425 results
Search Results
2. Visitors' wayfinding strategies and navigational aids in unfamiliar urban environment.
- Author
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Vaez, Sima, Burke, Matthew, and Yu, Rongrong
- Subjects
URBAN ecology (Sociology) ,URBAN planners ,PEDESTRIANS - Abstract
Copyright of Tourism Geographies 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
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Networks, collaboration and knowledge exchange in creative industries: a comparative analysis of Brisbane and Shenzhen.
- Author
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Wang, Yi, Hearn, Greg, Mathews, Shane, and Hou, Jenny
- Subjects
INFORMATION sharing ,CULTURAL industries ,ACADEMIC-industrial collaboration ,REGIONAL development ,CITIES & towns ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
This paper explores an expanding area of policy interest: the networks and collaboration mechanisms between universities and creative industries actors in cities. While much is known about such relationships in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM), they remain taken for granted and under researched in the creative industries. We argue that they are pivotal for different domains of research and policy, notably, cultural policy, higher education, innovation systems, and regional development. To that end, this paper aims to open up consideration of these relationships which we argue 1) stimulate innovation and 2) make broader contributions to local communities and economic regeneration via a creative economy approach. Using the Triple Helix framework, we explore university-industry-governemnt relationships and knowledge exchange mechanisms via a comparative analysis of two creative industries case cities: Shenzhen, China and Brisbane, Australia. Despite differences in certain important respects the two cities have both adopted creative industries policy frameworks. We found important differences between the cases in the roles and relative strength of the three sectoral actors. This study also shows a need for strategic incentives to foster collective capacity and governance interventions as a push to broker relationships that were not there before. Focussing on boundary spanning we also argue that cultural policy should have formal mechanisms and informal interactions to build a sustainable innovation ecosystem based on knowledge exchange. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Multimodal joint fantasising as a category‑implicative and category‑relations‑implicative action in online multi‑party interaction.
- Author
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Sinkeviciute, Valeria
- Subjects
SOCIAL action ,SKI resorts ,SOCIAL services ,INTERSUBJECTIVITY ,PRAGMATICS ,COINTEGRATION - Abstract
Drawing on interactional pragmatics and membership categorisation analysis, with a focus on (un)accomplished intersubjectivity, categories and social action, this paper explores some new aspects of multimodal joint fantasising in online interaction. The data for this study comes from the public Facebook event page regarding the 'ski field opening' in Brisbane, a sub-tropical city in Australia. The first part of the analysis examines how intersubjectivity is accomplished through joint fantasising co-constructed among the posters, serving entertainment purposes. Invoking their membership in the category 'fantasisers', this is done in two ways: (1) flat co-construction gradient; and (2) upgraded co-construction gradient. The second part focusses on the instances wherein intersubjectivity in relation to the fantasy world is unaccomplished. It is indexed through (1) metapragmatic labels of humour types; (2) treating the event as real; and (3) doubting the authenticity of the event and challenging the joint fantasising posts. As a result, additional categories emerge, thereby constructing category relations, namely, oppositional categories such as 'fantasisers'-'the gullible' and 'fantasisers'-'sceptics'. This in situ change, I argue, creates a shift in the pragmatic function of joint fantasising, moving from a category-implicative action (serving entertainment) to a category-relations-implicative action (serving jocular criticism). This paper adds to the research on joint fantasising, categorial work and social action, and broadly contributes to our understanding of how members of the society orient to contexts and categories in and through talk-in-interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL, THE AUSTRALIAN ENTOMOLOGIST.
- Author
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MONTEITH, G. B. and WRIGHT, SUSAN
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ENTOMOLOGISTS ,PERSONNEL management ,ELECTRONIC journals ,ARTHROPODA ,INSECTS - Abstract
The Australian Entomologist is a quarterly, refereed journal which publishes manuscripts dealing with native insects and other arthropods of Australia and nearby land masses east of the Wallace Line. In its 50th year of operation, the history of its transition from a privately-run, print-only journal in Sydney to a print and electronic journal owned and operated by the Entomological Society of Queensland in Brisbane is described. All editorial and management staff since transfer to ESQ in 1987 are listed and the pages sizes and issue dates of part numbers since foundation are tabulated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
6. Drivers behind the public perception of artificial intelligence: insights from major Australian cities.
- Author
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Yigitcanlar, Tan, Degirmenci, Kenan, and Inkinen, Tommi
- Subjects
PUBLIC opinion ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,METROPOLIS ,PUBLIC spaces ,EMERGENCY management ,GOVERNMENT corporations - Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is not only disrupting industries and businesses, particularly the ones have fallen behind the adoption, but also significantly impacting public life as well. This calls for government authorities pay attention to public opinions and sentiments towards AI. Nonetheless, there is limited knowledge on what the drivers behind the public perception of AI are. Bridging this gap is the rationale of this paper. As the methodological approach, the study conducts an online public perception survey with the residents of Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane, and explores the collected survey data through statistical analysis. The analysis reveals that: (a) the public is concerned of AI invading their privacy, but not much concerned of AI becoming more intelligent than humans; (b) the public trusts AI in their lifestyle, but the trust is lower for companies and government deploying AI; (c) the public appreciates the benefits of AI in urban services and disaster management; (d) depending on the local context, public perceptions vary; and (e) the drivers behind the public perception include gender, age, AI knowledge, and AI experience. The findings inform authorities in developing policies to minimise public concerns and maximise AI awareness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Fluvial Response to Environmental Change in Sub-Tropical Australia over the Past 220 Ka.
- Author
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Croke, Jacky, Thompson, Chris, Larsen, Annegret, Macklin, Mark, and Hughes, Kate
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AGGRADATION & degradation ,OPTICALLY stimulated luminescence dating ,EL Nino ,SOUTHERN oscillation ,LARVAL dispersal - Abstract
This paper uses a 30 m record of valley alluviation in the Lockyer Creek, a major tributary of the mid-Brisbane River in Southeast Queensland, to document the timing and nature of Quaternary fluvial response. A combination of radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence dating reveals a sequence of major cut and fill episodes. The earliest aggradation phase is represented by a basal gravel unit, dating to ~220 ka (marine isotope sub-stage 7d), and although little evidence supports higher fluvial discharges during MIS 5, a MIS 3 fluvial episode characterised by incision and aggradation dates to ~60 ka. A penultimate phase of incision to a depth of 30 m prior to ~14 ka saw the lower Lockyer occupy its current position within the valley floor. The Lockyer Creek shows evidence of only minor fluvial activity during MIS 2, suggesting a drier LGM climate. The appearance of alternating fine- and coarse-grained units at about 2 ka is notable and may represent higher-energy flood conditions associated with a strengthening of El Niño Southern Oscillation activity as observed in the flood of 2011. The aggradation rate for this Holocene floodplain unit is ~11 times higher than the long-term rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. An Empirical Analysis of Efficiency in Accommodation Industry in Australian Tourism Regions.
- Author
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Tran, Carolyn-Thi Thanh Dung, Le, Andrew-Tuan Anh, Tran, Thanh Duc, Roper, Alexander, Murray, Glenn, James, Bryn, Allen, Vivian, and Petrov, Leonid
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL tourism ,TOURISM ,COVID-19 pandemic ,OCCUPANCY rates ,CITIES & towns ,DATA envelopment analysis - Abstract
A body of empirical literature exists which sets out how the accommodation industry performs across a range of locations. However, research on tourism regions in terms of its accommodation industry remains underdeveloped, especially in the Covid-19 pandemic when tourism faced unprecedented adversity and need to find a way to move forward. In an attempt to address this and take the Australian accommodation industry as a case study, this paper sought to investigate the efficiency of Australian tourism regions in the accommodation industry for the period of 2014/15–2017/18. The findings clearly showed that Australian tourism regions had seen significant growth in terms of their efficiency in the accommodation industry over the surveyed period. The Australian commercial large cities, namely Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and the Goal Coast, represent perhaps the best example, having obtained a higher efficiency than all other tourism regions. Exogenous factors, such as the occupancy rate, the average daily rate, the number of international visitors and the number of domestic visitors overnight were identified as influencing the technical efficiency score of tourism regions, with policy formulation and implementation identified as being key to improving the efficiency of the accommodation industry at the regional level for a post-Covid-19 period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
9. Experience with inflatable friction rock bolts on the Cross River Rail project.
- Author
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Clarke, S. J., Stosic, M., Ahn, J., Shen, B., Hargreaves, A., and Smith, A.
- Subjects
ROCK bolts ,FRICTION ,SHEAR strength ,GEOTECHNICAL engineering ,DURABILITY - Abstract
Friction rock bolts offer a significant advantage over grouted bolts in that they do not require grouting and thus provide immediate ground support upon installation. Inflatable friction bolts were developed around 40 years ago, with various versions of this type of bolt now offered by several manufacturers. The bolt is unique in that it is expanded with high pressure water during installation. This expansion generates the shear strength of the frictional interface with the rock. Pull testing was performed on inflatable friction bolts both prior to and during construction of the Cross River Rail project in Brisbane, which commenced construction in early 2020 with tunnelling completed at the end of 2021. Pull testing involves applying an axial force to the bolt head to confirm proper installation and can be used to determine geotechnical strength and stiffness parameters. Bolts for initial site trials were partially sleeved such that only a short length of bolt was inflated. This detail allowed the frictional interface between the bolt shaft and borehole wall to be tested to relatively high shear stresses, and thus allowed measurement of the ultimate geotechnical bond capacity. The test methodology also involved measurement of the axial displacement of the bolt relative to the applied load. This permitted bond shear stiffness to be assessed. This is a parameter utilised in numerical analysis and design of tunnel support and relates to the rate of load transfer between the rock bolt and surrounding rock mass. It has a significant impact on the magnitude of calculated bolt forces and a lesser influence on tunnel deformation. Both pre-production and production pull tests were completed in rock mass types including Neranleigh Fernvale Group, Brisbane Tuff and Aspley Formation bedrock. The measured bond strength values confirmed design assumptions that were based on a comprehensive literature review. The results allowed the contractor to proceed with procurement of the plant and materials needed to install the bolts with the confidence that they were an appropriate ground support element for the anticipated ground conditions. Advantages and limitations of this type of bolt are discussed, together with durability considerations, installation methods, production rates, construction challenges, test methods, and back-analysis of key design parameters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
10. Getting a head start: the 2032 Olympic Movement through the preferred candidature bid involving Brisbane, Australia.
- Author
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Tham, Aaron
- Subjects
BIDS ,OLYMPIC Games ,MEDALS ,OPENING ceremonies - Abstract
The Olympic bidding process prior to 2024 was altered in 2019 to provide greater transparency and reduce unnecessary work related to the preparation for each bid, of which there can only be one host. This paper analyses the process of the 2032 Olympics through the notion of a preferred candidate in Brisbane, Australia. Through a document analysis of five official documents and submissions in the lead up to the IOC announcement of the preferred bid in February 2021, this paper elucidates how the Olympic Movement is shaped and refined to offer a more nuanced perspective of how such a preferred bid could be advantageous in terms of more inclusive legacy outcomes to the IOC, as well as the destination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Negotiating Multiple Stigmas: Substance Use in the Lives of Women Experiencing Homelessness.
- Author
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Thomas, Natalie and Menih, Helena
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse ,HOMELESSNESS ,SOCIAL stigma ,POLICE harassment ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
This paper explores the qualitative dimensions of stigma related to substance use for a sample of women experiencing homelessness in Brisbane, Australia. A secondary thematic analysis of ethnographic research data identified four key themes: (1) "Intersecting stigmas," including experiencing homelessness, mental and physical illness, as well as being a woman who uses drugs; (2) "Perceived stigma" examines the association between homelessness and substance use; (3) Women's experiences of multiple forms of "enacted stigma" related to substance use and homelessness, including violence, predation and victimization, discrimination, and police harassment; and (4) "Negotiating stigma" outlines techniques participants used to manage the stigma attached to substance use and homelessness, such as avoiding substance use themselves, avoiding other people who used drugs, and engaging with other social networks and activities. The paper argues that the framework of "intersectional stigma" can provide insight into the multiple stigmas negotiated by women experiencing homelessness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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12. Climate Change Impacts on Rainwater Tank's Potential Water Savings, Efficiency and Reliability Presenting Relationship Between 'Seasonality Index' and Water Savings Efficiency.
- Author
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Imteaz, Monzur A., Khan, Mohammad S., Yilmaz, Abdullah G., and Shanableh, Abdallah
- Subjects
WATER efficiency ,WEATHER & climate change ,RAINFALL ,CLIMATE change ,RAINWATER ,WATER harvesting - Abstract
The paper presents potential impacts of climate change on rainwater tanks outcomes such as water savings, reliability and water savings efficiency under two projected climate change scenarios; RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 utilising a case study using rainfall data from four stations within the city of Brisbane, Australia. Historical rainfall data were collected from the Australian Bureau of Meteorology website for the selected stations. Projected daily rainfall data were collected from Australian government data portal for the same stations within Brisbane. Using an earlier developed daily water balance model, eTank potential annual water savings were calculated for several weather and climate change scenarios with varied roof areas and rainwater demandValues of 'Seasonality Index (SI)', a commonly used factor representing rainfall variability within a year, were explored to validate earlier developed relationships between SI and water savings efficiency through rainwater tanks. It is found that in most cases water savings in future periods are expected to decrease and such decrease is not necessarily attributed to the expected decrease in rainfall amounts in future, rather also affected by future reductions in rainwater tank reliability. Linear relationships between potential future water savings and reliabilities for all the stations are found. Relationship between SI and water savings efficiency was established, and it is found that the relationship slightly varies with an earlier developed relationship using historical data. Compared to earlier established relationship, for lower SI values water savings efficiency is expected to become better, while for higher SI values the water savings efficiency is expected to become worse. Also, an increase of roof area from 100 m
2 to 200 m2 will cause an average increase of water savings efficiency by 25% and an increase of rainwater usage from 200 L/day to 300 L/day will cause an average increase of water savings efficiency by 20%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Is greenery green? An analytical comparison between the planned, visual, and perceived green.
- Author
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Yang, Qing, Cao, Chu-Fan, Li, Hai-Miao, Qiu, Wai-Shan, Li, Wen-Jing, and Luo, Dan
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,URBANIZATION ,ECOLOGICAL assessment ,URBAN ecology ,URBAN research - Abstract
This research established a comprehensive evaluation system for urban ecological assessment. Through research in the fields of urban planning, urban design, and cognitive psychology, this paper defines three ecological evaluation indexes correspondingly. They measure the vegetation coverage of land (planning green), the visibility of vegetation from the pedestrian's viewpoint (visual green), and the psychological perception of greenery by human (perceived green). This study uses computerized parametric analysis, computerized deep learning, data visualization, and statistical methods to achieve an accurate description of the three evaluation indicators. This study assumes that the three green values may behave consistently or inconsistently at each point. Therefore, this study, on the one hand, tries to analyze the potential factors affecting each green indicator. On the other hand, by analysing the consistency or discrepancy of the three green values, this research revealed the potential link between urban spatial type and integrated ecological properties. Four areas of Brisbane dominated by different functions were selected for this study (Red Hill and Bardon for residential areas, Brisbane City for downtown CBD, and Woolloongabba for industrial areas). The results of the study demonstrate the credibility and applicability of the three green indicators in different areas, examine the various factors affecting ecology, and provide new design strategies and ideas for urban designers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Dammed if you do, dammed if you don't: The impact of economic rationalist imperatives on the adaptive capacity of public infrastructure in Brisbane, Australia and Cork, Ireland.
- Author
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Tangney, Peter
- Subjects
INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,PUBLIC administration ,CORK ,ECONOMIC impact ,RISK assessment of climate change - Abstract
This paper presents a comparative analysis of catchment management dams in Cork, Ireland and Brisbane, Australia to demonstrate how interactions between municipal government and expert advisors for public infrastructure administration can constrain community climate adaptation. The analysis highlights how neoliberal economic rationalism can appropriate public value choice under the guise of technocratic expertise. Experts are often considered responsible agents for the effective administration of public infrastructure, even when ostensibly technical decisions concerning infrastructure management seem to demand normative, political input. Technocratic administration arising from economic rationalist priorities can thereby exacerbate the hazards presented by climate variability and advancing climate change. Climate risk managers in both cases over‐relied on operating protocols and the expertise of engineers to administer public infrastructure in pursuit of economic priorities. When operating protocols proved insufficient in the face of climate extremes, however, blame was assigned to experts despite their making all available attempts to avert disaster. Through analysis of these cases, the paper discusses the need for normative transparency in expert‐led public administration and better integration of multi‐level governance for climate resilience when pursuing economic rationalist imperatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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15. Australian Mega Transport Business Cases: Missing Costs and Benefits.
- Author
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Searle, Glen and Legacy, Crystal
- Subjects
COST effectiveness ,PUBLIC investments ,COST ,TRANSPORTATION costs ,BUSINESS enterprises ,TRANSPORTATION - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Policy & Research 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
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Localizing SDG2 Zero Hunger through "Fair Food" in Australia.
- Author
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Smith, Kiah
- Subjects
COMMUNITY-supported agriculture ,FOOD industrial waste ,FOOD security ,FARMERS' markets ,URBAN gardens - Abstract
In Australia, and elsewhere, community food networks such as urban gardens, community supported agriculture, farmers' markets, organic cooperatives, food charities and "fair food" organizations are important civil society stakeholders who actively confront food system inequalities such as food insecurity and food waste. These organizations emphasize equitable access to food that is ecologically sustainable, healthy and fairly produced, exchanged and consumed (i.e. food justice). This differentiates them from mainstream food security approaches and provides a potentially progressive framework for thinking about alternative food futures. This paper presents a sociological analysis of community "fair food" initiatives in Brisbane, Australia as a means of expanding SDG2 Zero Hunger to encompass local priorities. Following the presentation of a broad typology of initiatives, the paper will analyze selected case studies in terms of their: (a) personal and collective visions for future food systems, and (b) activities and outcomes related to food justice and food access. How do these place-based narratives connect to global sustainability goals? Findings indicate that more equitable food access is pursued in missions and activities that seek to build and connect (a) values of food justice, sovereignty, citizenship, farmer-consumer solidarity, empowerment and community control of food systems, with (b) solving practical problems associated with local ecological food production, reduction or redistribution of food waste, providing low-cost food to vulnerable groups, and restructuring finance. Scaling up to influence policy and financing remains a key challenge. These initiatives demonstrate significant synergies between ecological, social and economic values that are central to localising the SDGs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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17. It is time to update sun safety campaigns to recognise population diversity: Findings from two citizens' juries in Australia.
- Author
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Gregory, Judy, Neale, Rachel E., Frank, Oliver, and Gordon, Louisa G.
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENS , *SUNSHINE , *JURY , *VITAMIN D , *AUSTRALIANS - Abstract
Issue Addressed: While the links between sun exposure and skin cancer are well known, the benefits of sun exposure, particularly as a source of vitamin D, are less well known. This paper reports on a deliberative study exploring public perspectives about sun exposure harms and benefits. Methods: Two citizens' juries were conducted in Brisbane and Adelaide to consider questions about sun exposure, vitamin D and health promotion. Members of the general population (jurors) listened to evidence from expert witnesses about the harms and benefits of sun exposure. Most witness sessions extended for 60 min, with 6 sessions over 2 days. At each citizens' jury, jurors were asked to listen to expert testimony, consider the evidence and make policy recommendations. The planning and design of the citizens' juries were informed by well‐established citizens' jury methods. Results: Jurors proposed that Australia needs improved public information about the harms and benefits of sun exposure. They argued for information that supports personal decision‐making that accounts for differences in skin tone and geographical region. Jurors agreed that Australia needs an updated sun safety campaign that reflects new research and addresses diversity. A one‐size‐fits‐all approach to sun protection may no longer be appropriate. Conclusions: While a new campaign should address both harms and benefits, jurors felt the need for skin cancer prevention outweighs the desirability of generating vitamin D through sun exposure. More nuanced public health messages are needed, which balance the need for skin protection and vitamin D, and acknowledge the diversity of Australia's population. So What?: Previous research studies are typically siloed into the separate areas of vitamin D or skin cancer research. This study incorporated both topics and pooled the views of participants in two citizens' juries who agreed on the need for improved information about the harms and benefits of sun exposure to reflect a modern Australian population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Joseph Bancroft's discovery of Fusarium Wilt of banana.
- Author
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Ryley, Malcolm J. and Drenth, Andre
- Subjects
FUSARIUM wilt of banana ,FUSARIUM oxysporum ,BANANA growing ,PLANT diseases ,FUSARIUM - Abstract
In the early decades of British settlement at Sydney Cove in 1788, the struggling colonials tried their hand at growing edible bananas but invariably failed. However, they grew extremely well in the Moreton Bay colony (Brisbane) and over time banana growing became an important agricultural industry there, particularly after the introduction of the Cavendish variety. All was progressing well until a new disease appeared in plantations around Brisbane in the early 1870s. The medical practitioner and naturalist Joseph Bancroft investigated the problem and concluded that a fungus was implicated as the causal agent. In the early 1900s, following serious outbreaks of a disease with similar symptoms in Caribbean countries (where it was called Panama Disease), the American bacteriologist Erwin Frink Smith studied the same disease in Cuba, and named the pathogen Fusarium cubense. Another American scientist, Elmer Walker Brandes, conclusively proved that Fusarium cubense (now called Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. cubense) was the cause of the banana disease. Bancroft's discovery of the disease now called Fusarium Wilt not only predates other reports of the disease in the Caribbean but also represents the first scientific investigation of a plant disease in Australia. Within the first forty years of English colonisation of Australia, the climate of Queensland proved to be the ideal place for the commercial production of bananas. It was in the south-eastern corner of the state that a new disease of banana (now called Fusarium Wilt) was identified by a Brisbane physician, Dr. Joseph Bancroft, in the early 1870s. The disease was given the name 'Panama disease', despite the fact that it was not discovered in Panama until twenty years later. Photograph by Andre Drenth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The therapy capability framework and mapping process: perspectives of mental health clinical case managers.
- Author
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Lau, Geoffrey, Bennett, Sally, Meredith, Pamela, Chapman, Justin, and Wyder, Marianne
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MENTAL health services ,MENTAL health ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of a workforce leadership initiative, the Therapy Capability Framework (TCF), designed to enhance the provision of evidence-informed psychosocial therapies by publicly funded mental health case managers. To understand the experiences and perceptions of 'first-time users' of the TCF was conceived as an important first step to help guide service-wide implementation. Method: In 2018, a qualitative descriptive research methodology using two in-depth focus groups with frontline mental health clinicians in case management roles was adopted to explore their perceptions and experiences of the TCF and TCF Process across Metro South Addiction and Mental Health Services in Brisbane, Australia. An inductive approach to thematic analysis guided the generation of themes and subthemes. Results: Participants understood the purpose of the TCF; however, they identified several factors influencing their experience, including specific features of the framework; how it was used; and organisational, workforce, and leadership factors that restricted its potential utility and impact. Discussion: Clinicians reported the TCF as having the potential to facilitate incremental change in the existing case management model. This paper represents a phase of evaluation and continuous improvement of the TCF, which can assist publicly funded mental health leaders to augment the provision of evidence-informed psychosocial therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Editorial: NATIONAL CONFERENCE SPECIAL ISSUE.
- Author
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MCGRAW, KELLI and WILLIAMS, LINDSAY
- Subjects
LITERACY ,STUDENTS ,TEACHING - Abstract
The article presents an editorial which discusses the themes and papers from the Australian Association for the Teaching of English (AATE) national conferences in Brisbane, Australia in 2021 and Darwin in 2022. It mentions the Brisbane conference focused on the changing nature of English teaching and the aim of creating a better world for students through literacy.
- Published
- 2022
21. User-Centric Innovation District Planning: Lessons from Brisbane's Leading Innovation Districts.
- Author
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Esmaeilpoorarabi, Niusha and Yigitcanlar, Tan
- Subjects
LESSON planning ,CITIES & towns ,URBAN growth ,SOCIAL innovation ,INFORMATION economy - Abstract
Innovation districts are widely known as an effective land use type for fostering and sustaining knowledge and innovation economy growth in cities. Knowledge workers and the public are among the main stakeholders and key drivers for the growth of innovation districts. However, these groups' needs are often not well considered in the top-down implementation of innovation districts. This paper aims to explore the user preferences and decision makers' perspectives in innovation district planning, design, and development. The study tackles the question of which characteristics fulfil the responsibility of innovation districts toward both societies (reflecting user preferences) and cities (reflecting decision makers' perspectives). As for the methodology, a case study approach was employed to collect the required data from three innovation districts in Brisbane, Australia. The data are qualitatively and quantitatively analysed. The analysis findings highlighted the similarities between user preferences and decision makers' perspectives—e.g., usefulness of decentralisation, urbanism, mixed-use development, street life, and social interactions in innovation districts—and the differences that need to be carefully factored into the planning, design, and development of innovation districts with a user-centric approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. A Transformed Approach for Benchmarking the Performance of 'Sustainable' Infrastructure.
- Author
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Hayes, Samantha, Desha, Cheryl, Caldera, Savindi, and Gibbs, Mark
- Subjects
BENCHMARKING (Management) ,ECOSYSTEMS ,CREDIT ratings ,PERFORMANCE standards ,SUSTAINABILITY ,WASTE management ,ECOSYSTEM services - Abstract
Environmental sustainability priorities for infrastructure development have traditionally focused on aspects including minimising negative impacts in areas such as water and air quality, erosion control, biodiversity and waste management, both in compliance and voluntary frameworks. Associated project performance priorities have focused on avoiding damage beyond 'pre-project baselines'. In contrast, 'best practice' regenerative performance requires infrastructure project outcomes that not only avoid damage but contribute positively to social and ecological systems. For such best practice to become mainstream, industry frameworks, standards and rating schemes must evolve. However, there is limited knowledge regarding 'how' regenerative performance could be encouraged as a business-as-usual infrastructure expectation. This paper therefore explores the potential for a benchmarking methodology called Ecological Performance Standards (EPS) as a transformed approach to facilitate the mainstreaming of regenerative performance expectations. Three research workshops (Phoenix, AZ, USA; Sydney and Brisbane, Australia) were undertaken to investigate the potential for this methodology in infrastructure applications. Mapping was undertaken to align the EPS process steps with associated infrastructure lifecycle phases. Research findings include the synthesis of key opportunities for capturing EPS within infrastructure sustainability rating schemes to leverage current efforts and pivot towards regenerative performance. The authors present a comprehensive matrix mapping 18 ecosystem services against the Infrastructure Sustainability (IS) Rating Scheme credits and categories, summarising where ecosystem services are addressed within the current scheme. The authors conclude the presence of significant opportunities for a new 'business-as-usual' for infrastructure through the integration of regenerative performance benchmarking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Best practice in urban transport decarbonisation: a case study of three initiatives in Brisbane.
- Author
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Fabre, Anais, Howes, Michael, and Deweerdt, Tom
- Subjects
GREENHOUSE gases ,CARBON dioxide mitigation ,BEST practices ,URBAN growth ,ECOLOGICAL impact ,PASSENGER traffic ,CHOICE of transportation - Abstract
Avoiding the worst impacts of climate change requires a transition to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by mid-century, if not before. Urban transport systems are a significant contributor to emissions, so effective mitigation strategies for this sector are needed. This paper starts by outlining a best practice framework for transport decarbonisation based upon a review of the international research literature that entails: shifting passengers to net-zero or low-emission modes; investing in more energy-efficient technology options; and managing the demand for transport through a combination of land-use planning and socioeconomic policies. This best practice framework is then applied to a case study conducted in Brisbane (Australia) to see how the gap between the concepts developed in the research literature and the practice of making a change may be bridged. A policy analysis of three key transport initiatives in the city was undertaken to determine how they measure up against the best practice framework. On the positive side, Brisbane has the advantage of providing a reasonably reliable public transport system, expanding its bicycle/walking paths and engaging local communities in the decision-making and implementation. However, Brisbane faces a high degree of urban sprawl and car dependency, exacerbating its ecological footprint. Urban transport is not sustainable and needs to be decarbonised. This requires a framework of practical solutions to assist transport planners and policymakers in moving towards a more sustainable, low-emission future. The best practice framework for transport decarbonisation entails shifting commuters to low-emission transport options, investing in more energy-efficient vehicles, and managing the demand for transport. Brisbane has geographically extensive and reasonably reliable public transport systems and community engagement processes, but the city is challenged by urban sprawl and car dependency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Bordering Migratory Shorebirds through Contested Mobility Developments.
- Author
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Barry, Kaya and Suliman, Samid
- Subjects
SHORE birds ,MIGRATORY birds ,RECLAMATION of land ,HARBORS ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,ECONOMIC mobility ,EDUCATIONAL mobility - Abstract
Airports and seaports inhabit multiple geographies that dictate global mobility across political, economic, social, and environmental borders. In Australia and across the Asia-Pacific, large-scale mobility developments are being undertaken to connect local businesses and industries with global markets. However, these projects are proceeding without regard for the impacts that these mobility hubs will have on local and global ecologies. This is certainly the case across the Asia-Pacific region, where industry is impacting on the routes of migratory shorebirds along the 'East Asian-Australasian Flyway', which spans 18 countries and carries over 50 million migratory birds each year. Key sites that make up the Flyway are established and prolific hubs for these nonhuman mobilities, yet encroaching land reclamation practices are resulting in considerable avian population declines. This paper explores how more-than-human conceptualisation of the EAA Flyway and the "borders" it instigates through global conservation and nation-state governance are inadequately protecting the migratory shorebirds. We examine the recent and contested developments in Moreton Bay, in Brisbane, Australia, and the many bordering practices that take shape in this local place along the EAA Flyway. We argue that the multi-sited path that compose these global Flyways challenge our all-too-human-centric conceptions of space, borders, and movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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25. Housing Price and Interest Rate Hike: A Tale of Five Cities in Australia.
- Author
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Chong, Fennee
- Subjects
HOME prices ,PRICE inflation ,HOUSING policy ,SMALL cities ,HOUSE buying ,PORTFOLIO management (Investments) ,INTEREST rates - Abstract
Australian housing prices are reported to be overvalued and unaffordable for the past two decades. Many researchers and practitioners have attributed the persistent growth in housing prices to the prolonged period of low borrowing costs. However, due to inflationary pressure, the Central Bank has raised its cash rate consecutively in recent months. This paper aims to examine whether interest rate rises affect housing price in different parts of Australia. Evidence generated from the analysis reported bipolar results between the large and smaller cities, whereby housing prices in Sydney and Melbourne show a significant negative relationship with interest rate changes while Brisbane and the Gold Coast and Perth and Adelaide, respectively, are showing negative but insignificant results during the study period. Short-run trend projections on housing prices indicate that Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and the Gold Coast are on a downward trend while Adelaide and Perth will maintain its current momentum before plateauing out later next year. Likewise, control variables, such as oil prices, inflation rate and stock market performance, are found to be related to housing prices in larger cities only. These findings have implications on housing policy, house purchase decisions and investment portfolio management strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. UNDERSTANDING PACIFIC ISLAND WELL-BEING PERSPECTIVES THROUGH SAMOAN AND TONGAN MATERIAL CULTURAL ADAPTATIONS AND SPATIAL BEHAVIOUR IN AUCKLAND AND BRISBANE.
- Author
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Faleolo, Ruth
- Subjects
CULTURAL adaptation - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to discuss the tangible links that exist between Pacific Island well-being perspectives and their material culture. We can gain a better understanding of Pacific Island well-being perspectives through the analysis of Samoan and Tongan material cultural adaptations and how people interact with these via spatial behaviour, as observed in Auckland and Brisbane. This paper analyses a collection of images that capture evidence of six different types of material cultural adaptations that infer on, and reference spatial behaviours. Preliminary findings have been drawn from a wider-scale research project conducted during 2015-2018, that has explored Pacific Island Trans- Tasman migrants' perspectives of well-being. This inquiry process has revealed significant links between Pacific Island traditions and adaptations in Pacific diaspora contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Photographic Identification of the Troupe Members of the Wild Australia Show.
- Author
-
AIRD, Michael and MEMMOTT, Paul
- Subjects
LINGUISTIC identity ,FIRST Nations of Canada ,GROUP identity ,COLONIES ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,AFFILIATION (Psychology) ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ABORIGINAL Australians - Abstract
The 'Wild Australia Show' was a travelling troupe of Aboriginal performers who, during 1892-93, performed in Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne where they were photographed by leading studio portraitists of the time. The vast majority of the over 160 collected photos of the troupe are very poorly provenanced, with the performers' names and language group identities often inaccurately spelt partly due to being initially mis-heard and mis-pronounced; and in a proportion of cases photos are non-provenanced. This paper contains an introduction to the photographs, names and group identities of the 27 Aboriginal participants who were drawn from the Queensland frontiers, with a description of the methodology of how their identities were derived from a complex, contradictory, but ethnographically limited corpus of data. This research in visual anthropology represents a contribution to correcting the often ethnocentric and racist legacy of colonial Indigenous museum collections - the failure to recognise and acknowledge basic human identity and familial and social affiliations amongst First Nations peoples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Wivenhoe, January 2011: the dam truth: Munro Oration, Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium, Brisbane, 30 November 2022.
- Author
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Ayre, Robert Arnold, Malone, Terry, and Ruffini, John Lawrence
- Subjects
- *
WATER supply , *HYDROLOGY , *RAINFALL , *DAMS , *WATERSHEDS , *FLOOD damage , *FLOODS - Abstract
The January 2011 flood event that impacted southeast Queensland is amongst the most extensive and severe floods in terms of loss of life and property damage that the region has experienced, despite it being only the eighth highest flood on record at the Brisbane City Gauge. The spring of 2010 was the wettest on record for Queensland, New South Wales, and the Murray-Darling Basin (Bureau of Meteorology 2011a) at that time. The flood mitigation dams in the region, Somerset Dam and Wivenhoe Dam, had to be operated for flood mitigation purposes during October 2010, which was the first occasion since February 2001 that Wivenhoe Dam had been called into action due to the Millennium Drought. The wet October was followed by a very dry November which, in turn, was followed by the wettest December on record for Brisbane. Somerset Dam and Wivenhoe Dam were again pressed into action on three separate occasions during December 2010. The resultant releases ensured that only minor flooding resulted in the Lower Brisbane River during these events. However, on the 5th of January 2011, another rainfall event started to unfold across the catchments of the dams. By the 10th of January 2011, an upper-level low combined with a humid easterly flow to bring very heavy rainfall and flash flooding to southeast Queensland and northeast New South Wales. The heaviest falls were in the areas north and west of Brisbane, with three-day totals exceeding 200 mm over most of the Brisbane River catchment. This rainfall event resulted in a flood of record in the Upper Brisbane River and Upper Lockyer Creek catchments that sadly resulted in a substantial loss of life in Toowoomba and the Lockyer Valley, and which required record releases from Wivenhoe Dam. The resultant downstream flooding saw some 14,000 properties impacted, principally in the Lockyer Valley Regional Council, Somerset Regional Council, Brisbane City Council, and Ipswich City Council local government regions. Flood damage was estimated to be around $2.53 billion. This paper discusses the event as it unfolded and the subsequent judicial inquiries, engineering reviews, and legal proceedings that resulted from the consequences of the operation of Somerset Dam and Wivenhoe Dam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
29. The Problems with Neighbors: An Examination of the Influence of Neighborhood Context Using Large-Scale Administrative Data.
- Author
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Liu, Yan, Wang, Siqin, and Cheshire, Lynda
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS ,CITIES & towns ,NEIGHBORS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,REGRESSION analysis ,OFFENSIVE behavior - Abstract
Where earlier conceptions of problem neighbors saw them as contributing to neighborhood level forms of disorder, neighbor problems, in contrast, occur in the everyday domestic setting of residential life and challenge conceptual boundaries between public/private and civility/incivility. As a result, there is a need to better understand the phenomenon of problems between neighbors beyond conceptions of public disorder and to understand the processes that influence how and why neighbor problems arise. In this study, we examine neighbor problems as manifest in reported complaints to a local municipality in Australia to understand how neighborhood features affect the likelihood of neighbors experiencing problems with each other. We propose five hypotheses to examine the social-interactive, environmental, and geographical mechanisms of neighborhood effects and test these hypotheses through logistic regression models on the way certain neighborhood features relate to the prevalence of neighbor problems. The findings reveal the sources of neighbor problems that typically reside in a combination of the social-interactive dynamics of the neighborhood itself—including the composition of the resident population—and the environmental features of the neighborhood in terms of the condition, density and use of dwellings, but not in the location of the neighborhood relative to larger-scale political and economic forces of the city. The paper concludes with a discussion of the significance of these findings for research, policy, and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. How does heterogeneity in dwelling type preferences relate to housing and built environment characteristics?
- Author
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Huang, Yuanyuan, Lieske, Scott N., Wang, Siqin, and Liu, Yan
- Subjects
BUILT environment ,HOUSING ,POOR families ,URBAN growth ,DWELLINGS - Abstract
Understanding housing preferences is critical for successful compact city development. However, there is limited research on understanding preference heterogeneity in dwelling type choices. Using the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey, this paper identifies the key housing and built environment characteristics associated with changes in dwelling type choice from detached houses to high-density. A latent class choice model captures the heterogeneity of dwelling type preferences within a traditionally low-density city, Brisbane, Australia. Findings reveal six household classes with distinct dwelling preferences: Class 1 (senior households without children with other family members) and Class 2 (couple families with children) in inner-city areas, Class 3 (high-income young households) and Class 4 (low-income households without children) in middle-city areas, Class 5 (low-income families with children) and Class 6 (middle-income young families without children) in outer-city areas. Residential environments with better access to educational facilities encourage Classes 3 and 6 to change to high-density living. Greater land use diversity encourages Classes 2, 3, and 6 to move towards high-density living. The findings can be used to design and improve high-density housing for targeted population groups across inner-, middle- and outer-city areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Modeling and Forecasting Ionospheric foF2 Variation in the Low Latitude Region during Low and High Solar Activity Years.
- Author
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Bi, Cheng, Ren, Peng, Yin, Ting, Xiang, Zheng, and Zhang, Yang
- Subjects
SOLAR activity ,TELECOMMUNICATION satellites ,GLOBAL Positioning System ,MACHINE learning ,SPACE environment ,DEEP learning ,LATITUDE - Abstract
Prediction of ionospheric parameters, such as ionospheric F2 layer critical frequency (foF2) at low latitude regions is of significant interest in understanding ionospheric variation effects on high-frequency communication and global navigation satellite system. Currently, deep learning algorithms have made a striking accomplishment in capturing ionospheric variability. In this paper, we use the state-of-the-art hybrid neural network combined with a quantile mechanism to predict foF2 parameter variations under low and high solar activity years (solar cycle-24) and space weather events. The hybrid neural network is composed of a convolutional neural network (CNN) and bidirectional long short-term memory (BiLSTM), in which CNN and BiLSTM networks extracted spatial and temporal features of ionospheric variation, respectively. The proposed method was trained and tested on 5 years (2009–2014) of ionospheric foF2 observation data from Advanced Digital Ionosonde located in Brisbane, Australia (27°53′S, 152°92′E). It is evident from the results that the proposed model performs better than International Reference Ionosphere 2016 (IRI-2016), long short-term memory (LSTM), and BiLSTM ionospheric prediction models. The proposed model extensively captured the variation in ionospheric foF2 feature, and better predicted it under two significant space weather events (29 September 2011 and 22 July 2012). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Whose plan is it? The importance of place.
- Author
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Muir, Laurelle
- Subjects
EMERGENCY management ,DISASTER resilience ,RISK perception ,COMMUNITY involvement ,STAKEHOLDER analysis - Abstract
The effects of climate change are escalating and developing and maintaining disaster resilience in communities is a major objective. Yet the active involvement of communities as major stakeholders in building their capacity to prepare, respond to and recover from natural hazards has had less focus in emergency management planning. For communities living in hazard-prone areas, the continuity of risk and disaster awareness and the significance of preparation at the local level can be critical to people’s capacity to appropriately respond to disaster events. In 2011, the significant flood event in Brisbane saw community-led response and recovery efforts supported by place-based organisations that traditionally work within communities. However, as communities evolve and change, learnings can dissipate over time. As such, 10 years on from the 2011 floods, how well prepared are communities living in flood-prone areas of Brisbane? This paper outlines how community and stakeholder engagement can develop disaster resilience at the local level. The focus is on strong working relationships between participants in emergency management planning and response including community-based organisations and, by extension, the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Daring to build fair and sustainable urban food systems: A case study of alternative food networks in Australia.
- Author
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Canal Vieira, Leticia, Serrao-Neumann, Silvia, and Howes, Michael
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,URBANIZATION ,LOCAL foods ,EXHIBITION buildings ,URBAN agriculture - Abstract
Food systems are under pressure from population growth, climate change, resource scarcity and increasing urbanization. Alternative food networks are initiatives related to food provision that operate at a local level and are concerned with both environmental stewardship and social justice. This paper presents a case study of alternative food networks operating in Brisbane and Melbourne in order to analyze: i) their socio-economic and environmental contributions to the resilience and sustainability of urban food systems; and, ii) the limitations that alternative food networks are facing. The cases researched include examples of urban agriculture, food hubs, buyers' groups, and specialist retailers. The results indicate that alternative food networks can improve access to healthy food, provide fairer conditions for farmers, reduce food loss/waste, increase environmental protection, and facilitate climate change adaptation. The limitations to the expansion of alternative food networks are also discussed, including the restricted access to land for growing food, low public engagement, and the dependence on volunteer labor. The paper concludes by summarizing the contribution of alternative food networks to urban food systems and identifies issues for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. the role of doubt in collaborative philosophical inquiry with children.
- Author
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fynes-clinton, elizabeth jean and renshaw, peter
- Subjects
CONSUMER price indexes ,COMMUNITY of inquiry ,GROUP process ,PRIMARY schools ,EDUCATORS - Abstract
Copyright of Childhood & Philosophy is the property of International Council for Philosophical Inquiry with Children 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
- 2021
35. Gene expression technique-based approach to improve the accuracy of estimating the total generated power by neighbouring photovoltaic systems.
- Author
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Al-Hilfi, Hasanain A.H., Shahnia, Farhad, and Abu-Siada, Ahmed
- Subjects
PHOTOVOLTAIC power systems ,GENE expression ,ELECTRIC power distribution ,ELECTRIC power production ,WAVELET transforms - Abstract
The penetration of photovoltaic systems (PVs) to existing power grids is increasing as they are considered attractive options for electricity generation in distribution networks. This paper focuses on estimating the total power generated by a group of neighbouring PVs, spread over a distribution network using a single pyranometer for measuring the solar irradiance. A new empirical-based model that employs the Gene Expression Programming (GEP) technique is proposed to correlate the distribution of the PVs and the irradiance measured by the pyranometer and estimate the total power generated by the PVs. The geographic variability reduction index has been considered in developing the proposed model that also employs a Wavelet Transform technique to enhance its accuracy. The effective performance of the proposed model is validated using real data collected by the Solar Project at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Results reveal that the proposed technique yields more accurate results when compared with other existing approaches in the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Do ‘city shapers’ really support urban consolidation? The case of Brisbane, Australia.
- Author
-
Raynor, Katrina, Mayere, Severine, and Matthews, Tony
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,SOCIAL cohesion ,HOUSING ,SUSTAINABILITY ,COLLECTIVE representation ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
Cities all over the world have activated policy support for urban consolidation in recent decades. Rationales for urban consolidation focus on its perceived ability to achieve sustainability goals, including decreased automobile dependence, increased social cohesion and greater walkability. Despite this, there are few international examples of urban consolidation policy implementation that has achieved its stated aims. This paper explores the nature and character of perceptions of urban consolidation held by urban planners, developers, architects and local politicians. The perspectives held by these ‘city shapers’ are integral to urban consolidation debates and delivery, yet the nature and character of their specific views are underexplored in urban studies literature. This paper combines the theoretical lens of Social Representations Theory with the methodological approach of Q-methodology to understand the common sense understandings of urban consolidation held by city shapers in Brisbane, Australia. It identifies, synthesises and critically discusses the social representations employed by city shapers to understand, promote and communicate about urban consolidation. Findings indicate that urban consolidation debates and justifications diverge significantly from stated policy intentions and are based on differing views on ‘good’ urban form, the role of planning and community consultation and the value of higher density housing. We conclude that there is utility and value in identifying how urban consolidation strategies are influenced by the shared beliefs, myths and perceptions held by city shapers. Understanding these narratives and their influence is fundamental to understanding the power-laden manipulation of policy definitions and development outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Taking Northern Queensland into Account: Another View of Australian Art.
- Author
-
Forbes, Celie and Naylor, Stephen
- Subjects
NARRATIVE art ,HISTORY in art ,AUSTRALIAN history ,ART ,ARTISTS ,SCULPTORS - Abstract
This paper seeks to bridge a gap in Australian art histories by examining the contribution of Northern Queensland to the Australian arts narrative. The story of the visual arts in Australia is often written from the perspective of the southern states, and the story of Queensland art is often written from the perspective of its capital, Brisbane. This is despite the early depiction of the rich flora and fauna of Far North Queensland recognised in early surveys. In examining the history of the arts from the north however, key themes emerge that characterise and challenge understandings of the visual arts in Queensland. By exploring the work of artist Clem Forbes (1938-1997) and sculptor Tom Risley (1947-2010) this paper suggests that the contribution made by artists living and working in Northern Queensland can throw light on what is distinct about the north as a vision of Australian art. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
38. Innovation District Typology Classification via Performance Framework: Insights from Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane.
- Author
-
Adu-McVie, Rosemary, Yigitcanlar, Tan, Xia, Bo, and Erol, Isil
- Subjects
CLASSIFICATION ,URBAN land use ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,REAL estate developers ,URBAN growth ,URBAN planners - Abstract
As a new land use type, innovation districts are taking prominence in the urban development policies and plans of many cities across the globe. This new urban land use comes in many shapes and forms and offers various features and functions to the users. Despite its increasing popularity, there exist only limited approaches to classify innovation districts, and there are no holistic typologies developed so far. This study focuses on this understudied, but important area of research. The paper aims to develop an innovation district typology matrix and evaluates its practicality with real innovation district data. The methodological approach is three-fold. First, the multidimensional innovation district classification framework is adopted as a performance framework. Second, data from three eminent Australian innovation districts—i.e., Macquarie Park Innovation District (Sydney), Monash Technology Precinct (Melbourne), and Kelvin Grove Urban Village (Brisbane)—are collected. Third, both qualitative and quantitative analysis methods are employed for data analysis. The study finds that innovation district performances can be measured, and typologies can be developed though a novel approach. These, in return, inform property developers and managers, city administrators, and urban planners in their efforts to plan, design, develop, and manage competitive innovation districts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Pioneer attempt of incorporating four variables in generalised equations for predicting water savings through rainwater tanks.
- Author
-
Imteaz, Monzur Alam and Saarim Khan, Mohammad
- Subjects
RAINWATER ,RAINFALL ,GREEN roofs ,EQUATIONS ,MOBILE apps ,COMPUTER software ,SUSTAINABLE architecture ,METEOROLOGY - Abstract
This paper presents the development of robust equations for calculating expected water savings through rainwater tanks, which are dependent on annual rainfall, rainwater demand, tank size and roof area. The city of Brisbane (Australia) was selected for this purpose. A modified version of the earlier developed daily water balance model, eTank was used to calculate annual water savings under different scenarios using daily rainfall data collected from the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. Several sets of charts on varying roof size, demand, tank size and annual rainfall were produced from the simulated results. Eventually, the sets of charts were converted to a single generalised equation, each for one of the four selected regions in Brisbane. Results from the developed equations were seen matching with the model (eTank) simulated results. Such equations can be easily incorporated into mobile apps or computer programs to help quick calculations for expected water savings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Thermochemical conversion characteristics of biosolid samples from a wastewater treatment plant in Brisbane, Australia.
- Author
-
Hla, San Shwe, Sujarittam, Nuttaphol, and Ilyushechkin, Alexander
- Subjects
SEWAGE disposal plants ,HEAVY metal toxicology ,COAL gasification ,SEWAGE sludge ,ENERGY conversion - Abstract
Environmental context: Biosolids are nutrient-rich organic materials. They can be used as fertiliser and solid amendments in agriculture if treated according to regulatory requirements. If farming applications of biosolids decline due to potential pollution from their heavy metal content, an alternative to traditional methods of biosolid disposal is required. In this context, thermal processing of biosolids is an economically and environmentally suitable option to convert large quantities of biosolids into useful energy. Rationale: Due to more stringent environmental regulations and frequently required long-distance transportation, the traditional disposal of biosolids from wastewater treatment plants in landfills and farms is becoming unsustainable. A potentially economical and environmental option is the thermochemical conversion of biosolids into energy and value-added products. This paper describes the chemical composition and energy content of a representative biosolid sample collected from a major wastewater-treatment plant in Queensland, Australia. Methodology: The thermochemical behaviour and compositional changes in biosolids were investigated under a wide range of pyrolysis and gasification conditions using a horizontal tube furnace (HTF), a fixed-bed reactor and a thermogravimetric analyser (TGA). In terms of practical application of by-products, we describe mineral matter transformations in char and ashes during pyrolysis and volatilisation as well as under different gasification conditions. Results: HTF experiments revealed that at pyrolysis below 800°C, mainly organic species were released, while losses of inorganic elements (phosphorus, magnesium and zinc) occurred at higher temperatures. In-situ gasification behaviour of biosolid chars in the TGA reactor showed that the gasification reaction of biosolid chars occurred rapidly at temperatures above 720°C, regardless of the pyrolysis temperatures at which those chars were produced. Mineral matter transformations began at temperatures above 600°C, and mainly involved the transformation of amorphous phases into crystalline oxide and phosphide forms. Under gasification conditions, all crystalline phases appeared as different phosphates and alumino-silicates. Discussion: The methods described here provide different options for the disposal of biosolids from wastewater by adjusting and optimising thermochemical conversion processes. Environmental context. Biosolids are nutrient-rich organic materials. They can be used as fertiliser and solid amendments in agriculture if treated according to regulatory requirements. If farming applications of biosolids decline due to potential pollution from their heavy metal content, an alternative to traditional methods of biosolid disposal is required. In this context, thermal processing of biosolids is an economically and environmentally suitable option to convert large quantities of biosolids into useful energy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. LEARNING FROM BRISBANE: THE POLITICS OF IDENTITY AND THE PROMISE OF EMPATHY.
- Author
-
Lazar, Flora E.
- Subjects
IDENTITY politics ,MENTAL health ,MEDICAL personnel ,PSYCHOLOGY of learning ,EMPATHY ,POLITICAL psychology - Abstract
Psychoanalysis has no shortage of theorists who see psychoanalysis as unique and who regard efforts to draw from academic disciplines as fanciful. Contemporary self psychology has been comparatively more receptive to adjacent disciplines. This paper discusses what self psychology can learn from the field of literary criticism about addressing the experience of political and social otherness. Using the debates arising from the 2017 Brisbane Literary Festival, it will explore how social, political, and cultural identities might affect our ability to understand the lives of those whose identities we do not share. It explores the historical reluctance of psychoanalysis to address issues of identity and otherness in theory and clinical practice, as well as the importance of the "relational turn" in overcoming these theoretical limitations. The paper will explore aspects of self psychology, including the empathic listening stance and specificity theory, that help the mental health profession avoid the central literary challenges raised in the Brisbane debates and will suggest that some of Kohut's central ideas about selfobject experience may need to be revised or elaborated more fully to address the clinical and policy implications of engaging with political, social, and cultural otherness especially when it entails devaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Pasifika diaspora connectivity and continuity with Pacific homelands: Material culture and spatial behaviour in Brisbane.
- Author
-
Faleolo, Ruth (Lute)
- Subjects
MATERIAL culture ,CULTURAL values ,CULTURAL adaptation ,COMMUNITY churches ,BEHAVIOR - Abstract
This paper presents an interesting discussion and analysis of Pasifika (specifically Tongan and Samoan) migrants in Brisbane, and the diverse adaptive cultural practices they use to promote a sense of wellbeing and cultural continuity in diaspora contexts. Pacific Island migrant perspectives of wellbeing and worldviews are linked to their spatial behaviour and material cultural adaptations within places like Brisbane. The characteristics of the Brisbane urban landscape create the material cultural adaptations that have been observed in diaspora contexts, including places of dwelling, community and church gatherings. They are commonly displayed during family or community events, in both private and public spaces. In order to understand the significance of material cultural adaptations we must also consider the underpinnings of the materials and templates used within context. Preliminary qualitative findings have been drawn from a wider‐scale research project that has explored Pasifika migrants (of Samoan and Tongan descent) perceptions and experiences of wellbeing during 2015‒2018. This inquiry has rendered significant evidence of cultural values and identity elements originating from Samoa and Tonga and retained by generations of Brisbane‐based Pacific Islanders, through adapted material culture and shared spatial behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Disrupting the Pathway from Truancy to Delinquency: A Randomized Field Trial Test of the Longitudinal Impact of a School Engagement Program.
- Author
-
Mazerolle, Lorraine, Bennett, Sarah, Antrobus, Emma, Cardwell, Stephanie M., Eggins, Elizabeth, and Piquero, Alex R.
- Subjects
CRIME ,LEGAL liability ,DELINQUENT behavior ,SCHOOL police ,GLUTARALDEHYDE - Abstract
Objective: Truancy in adolescence is related to detrimental developmental outcomes over the life-course, including a greater risk for delinquency during adolescence and offending in adulthood. This paper presents results from the Ability School Engagement Program (ASEP): a Third Party Policing partnership between schools and police that sought to disrupt the relationship between truancy and delinquency by communicating, in a procedurally fair dialogue, the legal responsibilities of parents to ensure their children attend school. This paper examines the impact of ASEP on antisocial behavior and the modifying effects of ASEP on the relationship between willingness to go to school and antisocial behavior. Methods: ASEP was evaluated under randomized field trial conditions, where 102 truanting young people from a highly disadvantaged urban area in Brisbane, Australia, were randomly assigned to either the ASEP intervention or the business-as-usual condition. Results: Utilizing four waves of survey data collected over a 2-year time period, we found evidence that ASEP was related to decreases in self-reported antisocial behavior throughout the 2 years study. We also find that ASEP lessened the negative relationship between willingness to go to school and self-reported antisocial behavior for those in the experimental condition up to 1 year post random allocation. Conclusions: Partnerships between schools and police that communicate, in a procedurally fair way, parental legal responsibilities for their children to attend school holds promise for increasing a truanting young person's willingness to go to school and reducing their self-reported antisocial behaviour, at least in the short run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. China painting in Brisbane: a livelihood or a genteel pastime?
- Author
-
Douglas, Jon and Douglas, Yvonne
- Subjects
POTTERY ,ART exhibitions ,AESTHETICS ,DECORATIVE arts ,ART & society ,ART materials - Abstract
This article provides a comprehensive overview of the practice of china painting in Brisbane between 1902 and 1917. While some artists were able to make a living from china painting, most engaged in it as a hobby or pastime. The popularity of china painting in Australia was influenced by American publications and the availability of technical advice and design patterns. The article highlights several prominent artists and teachers, discussing their exhibitions, teaching activities, and the styles of their work. It also explores the growth of china painting in Brisbane and the challenges faced by artists in selling their work. Overall, this article offers valuable insights into the history and significance of china painting in Brisbane. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
45. Culinary destination consumer-based brand equity: exploring the influence of tourist gaze in relation to FoodPorn on social media.
- Author
-
Manimont, Guljira, Pike, Steven, Beatson, Amanda, and Tuzovic, Sven
- Subjects
GAZE ,BRAND equity ,PLACE marketing ,SOCIAL media ,USER-generated content ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling - Abstract
The present paper investigates the impact of FoodPorn, or food photographs, on user-generated content (UGC) and its role in influencing the perceptions of 'food trippers' toward local culinary precincts in a metropolitan area in Australia. Adopting a mix-methods approach, 20 semi-structured interviews with food trippers revealed four antecedents of why they gaze upon FoodPorn on UGC, including usefulness, ease of use, affective gratifications and source credibility. Findings from interviews informed a large-scale online survey investigating residents' perceptions of three local culinary precincts. Data (n = 593) were analysed using structural equation modelling (SEM). Results from SEM revealed that the effectiveness of UGC in relation to FoodPorn and culinary precinct attractiveness largely depends on the benefits food trippers perceive when gazing upon the food imagery. This research advances our understanding of how gazing upon FoodPorn enhances culinary destination consumer-based brand equity. This study developed an extension of a model that measures culinary precinct destination attractiveness, and the role of FoodPorn in influencing perceptions held by Brisbane consumers of culinary precincts. Findings provide important recommendations for destination marketing organisations (DMOs) both in Australia and worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Developing a post-discharge suicide prevention intervention for children and young people: a qualitative study of integrating the lived-experience of young people, their carers, and mental health clinicians.
- Author
-
Watling, David P., Preece, Megan H. W., Hawgood, Jacinta, Bloomfield, Sharyn, and Kõlves, Kairi
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,CHILDREN of people with mental illness ,SUICIDE prevention ,MENTAL health ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Background: Suicide in young people is a leading cause of death. Interventions that are reflexive, tailored, and developed in concert with this at-risk population are needed. This study aimed to integrate lived-experience into the design of a suicide prevention intervention delivered by phone to young people post-discharge from an emergency department (ED) for suicide risk or self-harm. Methods: Qualitative study was conducted at the Queensland Children's Hospital, Brisbane Australia. Four focus groups with young people with lived-experience, parents or carers and ED mental health clinicals were conducted. In total 5 young people with lived-experience of suicidality (17–21 years, M
age = 19.20), 3 parents and carers with a lived-experience of caring for a young person with mental illness, and 10 ED mental health clinicians participated in focus groups. The first phase of qualitative analysis involved a phenomenological analysis and second phase included a deductive content analysis. The paper is following the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research. Results: First phase, a phenomenological analysis identified three foundational themes to structure future follow-up phone interventions: a person-centred focus, the phone-call dynamic, and the phone-call purpose. Second phase, a deductive content analysis found that participants preferred an intervention that was structured, consistent, and finite. Moreover, an intervention that was authentic, able to facilitate and empower growing independence, and achievable of young people after an ED presentation was desired. Conclusions: Participants expressed their desire for a responsive, structured, and clearly focused phone call that would recognise the young person and parent/carer's needs while providing tailored support to ease transition from the ED to available community and family led care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Let's go throwing stones and stealing cars: offender adaptability and the security hypothesis.
- Author
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Hodgkinson, Tarah, Andresen, Martin A., Ready, Justin, and Hewitt, Ashley N.
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL crimes ,OFFENSES against property ,AUTOMOBILE theft ,CRIMINALS ,BURGLARY ,THEFT - Abstract
The security hypothesis posits that the international crime drop can be attributed to, in large part, improvements in security technology. However, in recent years, certain types of property crime are increasing. In this paper, we test the hypothesis that offenders are adapting to increased security in vehicles through burglarizing residences to steal keys. We analyze residential burglaries, thefts of vehicles, and their co-occurrences in Brisbane Australia (2009–2018) to identify changes in their temporal patterns. Residential burglaries declined while thefts of vehicle remained relatively constant. Co-occurrences of residential burglaries and thefts of vehicle doubled while the rate almost tripled. Data signatures indicate a shift in modus operandi showing significant increases in the use of residential burglaries to facilitate thefts of vehicle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Targeted Advertising in the Public Transit Network Using Smart Card Data.
- Author
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Faroqi, Hamed, Mesbah, Mahmoud, Kim, Jiwon, and Khodaii, Ali
- Subjects
PUBLIC transit ,SMART cards ,CITY dwellers ,ADVERTISING spending ,HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) ,INTELLIGENT transportation systems - Abstract
A great number of urban residents uses public transit network to travel and reach their destination. While the public transit network could perform as a valuable medium for advertising purposes, the share of transit advertising in annual advertising spending is low due to the lack of passengers' profiles. This paper proposes a targeted advertising model in the public transit network regarding the extracted passengers' profiles from smart card data. The model exposes advertisements to groups of passengers in the public transit network regarding their activities and trips. A targeted group includes passengers with similar activities (considering type, location, and time of the activity) and trips (considering spatial and temporal dimensions of the trip). An agglomerative hierarchical clustering method is used to discover activity-trip groups of passengers according to the defined activity and trip similarity measures. An optimization problem is formulated to allocate advertisements to all activity-trip groups aiming at maximizing the coverage and minimizing the cost of the advertisements. Non-Dominated Sorting Genetic-II (NSGA-II) algorithm is used to solve the optimization problem. One-day smart card dataset from Brisbane, Australia is used to implement the model and examine the outcomes. Results show that at different cost intervals, solutions with high coverage can be applied to the network targeting all the activity-trip groups of passengers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Investigating the influence of weather on public transit passenger's travel behaviour: Empirical findings from Brisbane, Australia.
- Author
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Wei, Ming
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC transit , *METEOROLOGICAL stations , *SMART cards , *WEATHER , *PASSENGERS , *BUILT environment - Abstract
Drawing on transit smart card data allied with local weather station records over a 12-month period, this paper takes Brisbane, Australia as the study context and examines the way in which weather impose influences on public transit passenger's travel behaviour. In terms of transit passenger's spatiotemporal origin–destination (OD) information, a new travel behaviour indicator called stickiness is developed to reflect passenger's travel similarity in using the transit service over a period. By applying a suite of regression models, it shows that weather's effects on transit passenger's travel behaviour vary by temporal period and passenger type. In general, weather is shown to exert a stronger effect on passenger's stickiness during midday off-peak hours in comparison with either AM peak or PM peak. Across all types of passengers, child passengers are found to be most tolerant to weather changes and even be stickier to their regular travel pattern during AM peak. The modelling results also reveal that when it relates to journey-to-work or journey-to-school, weather's effects on alighting location are much smaller than other three OD-related travel behaviour features (i.e., boarding time, boarding location, and alighting time). In contrast with the postponement during AM peak, transit passengers are prone to bring forward their trip back home during PM peak in response to poor weather conditions. Moreover, this paper verifies that weather parameters are not singly perceived by transit passengers but as an interrelated unity in shaping transit passenger's travel behaviour. By enriching the weather–travel behaviour scholarship, the empirical findings of this study are helpful to render a holistic understanding of the weather–travel behaviour relationship and have important implications for transit operators in building a more weather-resilient transit system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Effect of Weather on Assault.
- Author
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Corcoran, Jonathan and Zahnow, Renee
- Subjects
WEATHER ,CULTURAL pluralism ,TEMPERATURE effect ,LAND use ,SEASONS - Abstract
This paper examines the role of local weather conditions in explaining variations in assault, in sub-tropical Brisbane, Australia. It details the extent to which local variations in weather are important in shaping the necessary preconditions for assault to take place. Results suggest that higher daily temperatures are associated with an increased propensity for assault at the neighborhood level after controlling for seasonal effects. Assaults occur significantly less frequently in summer than in spring and there is a greater propensity for assaults to occur on weekends compared to weekdays. Neighborhood disadvantage, ethnic diversity, and the presence of risky facilities such bars, schools, or shops increased the propensity for assault above and beyond the effect of temperature. Findings are important in their capacity to isolate the effect of the prevailing local weather conditions whilst controlling for seasonal variations, land use, and the socio-economic and demographic context within which assaults took place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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