180 results
Search Results
2. The 2009 Defence White Paper and the Rudd Government's Response to China's Rise.
- Author
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Tubilewicz, Czeslaw
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,MILITARY policy ,DIPLOMACY ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,CHINESE foreign relations, 1976- - Abstract
This research note discusses the 2009 Defence White Paper, particularly its focus on the potential threat the Chinese military might pose to the security of the Asia-Pacific in the foreseeable future. It also examines Chinese responses to the White Paper's main theses. It concludes that the White Paper marked a departure from the Howard government's policy of de-emphasising differences in Canberra's dialogue with Beijing and, by re-affirming commitment to the alliance with the United States (US), delineated the limits of Australia's partnership with China. However, its poorly substantiated predictions regarding the rise of China's power, the US economic and military decline and Beijing's geostrategic objectives raise doubts about the Rudd government's capacity to formulate a coherent vision for the future of Australia's relations with China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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3. To teach creativity (or not) in early childhood arts curriculum: a case study in Chinese Beijing kindergartens.
- Author
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Jin, Yan, Krieg, Susan, Hamilton, Amy, and Su, Jing
- Subjects
ARTS education ,EARLY childhood education ,CHILDREN - Abstract
This paper draws from a cross-cultural study of young children's arts curricula. The initial phase of the original study consisted of a comparison of the intended arts curriculum for 5–6 year old children in China and Australia. This was followed by a survey in Beijing exploring 88 contemporary early childhood educators' beliefs about children's arts education. A case study of the enacted curriculum took place across three kindergartens in Beijing. The data was coded and analysed using grounded theory methodology. The research presented in this paper reported a diverse understanding of children's creativity among the participant EC educators; it revealed that a pedagogical dilemma of demonstration remains as a challenge to early childhood arts educators. This study provided qualitative descriptions and examples of Chinese Beijing children's arts education in this era of globalisation. Utilising Foucault's (1991. "Governmentality." In The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality, edited by G. Burchell, C. Gordon, and P. Miller, translated by R. Braidotti, 87–104. London: Harvester Wheatsheaf) theory of governmentality as a critical lens to view the issues in this field, the study broadened perspectives regarding the education philosophy and practices of early childhood arts curriculum, in particular, for the cultivation of young children's creativity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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4. The potential of energy cooperation between China and Australia under the Belt and Road Initiative.
- Author
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Xu, Qinhua, Yu, Jishuang, Shi, Xunpeng, and Collinson, Elena
- Subjects
BELT & Road Initiative ,AUSTRALIA-China relations ,POTENTIAL energy ,ENERGY development ,ENERGY industries - Abstract
While there is a proliferation of studies on China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), there is a gap in the literature in terms of an exploration of the costs and benefits from the perspective of the energy sector, in both the areas of sectoral development and energy transition. This paper uses Australia as a case study. The paper is the first to quantify the impact of the BRI in the energy sector, and the analysis informs the current debates on the BRI in Australia. We find that energy cooperation under the BRI enhances the performance of energy companies, but the Chinese energy investment in Australia faces mounting challenges. We suggest some areas for cooperation and such cooperation could be extended to third countries. Amid the increasing trade and political tensions, the two countries need continued, level-headed discussions and debates about the potential cooperation areas at all levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Understanding the risks of China-made CCTV surveillance cameras in Australia.
- Author
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Bernot, Ausma and Smith, Marcus
- Subjects
VIDEO surveillance ,CLOSED-circuit television ,DATA security ,HUMAN rights violations ,NATIONAL security ,INTERNET of things - Abstract
In the global interconnected economy, China-made information-collecting technologies such as closed-circuit television (CCTV) surveillance cameras have become popular products for routine video-based surveillance. Hikvision and Dahua are the two largest global suppliers of CCTV cameras, with both companies supplying their products to over 200 countries. Despite their popularity, national security concerns are commonly cited when adopting these cameras, citing manufacturer links with the Communist Party of China (CPC), cybersecurity vulnerabilities, and sales recorded in the Xinjiang region, that has records of human rights violations. This paper is structured in three parts: first, we explore the predominance of China-made information-gathering technologies in Australia; second, we summarise common national security concerns usually associated with China-based technology manufacturers; and third, we propose regulatory measures to regulating China-made CCTV cameras in Australia. The paper suggests that while state and Federal decision-makers are free to remove Chinese CCTV surveillance cameras, they should avoid overt politisation. Overall, a stronger focus should be placed on evaluating cybersecurity risks of Internet of Things (IoT) information-collecting technologies and considering their timely and effective regulation from the perspective of individual and national interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A Theoretical Framework of Business Network Relationships Associate with the Chinese Outbound Tourism Market to Australia.
- Author
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Pan, Grace Wen
- Subjects
TRAVEL ,CULTURE ,EMERGING markets ,TRAVEL agents ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,OUTBOUND tourism ,INBOUND tourism - Abstract
The Chinese outbound tourism market has become one of the acknowledged emerging markets in Australia. This paper reviews the development of the Chinese outbound tourism market to Australia, with particular reference to issues emerging from the interaction between Chinese and Australian-based businesses. The paper begins with an overview of Chinese inbound tourism to Australia to provide some context to the discussion. This is followed by an examination of cultural factors, particularly guanri, in business transactions in the Australian-Chinese tourism sector. A theoretical model is introduced to conceptualize the strategies managing the Chinese business relationships. This is an ongoing research project; this paper reports Stage One of the research which has been conducted to explore the crucial factors which influence establishing, developing and maintaining the relationships between Chinese authorized travel agencies and Australian inbound tour operators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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7. Learning management systems: a review of the research methodology literature in Australia and China.
- Author
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Turnbull, Darren, Chugh, Ritesh, and Luck, Jo
- Subjects
LEARNING Management System ,RESEARCH methodology ,LITERATURE reviews ,EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
Education is seen as an important vehicle to foster relationships with countries in the Asia-Pacific region – particularly with Australia's most important economic partner, China. There are many prior studies that have explored the impact of Learning Management Systems (LMSs) on users, through a variety of research designs. However, the diversity of research designs used means that the nuances and subtleties of the diverse approaches, particularly in the context of Australia and China are unknown. The purpose of this literature review is to compare the research designs employed by empirical studies of LMS usage in Australia and China. This review explores the similarities and differences in research methodologies (quantitative, qualitative or mixed methods), research approaches (confirmatory or exploratory) and data collection methods commonly used in a selection of contemporary studies from both countries. The findings indicate Chinese studies employ quantitative methodologies more than Australian studies; confirmatory research is more prevalent in China than Australia; and that there is a distinct preference for surveys in Chinese studies. This review will assist the developers of future collaborative research projects between China and other countries, to construct study designs that are compatible with the identified research strengths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. For better or worse, in sickness and in health: Australia-China political relations and trade.
- Author
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Golley, Jane, Agarwal, Vishesh, Laurenceson, James, and Qiu, Tunye
- Subjects
AUSTRALIA-China relations ,EXPORTS - Abstract
This paper quantifies the effects of shocks in bilateral political relations on Australia's merchandise goods exports to China between 2001 and 2020. Using a vector autoregression framework, our estimates suggest that short-term fluctuations in political relations have no long-run effects on Australia's aggregate export growth to China over this period, nor in any of three sub-periods analysed. A disaggregated analysis of 19 HS2 sectors reveals heterogenous short-run effects across sectors and time periods, with numerous sectors indicating the seemingly perverse finding that an increase in political cooperation/conflict is associated with a decrease/increase in export growth, with a lag of one to four months. We propose two hypotheses that are consistent with these findings, 'doubling down' and 'dropping the ball', contributing new understanding to the political relations-trade nexus in the context of a bilateral relationship that will likely be characterised by both cooperation and conflict in the decades ahead. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. Explaining China's strategy of implicit economic coercion. Best left unsaid?
- Author
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Miller, Charles
- Subjects
ECONOMIC sanctions ,AUSTRALIA-China relations ,ECONOMICS of war ,SEXUAL consent ,INTERNATIONAL conflict ,INTERNATIONAL trade disputes - Abstract
The recent 'trade war' between Australia and China has understandably sparked fear amongst Australian policymakers, voters and businesses. China's alleged economic coercion towards Australia has the strange property that Chinese leaders are not making any clear explicit demands of Australia. Moreover, this behaviour follows a pattern in recent Chinese dealings with other Asia-Pacific states. Why would a state initiate economic coercion without making clear demands? In this paper, I offer an explanation, building on the logic of audience costs in wars of attrition. I suggest that China's strategy of economic coercion without explicit demands serves a key strategic purpose. Omitting specific demands makes the outcome of any given dispute less clear and hence makes it easier for either side to claim victory. This negates a key advantage which democratic states have in bargaining with autocratic adversaries—the fact that their audience costs for backing down are usually higher, which makes them less likely to initiate but more likely to win international disputes. Implicit economic coercion should therefore be a strategy which is primarily targeted at China's democratic trading partners. I examine the record of Chinese uses of economic coercion in the past and find that this pattern finds much support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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10. Transferable skills within research degrees: a collaborative genre-based approach to developing publication skills and its implications for research education.
- Author
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Cargill *, Margaret
- Subjects
ACADEMIC degrees ,STUDY & teaching of research ,ADULT education workshops ,APPLIED linguistics - Abstract
Recognition is increasing that Ph.D. graduates require transferable skills for employment within or outside academia, and professional written communication skills form an important subset which contributes to many other skill categories. Writing journal articles for publication is a key task within candidatures and research workplaces, so intrinsic motivation for developing the required skills is high in both contexts. This paper describes a publication skills workshop approach based on research findings from genre analysis and methodologies current within the English for Specific Purposes area of Applied Linguistics. Quantitative evaluation of workshops presented in research workplaces in China and Australia, and in university departments, highlights participants' positive responses to the approach. Qualitative data analysis indicates that the workshop features participants valued most highly related to its genre-based, collaborative and hands-on nature. Implications are drawn for the effective development of desirable graduate attributes within research education programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
11. Examining the Chinese-Australian post-production relationship through Chinese audiences’ cinema experience.
- Author
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Soh, Kai
- Subjects
MOTION picture industry ,POST-production in motion pictures ,MOTION picture audiences ,MOTION pictures ,ONLINE social networks - Abstract
In recent years, China has become one of the largest film industries and in order to remain competitive, Chinese blockbusters are attempting to imitate Hollywood post-production qualities. As Australian post-production companies are internationally renowned for their expertise, Chinese filmmakers are seeking opportunities to collaborate with Australians. The Australian government recognises China’s enthusiasm and has begun highlighting the nation’s strength through various programmes targeted towards the Chinese film industry. Though efforts have been placed to promote Australia's post-production industry, there is currently minimal research on Chinese cinema audiences' opinions regarding this transnational collaboration. To examine the effects of transnationality in Chinese cinema, this paper analyses Chinese audiences' opinions, along with exploring how the Australian government and post-production companies are engaging with China, to understand the potential of this partnership. The paper utilises data collected from the Chinese social networking site Douban to understand audiences’ reception on the post-production elements of the Chinese filmHero(2002). Overall, the analysis demonstrates that Chinese audiences are not identifying Australia’s role, however the impact of Australian practitioners are being emphasised through complements on the film’s visual effects, showing great potential between this transnational collaboration. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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12. Tourism demand and the COVID-19 pandemic: an LSTM approach.
- Author
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Polyzos, Stathis, Samitas, Aristeidis, and Spyridou, Anastasia Ef.
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,LONG-term memory ,SHORT-term memory ,DEEP learning ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks - Abstract
This paper investigates the expected results of the current COVID-19 outbreak to arrivals of Chinese tourists to the USA and Australia. The growing market share of Chinese tourism and the fact that the county was the first to experience the pandemic make China a suitable proxy for predictions on global tourism. We employ data from the 2003 SARS outbreak to train a deep learning artificial neural network named Long Short Term Memory (LSTM). The neural network is calibrated for the particulars of the current pandemic. Our findings, which are cross-validated using backtesting, suggest that recovery of arrivals to pre-crisis levels can take from 6 to 12 months and this can have significant adverse effects not only on the tourism industry but also on other sectors that interact with it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. In defence of the Indo-Pacific: Australia's new strategic map.
- Author
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Medcalf, Rory
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,MILITARY strategy ,MILITARY readiness ,FOREIGN relations of the United States, 2009-2017 ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,NATIONAL security ,TWENTY-first century ,MILITARY geography - Abstract
Copyright of Australian Journal of International Affairs is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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14. Shared interest or strategic threat? A critical investigation of political debates and regulatory responses to Chinese agricultural investment in Australia.
- Author
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Böhme, Michaela
- Subjects
POLITICAL debates ,FOREIGN investments ,FOOD sovereignty ,INVESTMENTS ,FOOD security - Abstract
Since the global food crisis, China has been in the spotlight as a major actor in the global 'land grab'. In the context of Australia – a key target of Chinese investment – rising Chinese farmland ownership has provoked a contentious debate, eventually leading to a revision of Australia's foreign investment regime. The paper analyses how concerns over the assumed 'state-driven' and 'food security'-oriented nature of Chinese investment have been mobilized to tighten governmental scrutiny over foreign investment flows into Australian agriculture. I argue that the reregulation of Australia's foreign investment regime must be understood as part of a broader effort by Australian political and agribusiness interests to balance the opportunities and threats associated with China's rise as a key agri-food player. Ultimately, these controversies have precluded a substantial reflection upon the problematic productivist assumptions that characterize common understandings of who should own Australian farmland and to which ends. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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15. TABLOID JOURNALIST AS P.O.W. The War Diaries of Dorothy Gordon Jenner.
- Author
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Goc, Nicola
- Subjects
JOURNALISTS ,PRISONER-of-war journalism ,WAR diaries ,MASS media & war ,TABLOID newspapers ,WORLD War II ,CONCENTRATION camps ,HISTORY - Abstract
In 1941 Australian tabloid journalist Dorothy Gordon Jenner was caught up in the Japanese siege of Hong Kong and was incarcerated in the Stanley Internment Camp. During her internment Jenner kept a clandestine record of daily life written in pencil on Bronco brand toilet paper and kept hidden in the heels of her shoes. To date her fragmented diary and notes have defied analysis. This paper provides a reading of Jenner's personal wartime testimonio through the frame of tabloid journalism to expose how the tabloid genre-Jenner's stock-in-trade as a journalist before the war-became the framework for her personal testimony during World War II. By interpreting Jenner's private diary and notes as testimonio journalism this paper exposes the flow of the tabloid vernacular style of journalism between private and public discourses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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16. Climate Policy and Industry Elite Perceptions of Risk and Uncertainty: A Cross-National Study.
- Author
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Wong, Catherine Mei Ling and Lockie, Stewart
- Subjects
RISK perception ,GOVERNMENT policy on climate change ,CLIMATE change ,UNCERTAINTY ,CLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
There has been a growing focus on uncertainty as a distinct concept in the risk literature. This paper is concerned with how those involved in the design and implementation of climate change policy conceptualize risk and uncertainty. Based on interviews with policy and industry elites in Australia, China and the UK, it finds that participants did not distinguish between "risk" and "uncertainty" in their conceptualization of climate threats. For the majority of them, politics was the most significant source of risk and uncertainty in climate policy, but delegation of otherwise political decisions to the market was seen as the best solution. The conclusion suggests that the conceptual distinction between risk and uncertainty is less important, for policy and industry elites, than the need to develop mechanisms that account for both persistent scientific uncertainties as well as interpretive and moral ambiguities in climate policy design and implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Australia and China at 50: The New Wave Theatre and the Drama of Cultural Exchange.
- Author
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Pender, Anne
- Subjects
CULTURAL relations ,BALLET companies ,CHINESE people ,OPERA companies ,DANCE companies ,TERM limits (Public office) ,PRIME ministers - Abstract
2022 marks the 50th anniversary of the opening up of relations between Australia and the People's Republic of China. When he became prime minister in 1972, Gough Whitlam sent the first ambassador to China (Dr Stephen Fitzgerald), and in his term of office established support for artists' exchanges from the Australia Council. The Australian Ballet visited China in 1980, the first major ballet company to tour since the Cultural Revolution. The touring of China by Australian theatre, opera and dance companies has flourished since then, particularly over the last decade, and Australian spoken-word drama has featured in the relationship between the two countries since 1983. Since the 1980s, the work of the New Wave dramatists has captured the interest of Chinese audiences over a sustained period beyond the years of the New Wave itself. The theatre has, in some respects, provided a respite from the rigours of realpolitik and most importantly a means of genuine interaction between ordinary Australians and Chinese citizens who make up the audiences. This article documents the take-up of the New Wave drama in China, and the legacy of the relationships created in this formative period of Australian theatre in its international context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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18. Varieties of employment relations: continuity and change in the global auto and banking industries.
- Author
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Kirsch, Anja and Wailes, Nick
- Subjects
BANKING industry ,AUTOMOBILE industry - Abstract
This paper examines continuity and change in employment relations in two key industries – auto assembly and retail banking – across five countries: the USA, Australia, Germany, South Korea and China. The subsequent papers that constitute this symposium are discussed drawing on the varieties of capitalism (VoC) approach. Particular emphasis is laid on the interplay between continuity and change in employment relations in different types of capitalism, the conceptualization of Asian VoC and the industry-specific effects of globalization on employment relations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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19. The need for context-sensitive measures of educational quality in transnational higher education.
- Author
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Pyvis, David
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL quality ,TRANSNATIONAL education ,IMPERIALISM & society ,COLLEGE curriculum - Abstract
This paper argues that the current approach to educational quality formation in transnational higher education promotes educational imperialism, and that guidelines and practices should be altered to embrace context-sensitive measures of quality. The claims are sustained by findings from a study that investigated how academics understood and pursued educational quality in an Australian university programme delivered in partnership with a Chinese university in China. A key finding was that a home programme functioned as the single reference point for quality in the programme delivered in China. Quality in the China programme was sought through the imposition of practices and philosophies associated with the home programme, which required the suppression of local educational traditions. The paper points out that reliance on a home programme as the single measure of quality is encouraged by governing UNESCO/OECD guidelines on quality in cross-border provision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Young “netizens” creating public citizenship in cyberspace.
- Author
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Robertson, Margaret
- Subjects
COMPUTER assisted instruction ,COMPUTER managed instruction ,ONLINE social networks ,INTERNET in education ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
Collaborating with universities in Hong Kong, Finland, the United Kingdom and Australia the research project outlined in this paper takes up one of the key initial findings related to the importance of children's online spaces away from school. The project brings together complementary strengths from each partner nation to assist our mutual need to understand the worlds of our young “netizens” - the new public citizens of cyberspace. Differing in social and cultural context, each setting is recognised as a strong contributor to understanding the competencies of young people's digital expertise. We work from the shared view that the arrival of Web 2.0 and 3.0 social networking tools is educationally challenging and demands futuristic thinking for sustainable education and social connectivity globally. Our research aim is to use a common research design to discover how young people are behaving in the new online spaces; what guides their decision-making; and what, if any, common values appear to emerge when results between countries are compared. Locally derived knowledge gained from samples of 12-year-olds will be subjected to cross-cultural comparisons and validation. In doing so, we make some assumptions about the homogenising process that shared global networks may be fostering. Bringing together these contributions will strengthen the decision-making process and provide new knowledge about meaning making, agency and citizenship for the twenty-first-century e-democracy. This paper reports on the conceptual process underlying the research and the research design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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21. A Comparison of Water Rights Systems in China and Australia.
- Author
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Speed, Robert
- Subjects
WATER rights ,WATER laws ,WATER trusts ,WATER supply management ,RISK management in business ,PUBLIC welfare ,MUTUAL funds - Abstract
This paper describes and compares the reforms in China and Australia associated with granting water users better defined, more secure and (often) tradable entitlements to water. The paper considers the lessons that each country may learn from, and teach to, the other. The paper discusses policy issues and solutions in both countries in respect of: risk sharing and compensation for changes to rights; environmental flows; trans-jurisdictional approaches to water rights; trading water rights; and integrating water rights within the broader water supply and catchment management framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. GTAP Model Analysis of the Economic Effects of an Australia-China FTA: Welfare and Sectoral Aspects.
- Author
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Siriwardana, Mahinda and Yang, Jinmei
- Subjects
TERMS of trade ,FREE trade ,COMMERCIAL treaties ,INTERNATIONAL trade -- Econometric models - Abstract
The Australia-China Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA) is already in the process of being negotiated by the two governments. This paper employs the Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model using Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) database version 6 for a quantitative analysis of the economic effects of proposed ACFTA. Four scenarios are examined in the paper focusing on flexible and fixed current account positions within short run and long run. Equivalent variation (EV) and real consumption are used to measure the welfare effects resulting from the formation of the ACFTA. The results from the GTAP simulations show positive welfare effects for both Australia and China in all cases. Sectoral results show mixed outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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23. Chinese liquidity effects on the Australian macroeconomy, 2002–2017.
- Author
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Burdekin, Richard C. K. and Tao, Ran
- Subjects
FOREIGN exchange rates ,PRICE inflation ,CHINESE people ,COINTEGRATION - Abstract
China's growing importance to the Australian economy has been well recognized in policy circles but remained relatively untested in formal empirical analysis. This paper examines the reactions of Australian macroeconomic variables to Chinese money growth and inflation over the post-2002 period using VAR estimation, historical decompositions and long-run cointegration models. The consistent impact of Chinese money growth on Australian inflation and on the exchange rate seen in the VAR analysis is supplemented by evidence of cointegrating relationships between the Australian variables and both Chinese money growth and Chinese inflation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Perils of speed dating: an Australian success story in Chinese outbound tourism.
- Author
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Lindsay, David, Kriz, Anton P., Johns, Raechel, and Keating, Byron W.
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL marketing ,BUSINESS networks ,INDUSTRIAL procurement ,CULTURAL intelligence ,TOUR brokers & operators ,BUSINESS negotiation - Abstract
This paper provides insights and lessons about how Western tourism operators can build and maintain business-to-business relationships with Chinese tourism providers. The case analyses how Tangalooma Island Resort Pty Ltd approached the challenge of developing business networks and how they have sustained this activity for over a decade to become a major destination for Chinese visitors to Australia. While there is no shortage of research on the Chinese notion of guanxi, this study uses a novel multi-dimensional cultural intelligence perspective to synthesise Chinese and Australian views on the drivers of long-term commercial success. The frameworks and insights provided make a valuable and timely contribution to our understanding of how Western firms can approach China tourism opportunities, and importantly, provide lessons on the nuances of effective relationship development between Western and Chinese individuals and firms. This critical single case study highlights the importance of business negotiation and need for deepening cultural logic with appropriate pacing by key protagonists in the Western firm. Nurturing and growing interpersonal cultural skills is fundamental and helps build inter-firm bonds, resource ties and activity links. This is discussed using the actors–activities–resources model promoted within the context of industrial marketing and purchasing. Future research could extend the findings through additional case studies, or further empirical validation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The rise of China and the Antarctic Treaty System?
- Author
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Liu, Nengye
- Subjects
FISHERIES ,TOURISM - Abstract
This paper examines three dimensions of China's rise in Antarctica: (1) history (2) activities; and (3) governance. Historically, China was missing in Antarctic affairs for long time. Over the past four decades, as a reflection of China's rapid economic growth after the adoption of 'Open Door' policy, Chinese activities in the Antarctic can be seen as rising, especially in science, fisheries and tourism. Nevertheless, this paper argues that rather than having a secret agenda to pursue, China is still shaping up its general Antarctic policy. China's capacity to advance its interests within the Antarctic Treaty System is not significant either. After defining what China's rise in Antarctica is, the paper provides some suggestions regarding Australia's China strategy in Antarctica in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Managing Knowledge in Tourism Planning: And How to Assess Your Capability.
- Author
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Clark, Stephen and Scott, Noel
- Subjects
KNOWLEDGE management ,STRATEGIC planning ,TOURISM - Abstract
This paper explores the theme of strategic planning in a Slate Tourism Organization (STO) from a knowledge management perspective. It highlights the value of knowledge in strategy making and the importance of an organisation's knowledge management agenda in facilitating a strategic planning process. In particular, it considers the capability of an STO to implement knowledge management as the key to a successful strategic planning exercise. In order to develop greater insight into the factors that impact on planning competence, the key aim of this paper is to develop a framework on which the capability of a STO to implement a knowledge-based agenda in strategic planning can be assessed. Research on knowledge management in the field of tourism is limited and there is little practical account of the application of knowledge management principles in tourism planning. Further, there is no apparent tool or instrument that allows lot the assessment of an STO's capability to implement knowledge management in planning initiatives. Based on a literature review, a three-point framework of assessment is developed. The three elements of the framework are identified as: 1. Integration of knowledge management objectives with strategic imperatives: 2. A planning approach that balances top-down (outcome focused) with bottom-up (process focused) planning processes: and 3. Organisational capacity, including leadership, people and culture, process, technology, content and continuous improvement. The framework is tested through application to a practical case study--a planning initiative undertaken by a leading tourism STO in Australia. The results demonstrate that the framework is a useful means to evaluate organisational capability in knowledge-led strategic planning exercises and would be of practical value as a point of reference for future knowledge-based strategic planning projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Understanding and Sharing Knowledge of New Tourism Markets: The Example of Australia's Inbound Chinese Tourism.
- Author
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Pan, Grace W., Scott, Noel, and Laws, Eric
- Subjects
KNOWLEDGE management ,INFORMATION sharing ,TOURISM - Abstract
This paper examines issues involved in the definition, creation, and use of knowledge about the Chinese outbound market. It provides an initial view of the type of knowledge required by tourism managers in Australia, some suggestions about where this knowledge is available, or how it may be produced, and identifies issues in sharing that knowledge between tourism industry members and between academics and the industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Western concepts, Chinese context: A note on teaching accounting offshore.
- Author
-
HONG YANG, HELEN
- Subjects
TRANSNATIONAL education ,ACCOUNTING education ,INTERNATIONAL Financial Reporting Standards ,INTERNATIONAL accounting standards - Abstract
Because they have taken the lead in providing transnational accounting programs in China, Australian universities have a corresponding responsibility to deliver programs of the highest quality. One of the challenges this poses for transnational accounting education is how to engage with the local Chinese context. This paper addresses this challenge by presenting a teaching note on teaching the Australian conceptual framework for financial reporting to Chinese students in the context of China's convergence with International Financial Reporting Standards. The teaching note attends to the special circumstances of transnational Chinese students and other challenges in teaching Western accounting theories. It justifies a comparative approach to engaging Chinese students in understanding the financial reporting framework in an Australian context whilst simultaneously identifying links to Chinese accounting practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The real ‘cost’ of study in Australia and the ramifications for China, Australia, and the Chinese nursing students: what do these three players want? A narrative review.
- Author
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Wang, Carol Chunfeng, Whitehead, Lisa, and Bayes, Sara
- Subjects
NURSING education ,NURSING students ,HUMAN capital ,FOREIGN study ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Australia attracts international nursing students from China to maintain its economic advantage and to alleviate the projected nursing shortage; conversely, China needs its best and brightest citizens who have trained abroad in nursing to return to cope with current challenges within its healthcare system and nursing education. This paper explores whether China can lure its foreign-trained nurses home to achieve its goals; whether China or Australia will win the nursing talent war; and do Chinese nursing students want to remain abroad or return home. The insight gained can support the development of successful human capital investment for all parties involved. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Politics of Accommodation of the Rise of China: the case of Australia.
- Author
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He, Baogang
- Subjects
CHINESE foreign relations, 1976- ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,CONTAINMENT (Political science) ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,GREAT powers (International relations) - Abstract
In the context of the rise of China, Southeast Asian countries and Australia have begun shifting towards an accommodation policy. Robert Ross examines the accommodation policy in South Korea, Mochizuki discusses Japanese accommodationists, and Manicom and O'Neil show some evidence of Australian accommodation of Chinese strategic preferences. The scholarship has, however, narrowly focused on and overestimated the role of security. Through a study of the origin, process, structural conditions and impacts of accommodation policy, this paper broadens the concept of accommodation to capture its multiple meanings and practices. It finds that a selective accommodation policy and strategy toward the rise of China developed in Australia is a sign of the changing power relations under which the mainstream paradigms of containment and engagement, hard balancing or bandwagoning, have proved inadequate to the task of dealing with China, and that economic interdependence has driven the politics of accommodation in Australia and several Asian countries. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Comparison of Chinese and Australian 500 MPa reinforcing steel.
- Author
-
Li, H., Deeks, A. J., Liu, L., and Su, X.
- Subjects
STRUCTURAL engineering ,STEEL testing ,METALS ,DUCTILITY ,WELDABILITY of metals ,MECHANICAL properties of metals ,PHOSPHORUS ,SULFUR ,TITANIUM - Abstract
This paper reports the results of a series of material performance tests undertaken to compare Chinese and Australian 500 MPa reinforcing steel. After providing some background to modern high strength reinforcing steel, this paper compares the chemical and mechanical requirements of the reinforcing steels in Chinese codes with those in Australian standards. The results of tensile strength and ductility tests are reported. From the requirements of the standards and the analysis of the test data, several conclusions are drawn. Small differences in the chemical composition cause some differences in mechanical properties. Because of the higher percentage of carbon, the tensile strength of Chinese reinforcing steel is generally higher than that of Australia's normal ductility (N) reinforcing steel. The ductility of Australia's normal ductility reinforcing steels is somewhat less than that of Chinese reinforcing steels, due to the higher percentages of the chemicals phosphorous and sulphur. However, because of the lower value of Ceq and carbon content, the weldability of Australian steel is higher than Chinese steel. By adding the trace elements V, Nb and Ti into the steels, the seismic ability of Chinese steels has been improved. Both Chinese and Australian reinforcing steels tested had adequate yield stress levels. In each country the test results indicated that the tested steel achieved the requirements of the applicable standard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Chinese foreign direct investment in Australia: policy issues for the resource sector.
- Author
-
Drysdale, Peter and Findlay, Christopher
- Subjects
CHINESE investments ,FOREIGN investments ,CAPITAL movements - Abstract
The past 18 months have seen Chinese foreign direct investment (FDI) in the Australian resource sector become an issue of policy interest. There are two big questions that the prospects of a significant rise in FDI from China into the Australian resources sector have raised. Is the surge of FDI into Australian mining and energy consistent with achieving the traditional gains from foreign investment? And are there any particular problems associated with investment from foreign state-owned enterprises or state-managed sovereign wealth funds? These are among the questions addressed in this paper. The paper argues that there are no issues that cannot be dealt with under the umbrella of the established test of 'national interest' in managing the growth of Chinese FDI into the Australian minerals sector. It argues that a confusion has been introduced into policy over the questions of state ownership and supplier-buyer relations in respect of Chinese investments and that clarifying these issues is likely to be important to Australia's capturing the full benefits from the growth of Chinese resources demand and longer term economic and strategic interests in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Clientelism in the ethnopolis: ethnic contribution networks and political fundraising under late multiculturalism.
- Author
-
Kwok, Jen Tsen
- Subjects
PATRONAGE ,POLITICAL parties ,ETHNOLOGY ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government ,CHINESE politics & government ,GLOBALIZATION ,IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
This paper employs ethnographic method to theorise about the ethnic contribution networks enabled by major Australian political parties, with specific regard to Chinese Australian formations, and in the context of globalisation's impact upon 'de-nationalising' political institutions. The paper expands upon the notion of the contribution network by situating it within network theory literature, asserting the need for stability in the diffuse forms of resource exchange indicates that it is sustained by mixed and weak network ties. The character of the contribution network as a significant mode of political engagement by ethnic Chinese network actors, moulds participation in the political process that is both party ambivalent and politically apathetic. Its impact upon Chinese Australian political incorporation raises important questions about the role of progressive political theory, which through the politics of recognition has sought to legitimate modes of group representation, including clientelistic formations, as a means to enhancing the political inclusion of marginalised Australian migrant and ethnic communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Transnational Networks and National Identities in the Australian Commonwealth.
- Author
-
Fitzgerald, John
- Subjects
SOCIAL networks ,JOURNALISTS - Abstract
Chinese communities maintained a variety of institutional networks linking Australia, New Zealand, the Pacific Islands and southern China over the first half of the twentieth century. This paper explores one of these networks, the Australasian branch network of the Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuo Min Tang or KMT). By focusing on two institutional initiatives of the Australasian Kuo Min Tang--one in China and one in Australia--the paper asks whether there was anything distinctively Australasian about Chinese-Australasian networks besides their location in the South Pacific. Reflecting on the life of a contemporary Chinese-Australian journalist, the paper draws connections between the institutional history of the KMT and personal observations on what it may have meant to be Chinese Australian in China and Australia over the first half of the twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Australia's Indo-Pacific statecraft and Southeast Asia.
- Author
-
Graham, Euan
- Subjects
AUSTRALIA-China relations ,MERGERS & acquisitions ,POWER (Social sciences) ,REGIONAL differences - Abstract
A major shift in the paradigm undergirding relations between Australia and China has become clear in the early 2020s, with geopolitical concerns trumping economic considerations. Canberra has implemented a range of new policies in response to the risks it perceives in Australia's economic relations with China, the Chinese Communist Party's efforts to exert political influence in Australia, the expanding capabilities and presence of the People's Liberation Army, and Beijing's economic and diplomatic gains in Southeast Asia and the Southwest Pacific. China's policies towards Australia have become more coercive in economic as well as diplomatic terms. However, Australia has withstood Beijing's punitive trade measures without suffering significant economic damage. China's more assertive regional posture has prompted far-reaching changes to Australia's defence- and alliance-policy settings, including new capability acquisitions and strategic initiatives such as AUKUS. In this Adelphi book, Euan Graham argues that Australia has provided an imperfect but nevertheless useful exemplar of how governments may respond effectively to multifarious security challenges from China. In particular, the Australian case shows how measures to address domestic vulnerabilities may serve as the foundation for a successful China policy at the international level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Analysis of studies on the travel motivations of senior tourists from 1980 to 2017: progress and future directions.
- Author
-
Otoo, Felix Elvis and Kim, Seongseop (Sam)
- Subjects
TOURISTS ,TRAVEL ,RESEARCH methodology ,POPULATION aging ,PROGRESS - Abstract
As the global senior population expands, there is increasing scholarly interest in the intersection between tourism and the aging population. After nearly four decades of scholarly inquiry, there is the need for a comprehensive review of emerging studies. Therefore, this study was initiated to investigate publications on senior tourists' motivations from 1980 to 2017. Specific objectives include the identification of publication trends over the years, the identification of research methodologies, and an analysis of the nature of the motivations that have emerged over the past three decades. To accomplish these, a systematic and snow-balling process was employed to identify relevant publications on travel motivations. Furthermore, a classification of senior tourists' motivations into domains is provided. The findings suggest a potential increase in publications in the coming decades, domination of certain markets, including the USA, Australia, and China, the emergence of four broad senior travel motivation domains divided into 13 sub-domains, and some distinctiveness and similarities in senior travel motivations in comparison with other motivation schemes. These motives vary across different generations of seniors. The variables identified in this study provide a useful theoretical understanding of the senior travel phenomenon and for future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Are supply-chain relationships more influenced by buyer-supplier relationships or the business environment of the country itself? Evidence from the ‘China-Australia’ trading relationship.
- Author
-
Collins, Ray, Sun, Ximing, and Li, ChongGuang
- Subjects
FOOD supply research ,SUPPLY chains ,CHINESE corporations - Abstract
In doing business with China, poor supply chain performance is reported as being caused by either poor relationships between firms in China or the business environment in which firms in China have to operate. This research paper explores the relative importance of these two factors for food supply chains from Australia to China. Results are based on surveys of 84 importers, wholesalers and retailers in China and 22 Australian exporters and wholesalers. They show that the country itself had a greater influence than firm to firm relationships. Firms exporting food to China should therefore keep supply chains as short as possible to minimize the uncertainties associated with the business environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A new China: using sport to expose a multi-class race through the 1923 Chinese soccer tour of Australia.
- Author
-
Guoth, Nick
- Subjects
SOCCER ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations ,SPORTS ,WHITE Australia policy - Abstract
In the early 1920s, the perceptions by Australians of the Chinese race was one of a single culture and single class. Chinese Australians continuously attempted to break from the shackles of this monolithic construction. A soccer tour in late 1923 provided the local Chinese with an opportunity to alter these stereotypes. Through the performances both on the field and off, through the persistence of the organisers to promote a ‘different type’ of Chinese and through the development of this alternative image in the Western press, the Australian public were afforded a view of Chinese they had not experienced prior, one which included well-educated, middle-class and athletic individuals. The paper investigates the projection of a multi-class society within China to white Australians as portrayed by the soccer tour and how it challenged the entrenched negative perceptions imposed on Australians through the White Australia Policy. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Diasporic Chinese media in Australia: A post-2008 overview.
- Author
-
Sun, Wanning, Yue, Audrey, Sinclair, John, and Gao, Jia
- Subjects
MASS media & immigrants ,CHINESE language ,OLYMPIC Games (29th : 2008 : Beijing, China) ,MASS media & language ,ETHNIC mass media - Abstract
Despite the exponential growth of Chinese migrants in Australia, and despite the sizable body of work in various locations, the picture of how the Chinese-language media have developed in Australia over the past decade is still somewhat unclear. Even less clear is a sense of how the field has changed since the 2008 Beijing Olympics Games, a significant event that signalled China's ascent on to the global stage. This paper seeks to update the picture of the Chinese-language media landscape in Australia. We explore a number of angles, which work in articulation to produce a picture of growing complexity and fluidity. In doing so, we put forward a number of arguments. First, the diasporic Chinese-language media are subject to, as well as respond to, the vagaries of the wax and wane of the multicultural polity of the host nation. In addition, the diasporic Chinese-language media, for a wide range of reasons - technological, cultural, and economic - need to reassess their cultural role and strategies in the wake of the PRC's new status as a global power and its push for expansion of its media content and cultural impact outside China. Furthermore, to a varying extent and in a variety of ways, the diasporic Chinese-language media have become part and parcel of the global transnational cultural economies of Chinese-language media productions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Redescription of Doryphoribius zyxiglobus (Horning, Schuster & Grigarick 1978) (Eutardigrada: Hypsibiidae) and extension of its geographic range.
- Author
-
Claxton, SandraK, Beasley, ClarkW, Kaczmarek, Łukasz, and Michalczyk, Łukasz
- Subjects
MOSSES ,TARDIGRADA ,ANIMAL species ,TAXONOMY ,MUSEUMS - Abstract
A rare species, Doryphoribius zyxiglobus, was found in mosses in New Zealand. So far, it has been cited only three times; from Australia, New Zealand and central China. The original description is very brief and is insufficient by today's taxonomic standards and seems not to be based on the holotype. A photograph of the slide mounted holotype (obtained from The Museum of New Zealand) showed it to be so poorly preserved and oriented that it was deemed probable that little would be gained by its further examination. Consequently, the redescription was based on a few limited measurements from the photograph of the holotype with a complete set of measurements of a paratype and supported by morphometric analysis of a set of topotypes—all borrowed from The Museum of New Zealand. A comparison between sets of specimens from three countries (New Zealand, Australia and China) and a single specimen from South Africa permitted an evaluation of the geographic variation of this species. This paper thus redescribes D. zyxiglobus, reports on populations from widely separated locales and extends its geographical range. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The politics and practice of television ratings conventions: Australian and American approaches to broadcast ratings.
- Author
-
Balnaves, Mark and O'Regan, Tom
- Subjects
TELEVISION & politics ,TELEVISION broadcasting ,PRACTICAL politics ,TELEVISION viewers ,TELEVISION advertising ,TELEVISION programs - Abstract
As we now know, once you introduce audience ratings, as China has done, you have not just introduced 'a measure'; you have introduced a huge apparatus that brings with it certain types of agreements, values and behaviours. No doubt, China's leaders saw the ratings as a neutral mechanism in mapping broadcast audiences. The history of ratings, however, is quite the opposite. It is a set of standards, values and conventions that drives particular kinds of expectations in organizations, technology and content. Audience ratings first provided a coordination rule for advertiser-supported media and then became a convention, harnessed by TV to change media economics. In this paper the authors provide an insight into how audience ratings, as a convention - a compact - emerged in Australia and America, and some of the major differences between them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A Very Olympian Year! The Observation from Australia.
- Author
-
Rowe, David, Petzold, Thomas, and Gilmour, Callum
- Subjects
OLYMPIC Games (29th : 2008 : Beijing, China) ,AUSTRALIAN newspapers ,TELEVISED sports ,BROADCAST journalism ,NATIONALISM ,CHINESE national character ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
This paper reflects on the mediated cultural politics of the Beijing Olympics through analysis of selected Australian print, online and television coverage. It demonstrates that media coverage of major sports events such as the Olympics is linked to the particular concerns of each country, while also displaying elements of internationalism and globalism. The 2008 games provided an opportunity to 'interrogate' the current condition and trajectory of China, creating a very mixed picture of a nation wishing to use the games to symbolize its increasingly prominent place in world economics, politics and sport, but inducing considerable resistance to its projected image among the Australian press, as well as some robust defences of its achievements. Ultimately, the Beijing Olympics revealed (despite the familiar catchcry that sport and politics should be separated) a battle of narratives that saw, for example, Chinese nationalism and global engagement pitted against international defensive positioning and global scepticism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Broadening our sights: internationalizing teacher education for a global arena.
- Author
-
Olmedo, Irma and Harbon, Lesley
- Subjects
COLLEGE teachers ,GLOBAL studies ,GLOBALIZATION ,EDUCATION ,TEACHING ,UNIVERSITY faculty - Abstract
This article represents the collaborative efforts of two college faculty, one in the USA and one in Australia, exploring notions of internationalization of colleges of education and research on multilingualism and teacher education. First, the paper presents experiences of interactions with international researchers in Mexico, Brazil, Germany, Austria, Italy, Finland and Australia. Second, it presents research of three overseas immersion language teaching and learning experiences pursued with teacher candidates from Australia in Indonesia, Korea and China. The article focuses on two questions: in what ways can teacher educators enhance their expertise to prepare teachers for multicultural teaching in a global context? How can teacher educators and institutions create contexts and experiences where teachers and prospective teachers develop their knowledge, skills and dispositions to teach from an international and multicultural perspective? In essence, how can faculty prepare teachers to internationalize curricula and effectively teach students, not only from different ethnic groups and cultures but also different nations and languages? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Old World, New World, Third World? Reconceptualising the Worlds of Wine.
- Author
-
Banks, Glenn and Overton, John
- Subjects
WINE industry -- Economic aspects ,DEVELOPING countries ,GLOBALIZATION ,INTERNATIONAL competition - Abstract
This paper argues that existing categories defining the geography of the world's wine industry, principally the Old World/New World dichotomy, are flawed. Not only do they fail to represent adequately the complexity of production and marketing in those two broad regions but also, crucially, they do not acknowledge the significant and rapidly expanding production and consumption of wine in 'Third World' developing countries. Rather than argue for the addition of a 'Third World' category, we instead use the lens of recent work on globalisation to argue that such production requires us to re-examine the dichotomous Old/New distinction which structures much of the thinking around the global wine industry. It also requires us to more closely link changes in patterns of global wine consumption with developments in global production. Changing geographies of wine production have been driven, to a large extent, by the rapid expansion of both local wealthy elites and burgeoning middle classes in countries such as China and India. This has resulted in the development of local wineries, large and small, throughout the developing world. It has also seen new flows of investment both from established wine regions to these new sites of production and from companies and individuals in the developing world who have invested in established wine regions, whether in France or Australia. Increasingly, the various worlds of wine will become more complex, accommodating new regions and also different forms of production and marketing, from traditional and modern artisanal production, closely tied to place and vintage, to large-scale industrial production for a mass market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Management of Tourism Research Knowledge in Australia and China.
- Author
-
Scott, Noel and Ding, Peiyi
- Subjects
TOURISM management ,TOURISM research ,KNOWLEDGE management ,KNOWLEDGE transfer - Abstract
Research is often considered the immediate precursor of economic success and innovation but from a knowledge management (KM) perspective it is only an input into a system with knowledge production, adoption, and innovation as components. This article examines and compares the history and characteristics of tourism research in Australia and China to analyse areas where improvements in KM implementation may be made. Overall the amount and breadth of research in tourism in both countries appears to have improved over the past several years. The paper suggests a need for research into improving the transfer of knowledge to tourism business operators and different models of knowledge transfer applied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. TOWARDS A CONCEPTUALIZATION OF UNETHICAL MARKETING PRACTICES IN TOURISM: A CASE-STUDY OF AUSTRALIA'S INBOUND CHINESE TRAVEL MARKET.
- Author
-
March, Roger
- Subjects
TOURISM ,TOURISM marketing ,BUSINESS ethics ,INBOUND travel ,AUSTRALIA description & travel - Abstract
This paper has a twofold purpose: to identify the types and impacts of unethical practices in an international travel market and to offer a generic model to enhance our understanding of the causes and consequences of such practices. The Chinese outbound market is used as a case study. The choice of China is timely and appropriate, given that the country is forecast to be one of the world's major outbound markets by 2010 with over 100 million leaving mainland China (World Tourism Organization [WTO], 2006). The research setting is the Chinese inbound tourism market to Australia where the Chinese market has grown substantially since Approved Destination Status (ADS) was granted in 1999. The implications of this research for European and North American tourism operators are significant, given the 2005 agreement between the European Commission and the Chinese authorities that allows group travel from China into Europe. Using the long-interview technique with industry participants in Australia and China a conceptual framework of the environment in which unethical practices occur is provided. A model illustrating antecedents, impacts, and outcomes of unethical practices is offered. Key managerial findings include the unhealthy consolidation of channel power in the Chinese market and the influence of ethnic networks across borders. Several key issues requiring further research are highlighted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Australia and Japan: Towards a New Security Partnership?
- Author
-
Walton, David
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PRIME ministers - Abstract
This paper assesses the impact of recent upgrades in security ties between Australia and Japan and their implications for the bilateral relationship. In particular, the development and future of the Joint Declaration on Security Cooperation (JDSC) is assessed. It is argued that former Prime Ministers Abe and Howard encouraged the enhancement of security ties to unprecedented new highs, but that the rise of China and leadership change in Japan and Australia in 2007 will make the prospects of a full security treaty unlikely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Tourism Degree Education in Australia and Its Relevance to China.
- Author
-
Craig-Smith, Stephen J. and Peiyi Ding
- Subjects
TOURISM education ,HOSPITALITY studies ,EDUCATION research ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
This paper overviews the evolution and development of tourism degree education in Australia from its beginnings in the early 1970s to the present time (2005). From this analysis a number of key issues are raised which are then compared with issues arising from tourism degree education in China. Whilst there are many differences between the situation in Australia and that of China the differences are outweighed by a remarkable number of similarities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Koalas in the land of the pandas: reviewing Australian expatriates' China preparation.
- Author
-
Hutchings, Kate
- Subjects
EXPATRIATION ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,NONCITIZENS ,CULTURAL relations ,CROSS-cultural orientation ,EMPLOYEE selection ,CULTURAL awareness ,FOREIGN workers ,CULTURE shock - Abstract
The unprecedented internationalization of organizations in the past two decades has made the need for cross-cultural awareness, appreciation and understanding in the daily operations of international businesses increasingly prevalent. In both academic circles and the popular press much has been written about the need for individuals to be cross-culturally sensitive, adaptive and responsive when managing across national borders. One of the key aspects identified in literature as contributing towards achieving cross-cultural sensitivity of expatriates is correct selection, pre-departure and post-arrival training and in situ support for the expatriate and his/her family. The research presented in this paper examines the selection, training and support of Australian expatriates in China, a nation that has loomed large in the current and future trading and expansion plans of many Australian corporations since it opened its doors to international commerce in the late 1970s. Based on information gathered through semi-structured interviews conducted with expatriate Australians in Shanghai in 1999 and 2001, the results of this research indicate that, while organizations are recognizing the need to employ Australians who have prior China knowledge, organizational preparation remains negligible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Anthropology and the theorisation of citizenship.
- Author
-
Kipnis, Andrew
- Subjects
CITIZENSHIP ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
In this paper I argue for the importance of theorising citizenship as an independent axis of social inequality in the contemporary world. As a foil, I take two intertwined tendencies within anthropological writings on migration. First is the historical trend of anthropology as a discipline to theorise against the grain of the nation-state. Second is the tendency within anthropological studies of transnationalism and migration to theorise their subject in terms of Marxian understandings of class and exploitation or in terms of the intersecting dimensions of race, class and gender (but not citizenship). The result of these approaches is to elide the role of national boundaries and citizenship as significant theoretical objects in themselves. To build my approach, I contrast the production of migrant 'illegality' in three national contexts: the United States, China and Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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