government's proposal for an ‘Asia Pacific Community’ (APC) by the year 2020 was a substantive initiative in Australia's ongoing engagement with Asia. It has, however, attracted a high level of criticism both at home and abroad. The main critical analysis of the proposal has focused on institutional building or architecture, or its relationship with existing regional institutions, but overlooks a host of often fraught questions about culture, norms, identities, and international power relations. The APC concept needs to be scrutinized in terms of these questions with a critical eye. This paper examines the cultural, cognitive, and normative dimensions of Rudd's proposal. It analyses four dilemmas or awkward problems that the APC faces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Pandemic Paranoia Scale (PPS): factor structure and measurement invariance across languages.
- Author
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Kingston, J. L., Schlier, B., Ellett, L., So, S. H., Gaudiano, B. A., Morris, E. M. J., and Lincoln, T. M.
- Subjects
EXPERIMENTAL design ,STATISTICAL reliability ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,MULTILINGUALISM ,CROSS-sectional method ,FEAR ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,FACTOR analysis ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,TRUST ,PARANOIA - Abstract
Background: Globally, the corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has created an interpersonally threatening context within which other people have become a source of possible threat. This study reports on the development and validation of a self-report measure of pandemic paranoia; that is, heightened levels of suspicion and mistrust towards others due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: An international consortium developed an initial set of 28 items for the Pandemic Paranoia Scale (PPS), which were completed by participants from the UK (n = 512), USA (n = 535), Germany (n = 516), Hong Kong (n = 454) and Australia (n = 502) using stratified quota sampling (for age, sex and educational attainment) through Qualtrics and translated for Germany and Hong Kong. Results: Exploratory factor analysis in the UK sample suggested a 25-item, three-factor solution (persecutory threat; paranoid conspiracy and interpersonal mistrust). Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) on the remaining combined sample showed sufficient model fit in this independent set of data. Measurement invariance analyses suggested configural and metric invariance, but no scalar invariance across cultures/languages. A second-order factor CFA on the whole sample indicated that the three factors showed large loadings on a common second-order pandemic paranoia factor. Analyses also supported the test–retest reliability and internal and convergent validity. Conclusion: The PPS offers an internationally validated and reliable method for assessing paranoia in the context of a pandemic. The PPS has the potential to enhance our understanding of the impact of the pandemic, the nature of paranoia and to assist in identifying and supporting people affected by pandemic-specific paranoia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. Tailored and Seamless: Individualised Budgets and the Dual Forces of Personalisation and Collaboration.
- Author
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Needham, Catherine, Foster, Michele, Fisher, Karen R., and Hummell, Eloise
- Subjects
PEOPLE with disabilities ,OLDER people - Abstract
This article reviews the design and delivery features of individualised budgets for disabled and older adults to understand the mechanisms for disaggregation and collaboration in the way support is organised and delivered. Individualised funding is often assumed to be a fragmenting force, breaking down mass provision into personalised and tailored support and stimulating diverse provider markets. However, disability campaigners and policy makers are keen that it also be an integrative force, to stimulate collaboration such that a person receives a 'seamless' service. The article brings out these tensions within the individualisation of funding and support for older and disabled people in the United Kingdom and Australia, and considers whether there is scope for reconciling these dual forces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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15. British Economists and Australian Gold.
- Author
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Goodwin, Craufurd D.
- Subjects
GOLD mines & mining -- History ,ECONOMISTS - Abstract
Focuses on the views of British economists on the significance of Australian gold discoveries in 1851, in conjunction with their assessment of the overall value of the colonies. How information about the gold flowed from Australia to Britain; Discussion about the probable effects of the discoveries; Immediate reaction of most economies to the discoveries.
- Published
- 1970
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16. Human Biobanking in Developed and Developing Countries: An Ethico-Legal Comparative Analysis of the Frameworks in the United Kingdom, Australia, Uganda, and South Africa.
- Author
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MAHOMED, SAFIA
- Subjects
TISSUE banks -- Law & legislation ,DEVELOPING countries ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,MEDICAL ethics ,MEDICAL research ,POPULATION geography ,PRIVACY ,TISSUE banks ,DEVELOPED countries ,COMMUNITY support ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Although the concept of biobanking is not new, the open and evolving nature of biobanks has created profound ethical, legal, and social implications, including issues around informed consent, community engagement, secondary uses of materials over time, ownership of materials, data sharing, and privacy. Complexities also emerge because of increasing international collaborations and differing national positions. In addition, the degrees and topics of concern vary as legislative, ethical, and social frameworks differ across developed and developing countries. Implementing national laws in an internationally consistent manner is also problematic. However, these concerns should not cause countries, especially developing countries, to lag behind as this novel wave of research gains momentum, particularly while several biobank initiatives are already underway in the developing world. As the law has always struggled to keep up with the fast-evolving scientific arena, this article seeks to identify the ethico-legal frameworks in place in the United Kingdom, Australia, Uganda, and South Africa, for human biobank research, in an attempt to compare and contextualize the approaches to human biobanking in specific developed and developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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17. Striving for Consistency: Why German Sentencing Needs Reform.
- Author
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Herz, Clara
- Subjects
CRIMINAL law reform ,REFORMS - Abstract
Given the debate at the seventy-second Conference of the Association of German Jurists (Deutscher Juristentag) in September 2018 on whether German sentencing needs reform, this Article will explore this very question in greater detail. In this regard, this Article will present various empirical studies in order to demonstrate that notable inconsistencies in German sentencing practice exist. This Article will then point out that broad statutory sentencing ranges, along with fairly vague sentencing guidance, are among the main causes of these disparities. Subsequently, this Article will examine several mechanisms that selected foreign jurisdictions—namely the U.S., the U.K., and Australia—have put in place in order to enhance consistency in their sentencing practices. Three mechanisms of sentencing guidance will be distinguished here: First, formal sentencing guidelines; second, guideline judgments; and third, sentencing advisory bodies as they operate in some Australian states. This Article will compare these mechanisms and assess their merits and drawbacks. Based on this comparative study, this Article will look at how to improve consistency in German sentencing practice. In this respect, this Article will present three steps that German criminal law reform should follow, including a better sentencing framework, the strategic gathering of sentencing data, and the implementation of a flexible sentencing guidelines regime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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18. The nutritional content of supermarket beverages: a cross-sectional analysis of New Zealand, Australia, Canada and the UK.
- Author
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Chepulis, Lynne, Mearns, Gael, Hill, Shaunie, Wu, Jason HY, Crino, Michelle, Alderton, Sarah, and Jenner, Katharine
- Subjects
BEVERAGE analysis ,TAXATION of beverages ,NUTRITIONAL value ,SUPERMARKETS ,BEVERAGES ,CHI-squared test ,COMPARATIVE studies ,TAXATION ,FOOD portions ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Objective: To compare the nutritional content, serving size and taxation potential of supermarket beverages from four different Western countries.Design: Cross-sectional analysis. Multivariate regression analysis and χ 2 comparisons were used to detect differences between countries.Setting: Supermarkets in New Zealand (NZ), Australia, Canada and the UK.Subjects: Supermarket beverages in the following categories: fruit juices, fruit-based drinks, carbonated soda, waters and sports/energy drinks.Results: A total of 4157 products were analysed, including 749 from NZ, 1738 from Australia, 740 from Canada and 930 from the UK. NZ had the highest percentage of beverages with sugar added to them (52 %), while the UK had the lowest (39 %, P<0.001).Conclusions: There is substantial difference between countries in the mean energy, serving size and proportion of products eligible for fiscal sugar taxation. Current self-regulatory approaches used in these countries may not be effective to reduce the availability, marketing and consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages and subsequent intake of free sugars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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19. Child Maintenance and Social Security Interactions: the Poverty Reduction Effects in Model Lone Parent Families across Four Countries.
- Author
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SKINNER, CHRISTINE, MEYER, DANIEL R., COOK, KAY, and FLETCHER, MICHAEL
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CHILD rearing ,EMPLOYMENT ,ENDOWMENTS ,INCOME ,CASE studies ,POVERTY ,SINGLE parents ,SOCIAL security ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In most developed countries, children in lone parent families face a high risk of poverty. A partial solution commonly sought in English-speaking nations is to increase the amounts of private child maintenance paid by the other parent. However, where lone parent families are in receipt of social assistance benefits, some countries hold back a portion of the child maintenance to reduce public expenditures. This partial ‘pass-through’ treats child maintenance as a substitute for cash benefits which conceivably neutralises its poverty reduction potential. Such neutralising effects are not well understood and can be obscured further when more subtle interactions between child maintenance systems and social security systems operate. This research makes a unique contribution to knowledge by exposing the hidden interaction effects operating in similar child maintenance systems across four countries: the United Kingdom, United States (Wisconsin), Australia and New Zealand. We found that when child maintenance is counted as income in calculating benefit entitlements, it can reduce the value of cash benefits. Using model lone parent families with ten different employment and income scenarios, we show how the poverty reduction potential of child maintenance is affected by whether it is treated as a substitute for, or a complement to, cash benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Reducing discretionary food and beverage intake in early childhood: a systematic review within an ecological framework.
- Author
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Johnson, Brittany J., Hendrie, Gilly A., and Golley, Rebecca K.
- Subjects
DIET ,BEVERAGES & health ,PUBLIC health ,NUTRITION ,EDUCATION ,CHILD nutrition ,DECISION making ,FOOD habits ,HEALTH promotion ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDLINE ,META-analysis ,NUTRITIONAL requirements ,ONLINE information services ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Objective: To systematically review the literature and map published studies on 4-8-year-olds' intake of discretionary choices against an ecological framework (ANalysis Grid for Environments Linked to Obesity; ANGELO). Design: Articles were identified through database searches (PubMed, PyscINFO®, Web of Science) in February and March 2014 and hand-searching reference lists. Studies were assessed for methodological quality and mapped against the ANGELO framework by environment size (macro and micro setting) and type (physical, economic, policy and socio-cultural influences). Setting: Studies were conducted in the USA (n 18), Australia (n 6), the UK (n 3), the Netherlands (n 3), Belgium (n 1), Germany (n 1) and Turkey (n 1). Subjects: Children aged 4-8 years, or parents/other caregivers. Results: Thirty-three studies met the review criteria (observational n 23, interventions n 10). Home was the most frequently studied setting (67% of exposures/strategies), with the majority of these studies targeting family policy-type influences (e.g. child feeding practices, television regulation). Few studies were undertaken in government (5·5%) or community (11%) settings, or examined economic-type influences (0%). Of the intervention studies only four were categorised as effective. Conclusions: The present review is novel in its focus on mapping observational and intervention studies across a range of settings. It highlights the urgent need for high-quality research to inform interventions that directly tackle the factors influencing children's excess intake of discretionary choices. Interventions that assist in optimising a range of environmental influences will enhance the impact of future public health interventions to improve child diet quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Adapted cognitive–behavioural therapy required for targeting negative symptoms in schizophrenia: meta-analysis and meta-regression.
- Author
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Velthorst, E., Koeter, M., van der Gaag, M., Nieman, D. H., Fett, A.-K. J., Smit, F., Staring, A. B. P., Meijer, C., and de Haan, L.
- Subjects
SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment ,PSYCHOSES ,COGNITIVE therapy ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDLINE ,META-analysis ,ONLINE information services ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DATA analysis software ,PREVENTION - Abstract
BackgroundThere is an increasing interest in cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) interventions targeting negative symptoms in schizophrenia. To date, CBT trials primarily focused on positive symptoms and investigated change in negative symptoms only as a secondary outcome. To enhance insight into factors contributing to improvement of negative symptoms, and to identify subgroups of patients that may benefit most from CBT directed at ameliorating negative symptoms, we reviewed all available evidence on these outcomes.MethodA systematic search of the literature was conducted in PsychInfo, PubMed and the Cochrane register to identify randomized controlled trials reporting on the impact of CBT interventions on negative symptoms in schizophrenia. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed on end-of-treatment, short-term and long-term changes in negative symptoms.ResultsA total of 35 publications covering 30 trials in 2312 patients, published between 1993 and 2013, were included. Our results showed studies’ pooled effect on symptom alleviation to be small [Hedges’ g = 0.093, 95% confidence interval (CI) −0.028 to 0.214, p = 0.130] and heterogeneous (Q = 73.067, degrees of freedom = 29, p < 0.001, τ2 = 0.081, I2 = 60.31) in studies with negative symptoms as a secondary outcome. Similar results were found for studies focused on negative symptom reduction (Hedges’ g = 0.157, 95% CI −0.10 to 0.409, p = 0.225). Meta-regression revealed that stronger treatment effects were associated with earlier year of publication, lower study quality and with CBT provided individually (as compared with group-based).ConclusionsThe co-occurring beneficial effect of conventional CBT on negative symptoms found in older studies was not supported by more recent studies. It is now necessary to further disentangle effective treatment ingredients of older studies in order to guide the development of future CBT interventions aimed at negative symptom reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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22. Disability Employment Services in Australia: A Brief Primer.
- Author
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Byrnes, Catherine and Lawn, Sharon
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT agencies ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,EMPLOYEE selection ,EMPLOYMENT of people with disabilities ,HEALTH services administration ,INTERDISCIPLINARY education ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,JOB descriptions ,LABOR supply ,MEDICAL care ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,HEALTH self-care ,VOCATIONAL rehabilitation ,EMPLOYEE retention ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,REGULATORY approval - Abstract
This review aims to highlight how the chronic condition self-management support (CCSMS) field might inform and enhance the skills of the disability employment services (DES) workforce, particularly in its interactions with clients with complex disability needs. The approach we have taken involves a consideration of current education and training, recruitment of staff into DES and issues of concern arising from these processes. The main findings of our review are that the current DES workforce may not have the required skills to fully meet the needs of the populations they serve given the growing burden of chronic conditions, generally. We conclude by calling for greater consideration of CCSMS education and training as core required skills for the DES workforce, so that they might integrate their practice more collaboratively alongside other support providers. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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23. Australia, the ‘Marshall experiment’ and the decolonisation of Singapore, 1955–56.
- Author
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Benvenuti, Andrea
- Subjects
HISTORY of Singapore -- 1945-1963 ,COLD War & politics ,DECOLONIZATION ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,SINGAPOREAN politics & government ,BRITISH foreign relations ,CHINESE people ,HISTORY ,20TH century British history - Abstract
As decolonisation gathered pace in Southeast Asia, Singapore became a source of considerable concern to the Robert Menzies government. Britain's hold on its colony appeared increasingly precarious as political turbulence gripped the island. With a predominantly Chinese population, Singapore was considered susceptible to communist China's propaganda and subversion. By relying on previously classified Australian and British diplomatic documents, this article sheds light on the Australian approach to Singapore's political and constitutional development between 1955 and 1956 and, in so doing, it hopes to make a contribution to a better understanding of Australia's policies in a rapidly decolonising Southeast Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Church and State in Western Australia : Implementing New Imperial Paradigms in the Swan River Colony, 1827-1857.
- Author
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STRONG, ROWAN
- Subjects
CHURCH & state ,CHURCH of England missions ,COLONIZATION ,ANGLICANS ,IMPERIALISM ,19TH century British colonial administration ,RELIGION - Abstract
This article examines, through the work and attitudes of its first four governors, the relations between Church and State in the last Australia colony to be established. It covers the period from the foundation of the colony in 1829 to the arrival of the first resident bishop of Perth in 1857. It challenges the prevailing historiography of a colonial administration wedded to Anglican privilege, and discusses the persistence of an erastian mind-set among the colonial governors in the 1840s despite the advent of a new paradigm of autonomous imperial engagement by the Church of England. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Social Justice Principles, the Law and Research, as Bases for Inclusion.
- Author
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Foreman, Phil and Arthur-Kelly, Michael
- Subjects
SOCIAL justice ,EDUCATION ,STUDENTS with disabilities ,STUDENTS - Abstract
Educational policies for students with a disability in Australia, the USA, the UK and in most western countries stipulate that inclusive placement should be an option available to parents. This article examines three principal drivers of inclusion: social justice principles, legislation, and research findings, and considers the extent to which each of these has impacted on inclusive policy and practice. The article considers the research base for inclusion, and examines the extent to which the policy and practice of inclusion is supported by evidence. It concludes with some suggestions for a research agenda that focuses on the particular contextual challenges and complexities faced in Australasian school settings, whilst recognising international directions in the identification of evidence-based practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Income Poverty, Deprivation and Exclusion: A Comparative Study of Australia and Britain.
- Author
-
Saunders, Peter and Adelman, Laura
- Subjects
POVERTY ,DEPRIVATION (Psychology) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INCOME - Abstract
Poverty research has a long history in both Australia and Britain, but its influence on policy remains subject to political priorities and ideology. This can partly be explained by the limitations of defining poverty as low income and measuring it using an income poverty line. This article examines two national data sets that allow the income poverty profile to be compared with, and enriched by, the incidence of deprivation and social exclusion, measured using data that directly reflect experience. Although a degree of care must be applied when interpreting these new indicators within and between countries, a validated poverty measure is developed that reflects both low income and the experience of deprivation and exclusion. When results for the two countries are compared, they reveal stark differences between the alternative indicators. Britain has the higher income poverty rate and, although the incidence of both deprivation and exclusion are higher in Australia, Britain still has more validated poverty. The distributional profiles of deprivation and exclusion are shown to be very different in the two countries. These differences are explained by the very low incomes of low-income households in Britain, relative to other British households and relative to their Australian counterparts. Despite these differences, the results indicate that the same three groups face the greatest risk in both countries: lone parents, single working-age people and large (couple) families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Transportation versus Imprisonment in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Britain: Penal Power, Liberty, and the State.
- Author
-
Willis, James J.
- Subjects
PRISONS ,ALTERNATIVES to imprisonment ,EXILE (Punishment) ,DECENTRALIZATION in government ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
This article offers an alternative explanation for the development of national penitentiaries in Great Britain by comparing the emergence of these institutions to their primary penal substitute, the transportation of felons to the U.S. and Australia during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In all, some 50,000 British convicts were transported to the American colonies between 1718 and 1775. The centralization of state power transformed the capacity and willingness of broad segments of the populace to pressure national power-holders into protecting them from arbitrary state actions, including punishments. By contrast, the purpose of the nineteenth- century penitentiary was to punish and reform criminal offenders. Nevertheless, similar to reformist accounts, an important component of revisionist accounts was the persistent examination of punishments from the viewpoints of the ruling gentry and emerging mercantile and industrial classes. The removal and sale of felons overseas shifted the entire burden of their correction onto the shoulders of private citizens. By contrast, transportation served the interests of justices of peace, it increased their existing discretionary authority, and it helped minimize the administrative burden of their office. In sum, in the eighteenth century, the widespread imprisonment of felons was slow to develop, and Britain relied upon transportation as a form of punishment. Transportation's succession by imprisonment was also influenced by a more general transformation in social relations centered on the practical experience of liberty.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Supporting Children? The Impact of Child Support Policies on Children's Wellbeing in the UK and Australia.
- Author
-
Ridge, Tess
- Subjects
CHILD welfare ,GUARDIAN & ward ,CHILD development ,MATERNAL & infant welfare ,CHILD support ,DESERTION & non-support - Abstract
This article presents a comparative child-focused analysis of child support policies in the UK and Australia (an influential forerunner to the development of the UK child support system). Using a child-focused approach that places the best interests of children at the centre of the inquiry; it assesses how children have fared in each country in relation to three key criteria: first, the extent to which child support policies have succeeded in addressing the issue of child poverty; second, how child support policies have influenced the degree of conflict that children can experience between their separated parents; and, third, how equitable child support policies are in relation to children in `first' and `second' families. By focusing solely on children's wellbeing, the article shows how competing interests and social and political pressures can influence and distort policy outcomes, perversely affecting children's lives. The article concludes that child support policies in both countries have failed in several critical areas to put children's best interests first. In response to issues and concerns raised by using a child-focused approach, key reforms to the UK child support system are proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Selling English: advertising and the discourses of ELT.
- Author
-
MARK PEGRUM
- Subjects
ENGLISH language ,DISCOURSE analysis ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
FOR SOME time, a growing chorus of voices has been expressing concern over the way in which English is promoted by English-speaking countries, primarily the UK, the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand (cf. Phillipson 1992, Pennycook 1994 & 1998, Canagarajah 1999, Skutnabb-Kangas 2000). Identified by Kachru (1985) as the inner circle countries, these make vast profits from linguistic sales to outer circle countries such as Singapore and India despite the fact that the latter have largely developed their own Englishes and even more so to the expanding circle of countries which require access to the default international lingua franca. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Housing Tenure and Party Choice in Australia, Britain and the United States.
- Author
-
McAllister, Ian
- Subjects
HOUSING policy ,HOUSE buying ,HOME ownership ,HOUSING laws ,HOUSING market ,MORTGAGE loans - Abstract
The article reports on the housing tenure and party choice in Great Britain, Australia, and the United States. It states that housing type in across the population of these three countries are very similar because majority of the dwellings are either in the process of being bought or owned by their occupiers. According to the author, these high levels of home ownership depart from the patterns found in other industrialized societies. The housing markets' description of the three countries suggests two patterns. Firstly, the U.S. and Australia have housing markets in which it is ways to move from renting to owning a house. Secondly, housing market is divided between owners, private tenants and council tenants which represents an altogether different pattern is represented by Great Britain.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Unemployment and Real Wages in the Great Depression.
- Author
-
Solomou, Solomos and Weale, Martin
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,WAGE increases ,EMPLOYMENT ,RECESSIONS ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This article uses a dataset covering ten advanced economies (Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom and the United States) to explore the role of real wages as an influence on employment and unemployment in the Great Depression and more generally in the 1920s and 1930s. The distinction between employment and unemployment movements during the Great Depression helps to clarify the role of supply side influences on the national heterogeneity of unemployment increases during the Great Depression. We find little general econometric evidence for the idea that movements in product wages had strong influences on employment either during the period of rising unemployment associated with the depression of the 1930s or more generally with the data which exist for the 1920s and 1930s. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Finding a Space for Women: The British Medical Association and Women Doctors in Australia, 1880-1939.
- Author
-
McCarthy L
- Subjects
- Australia, Female, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, United Kingdom, Physicians, Women history, Societies, Medical history, Societies, Medical organization & administration
- Abstract
This paper examines the experiences of women in one professional organisation - the British Medical Association in Australia - during a significant period in the development of such bodies. In doing so it offers an opportunity to consider the relationship between professional societies and the construction of a gendered profession. For the medical profession in particular the time-frame of this study, from the 1880s to the 1930s, has been regarded by scholars as especially important. In this period various features of medical professionalism came to prominence: the status and authority of doctors, the processes of formally registering medical credentials, and the scope and cohesiveness of professional associations. Taking the third of these themes, the current paper extends previous analyses by uniting gender with history and medicine as the central point of examination, in order to evaluate the changing and contested positions of women within the profession. In this way we not only demonstrate how the history of professional societies can reveal the diverse beliefs and shifting priorities of their members, but also contribute to explaining the remarkable persistence of gendered differences in the medical profession.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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