50 results on '"Ann Genovese"'
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2. Review of: '[Commentary] Recognising and Managing Medical Issues in Neurodiverse Females'
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Ann Genovese
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- 2023
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3. Interoception in Practice: The Gut-Brain Connection
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Ann, Genovese, Trevena, Moore, Pete Charlie, Haynes, and Marilyn, Augustyn
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Male ,Adolescent ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Valproic Acid ,Infant, Newborn ,Brain ,Risperidone ,Clonidine ,Interoception ,Methamphetamine ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Pregnancy ,Child, Preschool ,Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders ,Ferritins ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Female ,Gabapentin ,Melatonin - Abstract
Tony is a five and a half-year-old boy who has been a patient in your primary care practice since he was adopted at birth. He has been treated by a child and adolescent psychiatrist for behavioral concerns starting at age 3 years and has been diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) combined type, anxiety disorder, and insomnia. He presents today with complaints of repeated emesis and refusal to eat or drink over the past 2 weeks and is now dehydrated. Tony was born at 30 weeks' gestational age by vaginal delivery with a birth weight of 4lbs 15oz and was described as minimally responsive at birth. There was known prenatal exposure to tobacco and methamphetamine and inadequate prenatal care. The maternal history is notable for a reported diagnosis of bipolar affective disorder, prostitution, and being unhoused at the time of delivery. Tony received antibiotics after delivery for presumed newborn infections. As an infant, he had kidney reflux, low serum ferritin, insomnia, and failure to thrive. Regarding developmental milestones, Tony was sitting up at 7 months, walking at 14 months, talking at 18 months, and speaking in full sentences by 24 months. When he presented to the psychiatric service at age 3 years, behavioral problems included irritability with destructive rages, excessive fears, separation anxiety, hyperactivity, and impulsivity with a lack of awareness of danger to the extent that he required a safety harness when in public and security locks in the home because of repeated elopements. Tony also had at the time of his initial presentation significant defiance, extreme tantrums, violent aggressive outbursts, cognitive rigidity, repetitive behaviors, resistance to change, frequent nondirected vocalizations, and self-injurious behaviors including slapping himself on the head and biting of his hands and feet. Review of systems includes complaints of frequent abdominal and neck pain, persistent insomnia, night terrors, restrictive eating habits with poor weight gain, and reduced sensitivity to pain. Treatment history included gabapentin and subsequently divalproex for seizure-like episodes (despite negative EEG) described as frequent staring spells with repetitive biting of his lips. Psychotropic medications were risperidone for irritability associated with autism and clonidine extended release for ADHD. He also took melatonin for sleep. During his well-child check at the age of 5 years, Tony is making good progress from a developmental standpoint, has age-appropriate expressive and receptive language skills, is fluent in both English and Spanish, is able to recite the alphabet, counts to 20, has learned to swim, and is demonstrating interest in planets and astrology. He is reported to have a secure attachment to his adoptive parents and is described as emotionally sensitive, caring, kind, considerate, and empathetic. He has good eye contact and can read facial expressions. He is affectionate and protective of his infant sibling, his biological sister, who is also adopted by his parents and now living in the home. Tony made an excellent adjustment to the start of kindergarten and up until this point was responding positively to his psychotropic medication regimen. But then at age five and a half, Tony experienced sudden and unexplained behavioral worsening, which was followed by the onset of recurrent vomiting and refusal to eat or drink. Comprehensive medical workup including upper endoscopy and biopsy resulted in a diagnosis of eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE). What would be your next step?
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- 2022
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4. Feminist Jurisography
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Ann Genovese
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- 2022
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5. On Conducts of Life (A Feminist Jurisography, 2022)
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Ann Genovese
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- 2022
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6. On Personae, 1988 (A Jurisographical Study of Theoretical Relations)
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Ann Genovese
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- 2022
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7. Feminist Jurisography (Introductory Notes)
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Ann Genovese
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- 2022
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8. On Books and Institutions, circa 1970 (A Jurisographical Examination of Relational Practices)
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Ann Genovese
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- 2022
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9. On Place and Displacement, 1962 (A Jurisographical Exercise Concerning Authors and Their Sources)
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Ann Genovese
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- 2022
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10. On Personal Relations, 1949 (A Jurisographical Report)
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Ann Genovese
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- 2022
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11. Thinking with Sovereignty in Australia
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Crystal McKinnon, Joanna Cruikshank, Shaun McVeigh, Ann Genovese, and Julie Evans
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In Australia, those who talk of non-Indigenous sovereignty must offer accounts of Indigenous and non-Indigenous sovereignties and relations between them. In this chapter, we address these concerns through the histories and jurisprudence of rulership, relationship and responsibility, and through a number of historic and contemporary examples. Our purpose in doing so is to describe some practices of sovereignty that shape thinking with sovereignty in Australia. Describing these practices matters because the continual disavowal of Indigenous sovereignty by the Australian state is oppressive and limits the understanding of what it means to take responsibility for the relations between peoples and laws.
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- 2022
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12. Law’s Documents: Authority, Materiality, Aesthetics
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Ann Genovese
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History - Published
- 2023
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13. Autism Spectrum Disorder: a Review of Behavioral and Psychiatric Challenges Across the Lifespan
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Ann Genovese and Kathryn Ellerbeck
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General Medicine - Published
- 2022
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14. Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility
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Julie Evans, Ann Genovese, Alexander Reilly, Patrick Wolfe, Julie Evans, Ann Genovese, Alexander Reilly, Patrick Wolfe
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- 2012
15. The Autism Spectrum: Behavioral, Psychiatric and Genetic Associations
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Ann Genovese and Merlin G. Butler
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Genetics ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) consists of a group of heterogeneous genetic neurobehavioral disorders associated with developmental impairments in social communication skills and stereotypic, rigid or repetitive behaviors. We review common behavioral, psychiatric and genetic associations related to ASD. Autism affects about 2% of children with 4:1 male-to-female ratio and a heritability estimate between 70 and 90%. The etiology of ASD involves a complex interplay between inheritance and environmental factors influenced by epigenetics. Over 800 genes and dozens of genetic syndromes are associated with ASD. Novel gene–protein interactions with pathway and molecular function analyses have identified at least three functional pathways including chromatin modeling, Wnt, Notch and other signaling pathways and metabolic disturbances involving neuronal growth and dendritic spine profiles. An estimated 50% of individuals with ASD are diagnosed with chromosome deletions or duplications (e.g., 15q11.2, BP1-BP2, 16p11.2 and 15q13.3), identified syndromes (e.g., Williams, Phelan-McDermid and Shprintzen velocardiofacial) or single gene disorders. Behavioral and psychiatric conditions in autism impacted by genetics influence clinical evaluations, counseling, diagnoses, therapeutic interventions and treatment approaches. Pharmacogenetics testing is now possible to help guide the selection of psychotropic medications to treat challenging behaviors or co-occurring psychiatric conditions commonly seen in ASD. In this review of the autism spectrum disorder, behavioral, psychiatric and genetic observations and associations relevant to the evaluation and treatment of individuals with ASD are discussed.
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- 2023
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16. Modus Vivendi
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Shaun McVeigh, Ann Genovese, and Mark McMillan
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- 2021
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17. Exploring Three Core Psychological Elements When Treating Adolescents on the Autism Spectrum: Self-Awareness, Gender Identity, and Sexuality
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Ann Genovese
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Mind–body problem ,autism ,Human sexuality ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Pediatrics ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Interpersonal relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,Psychology ,Medicine ,gender identity ,Adaptation (computer science) ,Psychiatry ,Gender identity ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,medicine.disease ,sexuality ,Self-awareness ,Autism ,adolescence ,psychological ,Narrative review ,business ,self-awareness ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
For those growing up on the autism spectrum, adolescence is associated with unique challenges. This narrative review explores three core psychological elements for clinicians to consider when treating adolescents on the autism spectrum: self-awareness, gender identity, and sexuality. Developmental tasks of adolescence include adaptation to a maturing mind and body, increased expectations for independence, and the ability to establish satisfying interpersonal relationships. What are welcome opportunities for non-autistic peers can become nearly insurmountable hurdles for autistic teens, which, in turn, could lead to crisis, particularly if skills needed for success in managing these tasks have not yet been acquired.
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- 2021
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18. Feminist Jurisography : Law, History, Writing
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Ann Genovese and Ann Genovese
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- Feminist jurisprudence
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This book offers a jurisprudential meditation on and methodological performance of how feminist and legal thought come into relation. This book is about the conduct of one's scholarship and why it requires examination.Across six essays, the book reintroduces official and unofficial jurisprudence writing of the late 20th century to show how disciplinary methods were transformed, and how relations between people and place, and between law and humanities, were transferred from the periphery to the centre of contemporary scholarship. To demonstrate this story, Feminist Jurisography experiments with genre, style, and form to historicise the relationship of a feminist jurisprudent to her own sources, methods, and interlocutors; and remind that it was feminist intellectuals from 1949 onwards who altered conducts of interdisciplinary scholarship in ways that are underacknowledged today. It exemplifies why naming a practice for yourself is an acknowledgment of relations of difference, collaboration, and inheritance, but also a performance of the feminist tradition of intellectual self-assertion that the book explores.The book will be a useful resource for scholars and students of law and humanities, feminism, and history, and of value to a general audience interested in feminist ideas. The book will benefit contemporary conversations about the history and status of feminist contributions to these fields.
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- 2023
19. Clinical Assessment, Genetics, and Treatment Approaches in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
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Ann Genovese and Merlin G. Butler
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0301 basic medicine ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,assessment ,autism ,Comorbidity ,Review ,ASD ,Catalysis ,Inorganic Chemistry ,lcsh:Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetic engineering ,0302 clinical medicine ,medications ,syndromes ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,genetics ,Epigenetics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Medical diagnosis ,Molecular Biology ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Spectroscopy ,treatment ,business.industry ,Organic Chemistry ,causes ,General Medicine ,Heritability ,medicine.disease ,Computer Science Applications ,030104 developmental biology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Etiology ,Autism ,heterogeneity ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Pharmacogenetics ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) consists of a genetically heterogenous group of neurobehavioral disorders characterized by impairment in three behavioral domains including communication, social interaction, and stereotypic repetitive behaviors. ASD affects more than 1% of children in Western societies, with diagnoses on the rise due to improved recognition, screening, clinical assessment, and diagnostic testing. We reviewed the role of genetic and metabolic factors which contribute to the causation of ASD with the use of new genetic technology. Up to 40 percent of individuals with ASD are now diagnosed with genetic syndromes or have chromosomal abnormalities including small DNA deletions or duplications, single gene conditions, or gene variants and metabolic disturbances with mitochondrial dysfunction. Although the heritability estimate for ASD is between 70 and 90%, there is a lower molecular diagnostic yield than anticipated. A likely explanation may relate to multifactorial causation with etiological heterogeneity and hundreds of genes involved with a complex interplay between inheritance and environmental factors influenced by epigenetics and capabilities to identify causative genes and their variants for ASD. Behavioral and psychiatric correlates, diagnosis and genetic evaluation with testing are discussed along with psychiatric treatment approaches and pharmacogenetics for selection of medication to treat challenging behaviors or comorbidities commonly seen in ASD. We emphasize prioritizing treatment based on targeted symptoms for individuals with ASD, as treatment will vary from patient to patient based on diagnosis, comorbidities, causation, and symptom severity.
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- 2020
20. A Conversation with Louise Anderson and Ian Irving (Former Native Title Registrars, Federal Court of Australia)
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Kim Rubenstein and Ann Genovese
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Tribunal ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Federal court ,Law ,Conversation ,Chief executive officer ,Supreme court ,media_common - Abstract
On 27 February 2017, Kim Rubenstein and Ann Genovese interviewed Louise Anderson and Ian Irving for the Court as Archive Project. Louise and Ian are former Registrars of the Federal Court of Australia. Louise was the first Native Title Registrar appointed in 1998 and Ian was appointed a Registrar in 2003 and became the second Native Title Registrar in 2005. At the time of the interview, both worked at the Victorian Supreme Court, Louise as the Chief Executive Officer and Ian as a Judicial Registrar. In 2019, Louise Anderson returned to the Federal Court in the role of National Director, Court and Tribunal Services.
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- 2019
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21. A Conversation with Warwick Soden (Principal Registrar and Chief Executive Officer, Federal Court of Australia)
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Kim Rubenstein and Ann Genovese
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Archivist ,Principal (commercial law) ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Federal court ,Conversation ,Administration (government) ,Chief executive officer ,Management ,media_common - Abstract
On 28 January 2016, Kim Rubenstein and Ann Genovese interviewed Warwick Soden for the Court as Archive Project, at the Principal Registry in Sydney. Mr Soden is the Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Court of Australia, a position he has held since 1994. In the full interview, we discuss the status and management of court records over time, as well as Warwick’s experiences in undertaking his duties in Court Administration, over the period of his career. The Federal Court archivist, Lyn Nasir, was also present.
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- 2019
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22. A Matter of Records: The Federal Court, The National Archives and ‘The National Estate’ in the 1970s
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Ann Genovese
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Political science ,Federal court ,Law ,National archives ,Estate - Published
- 2019
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23. The Court as Archive
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Trish Luker, Ann Genovese, Kim Rubenstein, Genovese, A, Luker, T, and Rubenstein, K
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Law ,Political science - Abstract
In particular, this collection addresses what it means for contemporary Australian superior courts of record to not only have constitutional and procedural duties to documents as a matter of law, but also to acknowledge obligations to care ...
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- 2019
24. Electroencephalogram (EEG) for children with autism spectrum disorder: evidential considerations for routine screening
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Gerald P. Kozlowski, Alexandra J. Roark, Ann Genovese, Erin K. MacInerney, Ronald J. Swatzyna, and Nash N. Boutros
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Electroencephalography ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Child and adolescent psychiatry ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Evidence-based medicine ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,business ,Developmental regression ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Routine electroencephalograms (EEG) are not recommended as a screen for epileptic discharges (EDs) in current practice guidelines for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, a review of the research from the last three decades suggests that this practice should be reevaluated. The significant comorbidity between epilepsy and ASD, its shared biological pathways, risk for developmental regression, and cognitive challenges demand increased clinical investigation requiring a proactive approach. This review highlights and explains the need for screening EEGs for children with ASD. EEG would assist in differentiating EDs from core features of ASD and could be included in a comprehensive assessment. EEG also meets the demand for evidence-based precision medicine and focused care for the individual, especially when overlapping processes of development are present.
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- 2018
25. Deletion of TOP3B Is Associated with Cognitive Impairment and Facial Dysmorphism
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Ann Genovese, Merlin G. Butler, and Carolyn S Kaufman
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0301 basic medicine ,Genetics ,Mechanism (biology) ,Chromosome ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Pathogenesis ,Fragile X syndrome ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine ,Autism ,Cognitive impairment ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Deletions of different regions of chromosome 22q11 have been extensively characterized in the literature, with a recent review outlining common deletions with a standardized system proposed for classification and nomenclature. The genotype-phenotype relationships have not been sufficiently elucidated for these deletions, and it remains unclear which specific genes play the dominant roles in producing associated clinical features. Several deletions involve entirely distinct regions of chromosome 22q11 but do not overlap, suggesting that a number of different genes contribute to the clinical features. Studies of patients with small deletions involving only 1 or 2 genes may provide more convincing evidence for the impact of individual genes on the observed phenotype. In this case report, we present a 12-year-old female with autism, cognitive impairment, dysmorphic features, and behavioral concerns and a 268-kb deletion of chromosome 22q11.22 including TOP3B, the only recognized disease-causing gene in the deletion. The mechanism of pathogenesis contributing significantly to our patient's clinical findings may relate to interaction between TOP3B and fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP), an mRNA-binding protein that regulates translation and is altered in fragile X syndrome, a condition involving developmental delay, learning disability, and autism. All these features are recognized in our patient.
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- 2016
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26. Low Dose Loxapine: Neuromotor Side Effects and Tolerability in Autism Spectrum Disorders
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Ann Genovese, Jessica A. Hellings, Mandar Jadhav, Seema Jain, and Sneha Jadhav
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Adult ,Male ,Dyskinesia, Drug-Induced ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,medicine.drug_class ,Loxapine ,Atypical antipsychotic ,Tardive dyskinesia ,Akathisia ,Young Adult ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Psychiatry ,Retrospective Studies ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Tolerability ,Dyskinesia ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Autism ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Akathisia, Drug-Induced ,medicine.drug - Abstract
New and repurposed drugs are urgently needed to treat individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Loxapine (LOX) in low doses of 5-15 mg/day resembles an atypical antipsychotic (Stahl 2002 ). Our recent open pilot study of LOX found significant behavioral improvements and overall weight neutrality in 16 adolescents and adults with ASD. The present study examined an outpatient sample for LOX neuromotor tolerability.Consecutive outpatients with Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th ed, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR) ASD diagnoses receiving LOX were examined for tardive dyskinesia (TD) and extrapyramidal side effects (EPS) using the Dyskinesia Identification System: Condensed User Scale (DISCUS), and for akathisia using the Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale. Data were also then retrospectively extracted from clinic charts regarding age, gender, diagnoses, LOX doses, treatment duration, concomitant medications, and LOX dosage reductions.Thirty-four subjects (25 male, 9 female) participated. Mean age was 23.4 years at LOX initiation (range 8-52). Thirteen subjects (38.2%) received loxapine for ≥5 years. Mean LOX dose was 8.9 mg/day (range 5-30 mg) and mean duration was 4.2 years (range 0.8-13). Fourteen subjects (41.2%) received concomitant atypical antipsychotics. Benztropine was prescribed in 5 of 34 subjects (14.7%). Three subjects manifested tics at baseline, but lower final DISCUS scores. Subject 26, with Prader-Willi syndrome, manifested TD. Apart from LOX 5 mg daily he received paroxetine 40 mg daily, which reduces LOX metabolism significantly. Akathisia objective scores were positive in 6 subjects (17.6%): Subject 2 scored 3 (pacing was present also at baseline); subjects 6, 7, and 11 each scored 1; and subjects 18 and 23 each scored 2. Six of 9 subjects (66.7%) with expressive language were positive for subjective akathisia.Low dose LOX was well tolerated, with lower than expected TD rates. This confirms clinical resemblance to an atypical antipsychotic. Individuals with neuromuscular problems including Prader-Willi Syndrome receiving LOX require close monitoring. Further study of LOX in ASD is warranted.
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- 2015
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27. Nineteen eighty three: A jurisographic report onCommonwealth v Tasmania
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Ann Genovese and Shaun McVeigh
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Law ,Jurisprudence ,Commonwealth ,Sociology ,Scholarly work - Abstract
The question we ask in this essay is quite direct: did the Tasmanian Dams case change the conduct of jurisprudence in Australia? To reflect on that question, we stand to the side of the review of the events of 1983 as constitutional decision, and present the jurisprudence of Dams and 1983 in terms of the incidents of legal thinking in the conduct of the office of the jurisprudent. Writing as jurisographers, we reflect historically on the conduct of office of the jurist and jurisprudent, and the writing of jurisprudence. Our account here provides a brief chronicle and record of the patchwork of law projects and engagements that pattern the events of Dams into the scholarly work of jurists in Australian universities.
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- 2015
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28. Critical decision 1983: rememberingCommonwealth v Tasmania
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Ann Genovese
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Political science ,Law ,Commonwealth ,High Court - Abstract
This special edition of Griffith Law Review began its life as a symposium to mark the thirtieth anniversary of the 1983 High Court decision Commonwealth v Tasmania.11 Commonwealth v Tasmania (1983)...
- Published
- 2015
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29. On The Liberal Promise: A Conversation
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Margaret Thornton and Ann Genovese
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Gender Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Sociology and Political Science ,Process (engineering) ,Jurisprudence ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Law ,Conversation ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,Sociology ,media_common - Abstract
Margaret Thornton's The Liberal Promise was published in 1990.1 In this interview, conducted at the ANU College of Law on 3 February 2015, Margaret Thornton discusses with Ann Genovese three broad, and interrelated, questions. One is the achievement of The Liberal Promise, the conditions of its production and publication and Margaret's experience as a feminist scholar through that process. Another is how the book contributes and speaks to an Australian feminist jurisprudence. The third concerns the difficulties of addressing the obligations of our own recent feminist past — when it is so close, yet also difficult to see and hard to record.
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- 2015
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30. 1. Sovereignty Frontiers of Possibility
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Julie Evans, Ann Genovese, Alexander Reilly, and Patrick Wolfe
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- 2017
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31. Bad Weed
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Amad Din, Karen E. Moeller, Ann Genovese, Sadiq Naveed, Todd Mekles, Nischal Sager, and Andrew Demo
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Psychosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,Synthetic cannabinoids ,medicine ,Cannabis ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Weed ,Psychiatry ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2019
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32. Critical decision, 1982: rememberingKoowarta v Bjelke-Petersen
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Ann Genovese
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Theory of Forms ,Law ,Jurisprudence ,Sociology ,High Court ,Event (philosophy) - Abstract
This article introduces the writings of jurists, lawyers, scholars and activists who were invited to review and remember the 1982 High Court decision Koowarta v Bjelke-Petersen (‘Koowarta’). The judgment is important doctrinally and is often cited on the legal record. What is less familiar is how Koowarta is also a public trial, an event of law that carries many different accounts of how jurisprudence is experienced in the life of a community. This introduction situates Koowarta as a public trial, and examines the ways in which the articles in this special issue of Griffith Law Review contribute to this account of jurisprudence. In doing so, it argues that there is necessity and purpose in making visible the histories of an Australian jurisprudence as Australian, and that histories of place are not extricable from our histories of living with law. The article also argues that paying attention to the forms and methods of the writing of the history of jurisprudence – described here as ‘jurisography’ – is an...
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- 2014
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33. Inheriting and Inhabiting the Pleasures and Duties of Our Own Existence: The Second Sex and Feminist Jurisprudence
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Ann Genovese
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Self-fashioning ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Jurisprudence ,Gender studies ,Historiography ,The arts ,Feminism ,Gender Studies ,Publishing ,Law ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,Sociology ,Inheritance ,business ,Relation (history of concept) ,media_common - Abstract
This essay considers the relation between the conduct and the personae of the feminist, the historian and the jurisprudent; and, the writing of history and of jurisprudence. It does so treating part of the relation between historiography and jurisprudence as engaged as an art of selffashioning, in the preparation for an 'institutionalised social office'. The immediate purpose of this essay is to show how these arts of self fashioning came to be inherited by Australian feminism. In doing so, I will assert the centrality of Simone De Beauvoir's The Second Sex in that tradition. I suggest that acknowledging this practice and its inheritance is important when considering how we might live productively the plurality of institutional life and the life lived - in law, and for our present.
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- 2013
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34. Australian Communist Party of Australia v The Commonwealth: Histories of Australian Legalism
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Ann Genovese
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History ,Law ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Opposition (politics) ,Commonwealth ,Narrative ,Ideology ,High Court ,Democracy ,Communism ,media_common - Abstract
In this article I structure legalism as a device to interpret how 1951 is remembered in law, in order to show what legal orthodoxies meant in their own time, and how that shifts to a different form of legalism in our own. In doing so, I will argue that the idea of legalism famously produced by the High Court judgment in 1951 has shifted its meaning as much as the ideological support of and opposition to communism that were expressed in the case. I will suggest that this history requires conscious incorporation in the commemorative narratives of ‘democracy vs. communism’.
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- 2013
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35. National Legislation and Transnational Feminism
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Ann Genovese
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Gender Studies ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Cultural studies ,Women's studies ,Legislation ,Human sexuality ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Transnational feminism ,Feminism - Published
- 2011
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36. Partial Deletion of Chromosome 1p31.1 Including only the Neuronal Growth Regulator 1 Gene in Two Siblings
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Merlin G. Butler, Ann Genovese, and Devin M. Cox
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Genetics ,Neuronal growth regulator 1 ,Microarray ,Chromosome ,Biology ,Neuropsychiatry ,Hypotonia ,Clinical report ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Gene ,Genetics (clinical) ,NEGR1 gene - Abstract
We present two siblings with a partial deletion of chromosome 1p31.1 involving only the neuronal growth regulator 1 (NEGR1) gene. The siblings had a history of neuropsychiatric and behavioral problems, learning difficulties, hypotonia, mild aortic root dilatation, hypermobility, and scoliosis. This is the first clinical report of a microdeletion of chromosome 1p31.1 involving only the NEGR1 gene.
- Published
- 2015
37. Sovereignty : Frontiers of Possibility
- Author
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Julie Evans, Ann Genovese, Alexander Reilly, Patrick Wolfe, Julie Evans, Ann Genovese, Alexander Reilly, and Patrick Wolfe
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- Sovereignty--Case studies, Sovereignty
- Abstract
Unparalleled in its breadth and scope, Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility brings together some of the freshest and most original writing on sovereignty being done today. Sovereignty's many dimensions are approached from multiple perspectives and experiences. It is viewed globally as an international question; locally as an issue contested between Natives and settlers; and individually as survival in everyday life. Through all this diversity and across the many different national contexts from which the contributors write, the chapters in this collection address each other, staging a running conversation that truly internationalizes this most fundamental of political issues.In the contemporary world, the age-old question of sovereignty remains a key terrain of political and intellectual contestation, for those whose freedom it promotes as well as for those whose freedom it limits or denies. The law is by no means the only language in which to think through, imagine, and enact other ways of living justly together. Working both within and beyond the confines of the law at once recognizes and challenges its thrall, opening up pathways to alternative possibilities, to other ways of determining and self-determining our collective futures. The contributors, Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike, converse across disciplinary boundaries, responding to critical developments within history, politics, anthropology, philosophy, and law. The ability of disciplines to connect with each other—and with experiences lived outside the halls of scholarship—is essential to understanding the past and how it enables and fetters the pursuit of justice in the present. Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility offers a reinvigorated politics that understands the power of sovereignty, explores strategies for resisting its lived effects, and imagines other ways of governing our inescapably coexistent communities.Contributors: Antony Anghie, Larissa Behrendt, John Docker, Peter Fitzpatrick, Kent McNeil, Richard Pennell, Alexander Reilly, Ben Silverstein, Nin Tomas, Davina B. Woods.
- Published
- 2013
38. Nineteen Eighty Three: A Jurisographic Report on Commonwealth v Tasmania
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Shaun McVeigh and Ann Genovese
- Subjects
Jurisprudence ,Law ,Political science ,Commonwealth ,Scholarly work - Abstract
The question we ask in this essay is quite direct: did the Tasmanian Dams case change the conduct of jurisprudence in Australia? To reflect on that question, we stand to the side of the review of the events of 1983 as constitutional decision, and present the jurisprudence of Dams and 1983 in terms of the incidents of legal thinking in the conduct of the office of the jurisprudent. Writing as jurisographers, we reflect historically on the conduct of office of the jurist and jurisprudent, and the writing of jurisprudence. Our account here provides a brief chronicle and record of the patchwork of law projects and engagements that pattern the events of Dams into the scholarly work of jurists in Australian universities.
- Published
- 2015
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39. 'Is It Her Hormones?'
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Ann Genovese, Marilyn Augustyn, Teri Smith, and Holly Kramer
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Paranoid Disorders ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bipolar Disorder ,Adolescent ,Family support ,media_common.quotation_subject ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Psychiatric history ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Bipolar disorder ,Psychiatry ,Suicidal ideation ,media_common ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mood ,Feeling ,Homicidal ideation ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Anxiety ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Polycystic Ovary Syndrome ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
CASE Beth, whom you have cared for in your primary care practice since she was born, is a 15-year-old adolescent girl with no prior psychiatric history who developed significant symptoms of clinical depression, associated with self-injurious behavior (cutting on wrists, arms, and thighs). She denied any known precipitant for her depression.She is a ninth grade honors student in the gifted program at a local high school and is described as a talented musician, playing multiple musical instruments as well as soccer and basketball. She has good family support, was sociable, and had several close friends. She denied any history of trauma and denied ever using recreational drugs or other mood-altering substances.At this visit, she reported feeling "sad and anxious." Family history was significant for maternal depression, which persisted through her teens and twenties. Her older sister had been diagnosed with Social Anxiety Disorder. Beth reported anhedonia, fatigue and irritable mood, lack of motivation, impaired concentration, and anxiety related to failing grades.You decide to begin medication because of the severity of her symptoms, and 1 week after starting fluoxetine 10 mg, she reportedly overdosed on an unknown quantity of acetaminophen. Within a few days of switching to escitalopram (due to persistent gastrointestinal complaints while taking fluoxetine), she developed homicidal ideation. She reported feeling grandiose, empowered, invincible, elated, and "crazy," although she never demonstrated or endorsed psychotic symptoms. She became fixated upon the idea that she could kill someone and "get away with it." At the time she tried to suffocate a peer with her hands, she was described as having "a glazed over look in her eyes." Moods were now described as alternating between depressed and elated, with mood shifts occurring every few days. These symptoms did not improve after the antidepressant medication was discontinued.Subsequently, patient was admitted for acute psychiatric care, at which time she was described as depressed, but with an "expansive and irritable" mood, and with obsessive suicidal ideation. She had developed a plan to hang herself in the home. She started to believe that her mother was trying to give her "poison." She reported panic attacks and said that she wanted to be in the hospital where she could feel "safe." She claimed to have an "entity inside of her body who was a bully" and who was "taking over her body" and stated that he put her hand over her peer's mouth, as she watched.Psychological testing included the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-Adolescent, showed significant paranoia, bizarre mentation, and poor reality testing. Along with interview and observation, it was determined that patient met criteria for the DSM-IV-TR clinical diagnosis of Other Specified Bipolar Disorder, with psychotic features.Aripiprazole was initiated at a dosage of 2 mg; however, moods were still described as fluctuating between extremes every few hours. It was discontinued after reaching 5 mg due to affective blunting. Risperidone 0.5 mg twice daily helped patient to feel and act "more like herself"; however, she continued to report significant depression. The addition of lamotrigine 25 mg daily, in addition to individual Dialectical Behavior Therapy, finally led to improvement of mood and a gradual return of her normal baseline, with reportedly stable emotional, social, and academic functioning.The patient's mother remained convinced that this adolescent's mood instability was caused by underlying hormonal problems so you refer her to endocrinology. Beth developed puberty at age 8, with menses occurring on average of twice yearly. She was found to have elevated free testosterone level of 8.6 (reference range, 1.2-7.5). She was of normal weight (body mass index = 21.85 kg/m) and did not manifest acne, male pattern hair thinning, or hirsutism. Thyroid functions, 17-OH progesterone, follicle-stimulating hormone/luteinizing hormone, and estradiol were within normal limits. Prolactin elevation (46.3) was assumed to be due to Risperidone. Patient refused ovarian ultrasound.After starting oral contraceptives to establish monthly menses, patient's emotional and behavioral symptoms continue to remain stable. After Beth decided on her own to discontinue psychotropic medications, she continued for 17 months following her initial visit to remain free of neuropsychiatric symptoms.Now that her symptoms seem resolved; you wonder what the medical diagnosis for Beth was? You wonder if "hormones" may have caused or contributed to her psychiatric presentation.
- Published
- 2016
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40. The battered body
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Ann Genovese
- Subjects
Gender Studies ,Women's studies ,Gender studies ,Sociology - Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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41. Book reviews
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Kay Schaffer, Jan Kociumbas, Melanie Oppenheimer, Ann Genovese, Alison Mackinnon, Joe Rich, Kwok Wei Leng, Sarah Ferber, Chris McConville, Noel MClachlan, Alan Platt, Sean Brawley, Richard Bosworth, Laksiri Jayasuriya, Alan Atkinson, Mike Berry, Diane Menghetti, Phillip Deery, Dawn May, Chris Waters, Alan Ryan, Robin Gerster, David Lowe, Muriel Porter, W.G. Mcminn, Morris Graham, Grace Karskens, and John Salmond
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History - Published
- 1996
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42. Sovereignty
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Alexander Reilly, Patrick Wolfe, Julie Evans, and Ann Genovese
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Power (social and political) ,Scholarship ,Politics ,Sovereignty ,Thrall ,Law ,Political science ,Environmental ethics ,Economic Justice ,Discipline ,Indigenous - Abstract
Unparalleled in its breadth and scope, Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility brings together some of the freshest and most original writing on sovereignty being done today. Sovereignty's many dimensions are approached from multiple perspectives and experiences. It is viewed globally as an international question; locally as an issue contested between Natives and settlers; and individually as survival in everyday life. Through all this diversity and across the many different national contexts from which the contributors write, the chapters in this collection address each other, staging a running conversation that truly internationalises this most fundamental of political issues. In the contemporary world, the age-old question of sovereignty remains a key terrain of political and intellectual contestation, for those whose freedom it promotes as well as for those whose freedom it limits or denies. The law is by no means the only language in which to think through, imagine, and enact other ways of living justly together. Working both within and beyond the confines of the law at once recognises and challenges its thrall, opening up pathways to alternative possibilities, to other ways of determining and self-determining our collective futures. The contributors, Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike, converse across disciplinary boundaries, responding to critical developments within history, politics, anthropology, philosophy, and law. The ability of disciplines to connect with each other - and with experiences lived outside the halls of scholarship - is essential to understanding the past and how it enables and fetters the pursuit of justice in the present. Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility offers a reinvigorated politics that understands the power of sovereignty, explores strategies for resisting its lived effects, and imagines other ways of governing our inescapably coexistent communities. Contributors: Antony Anghie, Larissa Behrendt, John Docker, Peter Fitzpatrick, Kent McNeil, Richard Pennell, Alexander Reilly, Ben Silverstein, Nin Tomas, Davina B. Woods
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- 2012
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43. Sovereignty
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Julie Evans, Ann Genovese, Alexander Reilly, and Patrick Wolfe
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- 2012
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44. How to Write Feminist Legal History: Some Notes on Genealogical Method, Family Law, and the Politics of the Present
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Ann Genovese
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Politics ,Law ,Legal history ,Sociology ,Family law - Published
- 2012
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45. Occasions and Events: Australian Feminist Jurisprudence at 25
- Author
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Ann Genovese
- Subjects
Gender Studies ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Sociology and Political Science ,Jurisprudence ,Gender studies ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,Sociology ,Law - Published
- 2015
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46. A Radical Prequel: Historicising the Concept of Gendered Law in Australia
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Ann Genovese
- Subjects
Law ,Sociology - Published
- 2010
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47. Worlds turned upside down
- Author
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Ann Genovese
- Subjects
Gender Studies ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Anthropology ,Cultural studies ,Gender studies ,Human sexuality ,Sociology ,Law ,Feminism - Abstract
69
- Published
- 2010
48. Family histories - John Hirst v. feminism, in the Family Court of Australia
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Ann Genovese
- Subjects
Gender Studies ,Politics ,Dismissal ,Women's studies ,Family court ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Other Studies in Human Society ,Feminism - Abstract
I am a child of the 1970s. I grew up in Adelaide in the Dunstan decade. My earliest political recollection is of my parents discussing the dismissal of Whitlam in 1975. I believed university educat...
- Published
- 2006
49. Rights for Aborigines
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Ann Genovese and Bain Attwood
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Industrial relations - Published
- 2005
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50. Unravelling Identities: Performance and Criticism in Australian Feminisms
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Ann Genovese
- Subjects
05 social sciences ,Gender studies ,Performative utterance ,Romance ,Feminism ,0506 political science ,Liberalism (international relations) ,Gender Studies ,Politics ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,050903 gender studies ,Cultural studies ,050602 political science & public administration ,Women's studies ,Criticism ,Sociology ,0509 other social sciences - Abstract
The following article is an exploration of the non-linear and non-unified identities that make up Australian feminism. The main premise is that the divergent strands of rational and romantic thought, central to the project of liberalism, are inherent in the characterization of Australian feminisms. As a result, there have always been tensions between feminists, centred around politics of self-identification. These tensions continue to exist, but to be articulated in different ways in different decades as a result of the ever changing relationships between feminist, state and media/public discourses. These ideas are explored through comparing two key moments in our recent past in which differences between feminisms were declared. These two events – the Mary Daly visit to Australia to promote Gyn/Ecology in 1981, and the debate engendered by Helen Garner's The First Stone in 1995 – are taken to be performative metaphors through which the continuities and discontinuities of the nature of Australian feminisms can be subjectively explored.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
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