3,397 research outputs found

    Introduction: changing lives and new challenges

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    How is women's employment shaped by family and domestic responsibilities? This book, written by leading experts in the field, examines twenty five years of change in women's employment and addresses the challenges facing women today. This book offers an innovative analysis of how global changes including new migration processes, educational expansion, transnational labour markets, technological advances, and the global economy affect women's labour market experiences. It tackles issues relevant for future change, including gender inequalities and ethnic diversities and confronts such contentious questions as what work-life balance means? This book provides new empirical research that advances our understanding of the challenges posed by women's employment in our changing society and draws out the policy lessons that could improve economic and social well-being

    From Research to Practice Change–Achieving Adoption through Regionally Packaged Technology and Farm Systems

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    The rate and extent of adoption of grazing systems technology is limited by the relevance of recommendations and the complexity of integrating new practices into farming systems. This paper describes how, through development of regional information packages, a national project is enhancing adoption of the outputs from research investment. Every farm has unique goals, soils, landscape, enterprise setup and existing practices. When making investment decisions, farmers consider the cost and potential impact of each option compared to other competing options, the fit into their existing management philosophy and other changes necessary to realise the potential benefit. Overlaying this, farmers consider whether the innovation applies to their region, and commonly cite lack of regional applicability as a reason not to adopt. We argue that development of regional packages is a powerful means of targeting the needs unique to each region. Such packages can include recommendations from whole-farm system experiments, modelling and case studies which tell the full story around profit, risk, natural resource management and lifestyle impacts of change options, and adviser training for supporting farmer adoption decision processes. By focusing on communicating how research outputs are relevant to local farming systems, utilising local input, regional packages have the capacity to change the way R,D & E is conducted and delivered, accelerating delivery of industry and environmental benefits

    The ISCIP Analyst, Volume VIII, Issue 1

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    This repository item contains a single issue of The ISCIP Analyst, an analytical review journal published from 1996 to 2010 by the Boston University Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and Policy

    King Gough : Madness Or Magnificence? A Retrospective View Of The 1975 APSA Conference

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    In 2000, I chose to mark the 25th anniversary by a personal project to complement the formal conference on the topic of the Whitlam years held later in the year on the specific anniversary. As President of APSA in that momentous year, I chaired the committee which organised the conference that year, held amid damp conditions at the Canberra CAE. The conference occurred in the hothouse environment of July 1975, a period of unprecedented levels of political uncertainty. Indeed, the very title of the conference, "The First Thousand Days of Labor" devised by John Power inadvertently begged a momentous question: Would Whitlam last beyond his first thousand days? Answer - just, 1074. The attendance at the conference, over 400 including the down-town public servants, was also abnormally large. Finally, the format of the conference, squeezing all contributors into a straight-jacket of a single theme, was also an innovation - and never repeated because some vocal groups felt disenfranchised by its intellectual parochialism. These special characteristics of the conference justify this exercise in retrospectivity. It fits into a theme of reviewing Australian federalism since 1975 was such a cataclysmic year. It was a mirror of where the Whitlam government was taking the public policy agenda - towards institutional reforms in the public service, reaching into local and regional communities, creating new slants on federalism and engaging in an activist and independent foreign policy (not least with respect to East Timor). It was also engaging the scholarly attention of a wide variety of participants not normally much in evidence at APSA conferences, including senior administrators, serving politicians journalists, union officials and ministerial staff. Some of these have faded into relative obscurity or joined their ancestors, but the list of - then/now - occupations in the Appendices suggest an unusual diversity of backgrounds at the time and subsequent to the conference. I decided to send the conference contributors a copy of their original papers and respond to the questions of how much things have changed since they wrote and how accurate were any predictions and analyses they offered. What did the differences tell us about thet state of the discipline of political science then and now? The papers are arranged as they were in 1975 - in four sections : "Government, Parliament and Parliamentarians", "Machinery of Government", "Federalism" and "Public Policy". A fifth section, on international relations could not be sustained in this retrospective as few authors could be contacted who had any interest in reviewing what they had written that long ago and many had not survived. Hard copies of this retrospective were tabled at the 2000 APSA conference. The original 1975 papers were photocopied and bound into two volumes with the modest technology then available and can still be found in many university libraries which received free copies from APSA. They will be catalogued as "The First Thousand Days of Labor" perhaps with attributions to compilers Scott, Richardson, Power and Wettenhall

    Evolution and Human Nature: Comparing Honors and Traditional Pedagogies for the New Science of the Mind

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    A class on evolutionary psychology can take many forms but always involves an interdisciplinary approach because of the subject matter and topics covered. In this paper, we describe and compare three different pedagogical techniques we have used to teach the topic of evolutionary psychology; two are honors seminars and one a traditional lecture-style course

    The ISCIP Analyst, Volume VIII, Issue 4

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    This repository item contains a single issue of The ISCIP Analyst, an analytical review journal published from 1996 to 2010 by the Boston University Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and Policy

    Evolution and Human Nature: Comparing Honors and Traditional Pedagogies for the New Science of the Mind

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    A class on evolutionary psychology can take many forms but always involves an interdisciplinary approach because of the subject matter and topics covered. In this paper, we describe and compare three different pedagogical techniques we have used to teach the topic of evolutionary psychology; two are honors seminars and one a traditional lecture-style course
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