Geschichte Neuerwerbungsliste 2. Quartal 2009
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Strategy-To-Win-An-Election-Lessons
WINNING ELECTIONS: LESSONS FROM THE AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY 1983-1996 i The Institute of International Studies (IIS), Department of International Relations, Universitas Gadjah Mada, is a research institution focused on the study on phenomenon in international relations, whether on theoretical or practical level. The study is based on the researches oriented to problem solving, with innovative and collaborative organization, by involving researcher resources with reliable capacity and tight society social network. As its commitments toward just, peace and civility values through actions, reflections and emancipations. In order to design a more specific and on target activity, The Institute developed four core research clusters on Globalization and Cities Development, Peace Building and Radical Violence, Humanitarian Action and Diplomacy and Foreign Policy. This institute also encourages a holistic study which is based on contempo- rary internationalSTRATEGY relations study scope TO and WIN approach. AN ELECTION: ii WINNING ELECTIONS: LESSONS FROM THE AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY 1983-1996 By Dafri Agussalim INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS UNIVERSITAS GADJAH MADA iii WINNING ELECTIONS: LESSONS FROM THE AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY 1983-1996 Penulis: Dafri Agussalim Copyright© 2011, Dafri Agussalim Cover diolah dari: www.biogenidec.com dan http:www.foto.detik.com Diterbitkan oleh Institute of International Studies Jurusan Ilmu Hubungan Internasional, Fakultas Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik Universitas Gadjah Mada Cetakan I: 2011 x + 244 hlm; 14 cm x 21 cm ISBN: 978-602-99702-7-2 Fisipol UGM Gedung Bulaksumur Sayap Utara Lt. 1 Jl. Sosio-Justisia, Bulaksumur, Yogyakarta 55281 Telp: 0274 563362 ext 115 Fax.0274 563362 ext.116 Website: http://www.iis-ugm.org E-mail: [email protected] iv ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This book is a revised version of my Master of Arts (MA) thesis, which was written between 1994-1995 in the Australian National University, Canberra Australia. -
Australia As a Partner of East Asia Countries – Political and Economic
PRACE NAUKOWE UNIWERSYTETU EKONOMICZNEGO WE WROCŁ AWIU Nr 67 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2009 Integracja Azji Wschodniej. Mit czy rzeczywistość? Anna Janiszewska, Ewa Klima University of Łódź AUSTRALIA AS A PARTNER OF EAST ASIA COUNTRIES - POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC ASPECTS 1. Introduction Australia, a continent “hidden” from Europe for the longest period of time, for many people still remains a synonym of rowdy adventure and a journey into the unknown. Unfortunately, in Poland Terra Incognita is actually a land of the un known. Information about the people and the country seldom reach Poland and even Summer Olympics in Sydney in 2004, both a sports and a promotional event, did not manage to change this fact. It is worth to know more about Australia. After all, it is a huge country of great economic potential. It is a country that can become a bridge between the Old World and the most dynamically developing region of the globalization era - Southeast Asia. Political and trade relations between the Com monwealth of Australia and countries from the region prove both the increase of this area’s significance and the active role of Australia as an international player. Australia, linked by strong alliances with the USA and Great Britain, is growing to become a fully-fledged partner in the Asia-Pacific region. The aim of this article is to show how strong political and economic relations of Australia and Asian countries, with a particular focus on Southeast Asia, really are. The analysis is mainly quantitative and has been conducted on the basis of available statistical data. 2. Political relations Australia is nowadays a significant player on the international arena, especially in the Asia-Pacific region. -
A Quick Guide to Military Anniversaries in 2017
RESEARCH PAPER SERIES, 2016–17 3 APRIL 2017 Anzac Day 2017 A quick guide to military anniversaries in 2017 David Watt Foreign Affairs, Defence and Security Section In February 2017, the Minister for Veterans’ Affairs announced a list of significant anniversary dates which will be the focus of commemoration during 2017. The Department of Veterans’ Affairs (DVA) website provides, where known, further information about the location and nature of the commemorative activities. The DVA Anzac webpage also enables a search of local events within Australia. The following anniversaries are based on the list set out by the Minister. 15 February 2017—75th anniversary of the Fall of Singapore British Prime Minister Winston Churchill described the Commonwealth defeat at Singapore on 15 February 1942 as ‘the worst disaster and largest capitulation in British history’. In just over two months, Japanese forces managed to defeat Commonwealth forces along the Malaysian Peninsula and invade and occupy the ‘Gibraltar of the East’, the British Empire’s main base in Southeast Asia. In Singapore alone, 80,000 Commonwealth troops (the vast majority of which were British, Indian and Australian) became prisoners of war. A further 40,000 Commonwealth troops had been captured in the fighting on the Malay Peninsula. Approximately 15,000 Australians (most of the 8th Division) were captured in Singapore. As many as 7,000 of those would die before the end of the war. More detailed information on the Malayan and Singapore campaigns can be found in the digitised version of Australia’s Official War History; see chapters 7 to 17 of Volume IV—The Japanese thrust. -
Melbourne Press Club Laurie Oakes Address 15 September 2017
MELBOURNE PRESS CLUB LAURIE OAKES ADDRESS 15 SEPTEMBER 2017 Thank you all for coming. And thank you to the Melbourne Press Club for organizing this lunch. Although I’m based in Canberra, I’ve long felt a strong link with this club and been involved in its activities when I can-- including a period as one of the Perkin Award judges. Many of the members are people I’ve worked with over the years. I feel I belong. So this farewell means a lot to me. When I picked up the papers this morning, my first thought was: “God, I’m so old I knew Lionel Murphy.” In fact, I broke the story of his terminal cancer that shut down the inquiry. But making me feel even older was the fact that I’d even had a bit to do with Abe Saffron, known to the headline writers as “Mr Sin”, in my brief period on police rounds at the Sydney Mirror. Not long after I joined the Mirror, knowing nothing and having to be trained from scratch, a young journo called Anna Torv was given the job of introducing me to court reporting. The case involved charges against Mr Saffron based on the flimsy grounds, I seem to recall, that rooms in Lodge 44, the Sydney motel he owned that was also his headquarters, contained stolen fridges. At one stage during the trial a cauliflower-eared thug leaned across me to hand a note to Anna. It was from Abe saying he’d like to meet her. I intercepted it, but I don’t think Anna would have had much trouble rejecting the invitation. -
The National Catholic Weekly July 20-27, 2009 $2.75 of Many Things Published by Jesuits of the United States
THE NATIONAL CATHOLIC WEEKLY JULY 20-27, 2009 $2.75 OF MANY THINGS PUBLISHED BY JESUITS OF THE UNITED STATES mere 95 years ago this sum- most primordial historical forms. This EDITOR IN CHIEF mer, miscalculation and mad- suggests that there is something almost Drew Christiansen, S.J. A ness brought forth the War to innate in our drive to kill and conquer, End All Wars, the first of the 20th which likely has more to do with origi- EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT century’s twin cataclysms and nal sin than it does with entangled MANAGING EDITOR humankind’s gruesome introduction to alliances, or Lenin’s theory of imperial- Robert C. Collins, S.J. total warfare on a global scale. In the ism, or McKinley’s manifest destiny, or EDITORIAL DIRECTOR opinion of much of Europe’s intelli- Bush’s preventive war. Karen Sue Smith gentsia at the time, it was not supposed If that is the case, if the sin of Adam to have happened. As Barbara and Eve helps explain why Cain killed ONLINE EDITOR Maurice Timothy Reidy Tuchman pointed out in The Guns of Abel and why the Kaiser marched on August, her masterly account of the ini- Paris, then this much is also true: war CULTURE EDITOR James Martin, S.J. tial months of World War I (if you are can never be understood as a rational still looking for a good beach read, pick exercise, for sin, original or otherwise, LITERARY EDITOR up this 1962 Pulitzer-winner), enlight- is by definition irrational, separating us Patricia A. Kossmann enment values and liberal economics, it as it does from God, the source and POETRY EDITOR was thought, had rendered war passé, summit of life itself, without whom James S. -
U.S. Church Seen Us Hope for Imperhed I. America REGISTER
U.S. Church Seen us Hope For ImperHed I. America Time is running out in Latin America, and the Church in the United States appears to be the only Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations power at the moment that can prevent a takeover by the ContenU Copyright by the Catholic Press Society. Inc.. 1962 — Permission to Reproduce, Except Communists or halt Protestants from making inroads On*Articles Otherwise Marked, Given After 12 H.” Friday Following Issue into an area that has such a long Catholic heritage. Latin America can use 200,000 priests right now. Father Edward O’Reilly Cassi-' dy of the Miasionary Society of work ia Latin America. To St. James the Apostle stressed date, he said, he expects to these conditions in an inter gain (be volnnteer services of DENVER CATHaiC view at the ResUter. mote than IS priests. There is a “ fantastic” need j The Missionary Society of St. I James the Apostle was founded ;by Cardinal Richard Cushing, . Archbishop of Boston, in 1958 ' to aid the Church in Latin America. REGISTER Father Cassidy became in terested in Latin America while VOL. LVI. No. 27. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1962 DENVER, COLORADO on a vacation trip to Mexico before he was ordained. Ckilditui Invito You He was ordahved when he was in his Ms for the Diocese of Reno and has retained his in terest in Latin America. He Adoption Week Feb. 18-23 made a pilgrimage to the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe near The Infant of Prague Mexico City when he was serv Nursery, 2790 W. -
2019/20 Darwin First
2019/20 ANNUAL REPORT DARWIN FIRST CITY OF DARWIN ANNUAL REPORT 2019/20 INTRODUCTION ©2020 City of Darwin This work is copyright. Permission to reproduce information contained in this report must be obtained from: City of Darwin GPO Box 86, Darwin NT 0801 Phone: +61 8 8930 0300 Web: www.darwin.nt.gov.au Annual Report Legend This year, City of Darwin has utilised icons throughout the Annual Report to denote reference to other information or programs and projects impacted by Coronavirus as follows: CASE STUDY Indicates performance through a case study and may include references to other information or external websites. REFERENCE TO ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Indicates a reference or link to additional information which can be found on Council’s website www.darwin.nt.gov.au or other external website. COVID-19 Indicates where a program or project performance has been impacted by Coronavirus (COVID-19). The following icons are utilised throughout the report to demonstrate the level of performance that has been achieved in 2019/20. Definitions of performance are outlined below and commentary has been provided throughout the report to substantiate Council’s assessment of performance. This icon demonstrates Council’s programs or This icon demonstrates monitoring of Council’s deliverables are on track or projects have been performance for deliverables and projects is completed within budget and on schedule required. It may also indicate that a program or where Council has achieved its deliverables project did not achieve the desired result. or where a project has been completed. This icon demonstrates Council’s programs This icon demonstrates that a deliverable or or deliverables are in progress and project has not yet commenced, has been projects are almost complete. -
Questions & Answers & Tweets
Questions & Answers & Tweets Jock Given & Natalia Radywyl Abstract This article reports on the integration of Twitter messages into the live television broadcast of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s (ABC) weekly public affairs discussion program, Q&A. The program first went to air in May 2008; Twitter integration began two years later. Twitter integration is an evolving example of ‘participation television’, but not one that involves the kind of remote- control/set-top-box interactivity that digital television promised. Q&A integrates broadcast and online content in a way the program makers thought would serve the animating purpose of the television program: to increase public engagement in politics. It is an attempt to use the internet to make television better rather than to concede its eclipse, by marrying brief fragments of online speech with the one-way, single-channel authority of a television program broadcast live across a nation by a public service broadcaster. The research draws on data about Twitter use supplied by the ABC and its contractor TweeVee TV, OzTAM television ratings data, interviews and email correspondence with ABC staff and others conducted by the two authors between June and October 2011, and observations on the making of the episode of the show in Sydney on 29 May 2011. Keywords: digital television, public service broadcasting, social media, television, Twitter Here’s what we’ll be looking for as we dip into the #QandA stream— • tweets that are concise (short), timely and on topic • tweets that are witty and entertaining • tweets that add a fresh perspective to the debate • tweets that make a point without getting too personal (ABC 2011a) Introduction In May 2010, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) began to display Twitter ‘tweets’ on-screen in the broadcast of the hour-long, weekly current affairs discussion program, Q&A.1 In each hour-long episode, around 80–100 tweets using the hashtag #qanda are selected for display in the broadcast program. -
Songs of Notre Dame
The Archives of The University of Notre Dame 607 Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 574-631-6448 [email protected] Notre Dame Archives: Alumnus ALUMNUS ^lalue of cfalher oowara Sorm, as. a, lounger, TJniverulu of CALolre fQ"^^ Last Year's Record Total oi 7.887 is 1.800 Bahind: tixttcf Gonw of 1947 Was Spediic Incentive; City Committees and Club Presidents Urged to Organize Follow-Up Programs to Beach 1948 Goal of lOMO GiTers The Army Game of 1947 was one of those Table Indicative ol Potentials with the other 180 Chairmen Cities func classics on which many historical events are Space prohibits a more general presenta tioning with their Local Clubs cooperating, based. tion of our picture, but from the accom the 10,000 giver-goal for 1948 is not dream We are immediately concerned with its panying chart of 44 cities, containing some ing but digging. obvious effects in 1947 on the early and 70% of our total alumni, you can see how Your individual response, without wait record-brealcing giving of some 2,000 more readily alimini response could close up the ing for a solicitor, will make that task easier alumni than had given in 1946. present gap to meet last year's total, and how. and the goal nearer and quicker. But we still feel that the current sub stantial deficit of some 1,800 alumni givers —as against last year's record at the same date—reflects only the timing incentive of 7948 Alumni Record ~-44 Key Chairman Clfles the Army Game. We are reluctant to ac cept the alternative thesis that some 2,000 alumni gave to Notre Dame last year only NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER because of the Army Game ALUMNI IN '48 % IN TO GO Actually, there should be no essential re Akron 77 35 45 42 lation between a football game and a gift Baltimore 48 20 42 28 to Notre Dame by an alumnus. -
GGD-97-86S World Wide Web Sites: Reported by 42 Federal
United States General Accounting Office GAO Supplement June 1997 World Wide Web Sites Reported by Federal Organizations GAO/GGD-97-86S Preface This publication supplements our report entitled Internet and Electronic Dial-Up Bulletin Boards: Information Reported by Federal Organizations (GAO/GGD-97-86, June 16, 1997). It contains a listing of approximately 4,300 World Wide Web (WWW) sites that 42 federal organizations reported to us. The definition of a WWW site can vary. Because we were requested by the Chairmen of the Senate Committee on Appropriations and the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs to identify the number of distinct WWW sites and to encourage consistent reporting, we defined a WWW site as a file or group of files organized under a homepage, that is accessible on the Internet using web browser software. A WWW site’s homepage is typically the index, welcome, or menu page for a distinct WWW activity or service. As expected, federal organizations reported a large number of WWW sites that reflect the large number of activities within the federal government. Although we contacted federal organizations where we had questions concerning whether they understood our definition of a WWW site, due to the large number of reported WWW sites, we could not verify that all federal organizations used our definition. Furthermore, some federal organizations reported that the list they provided of their WWW sites was not in accordance with our definition or was not complete. Some reported that they do not track this type of information and to obtain these data would have involved a major data collection effort. -
A War That Gave Heartbreak on Both Sides
32 BOMBING OF DARWIN 75TH ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY FEBRUARY 19 2017 A war that gave heartbreak on both sides And so it was, on the eve of TWO Japanese lovers, split by World War II in the the 70th anniversary of Japan’s Territory, united only in death. This incredible tale surrender, that Japanese war- time widow Miyoko Kawahara of enduring love from Tokyo to the Top End began found final peace in the waters in the 1940s and finally drew to a close in 2015 in off Darwin near where her air- crew husband had perished. the aquamarine waters off Darwin Harbour, as In a simple ceremony, Miy- GARY SHIPWAY recounts oko’s ashes were given to the sea by five members from three generations of her fam- ily, led by Noriyo Ito, the DARWIN will forever hold a Shinji was just 22, and he daughter of Shinji Kawahara. special place in the heart of and crew member Tomihiko They travelled from Tokyo Japan’s Kawahara family. Tanaka were flying another of for the moving ceremony, It is the final resting place of their many information gath- This was the first time the Shinji Kawahara and his ering missions over Darwin. family of a Japanese World devoted wife Miyoko. Unlike other missions, they War II victim had scattered the Shinji and Miyoko rep- ran into grave trouble, ashes of their loved one in Aus- resent the side of a war that 26,000ft in the air. tralia. Noriyo Ito said the pil- the northern shore of the Japa- even time can struggle to heal; Their aircraft was no match grimage to Darwin in 2015 was nese island of Kyushu. -
World War Ii (1939–1945) 56 57
OXFORD BIG IDEAS HISTORY 10: AUSTRALIAN CURRICULUM 2 WORLD WAR II (1939–1945) 56 57 depth study World War II In this depth study, students will investigate wartime experiences through a study of World War II. is includes coverage of the causes, events, outcome and broad impact of the con ict as a part of global history, as well as the nature and extent of Australia’s involvement in the con ict. is depth study MUST be completed by all students. 2.0 World War II (1939–1945) The explosion of the USS Shaw during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, 7 December 1941 SAMPLE OXFORD BIG IDEAS HISTORY 10: AUSTRALIAN CURRICULUM 2 WORLD WAR II (1939–1945) 58 59 Australian Curriculum focus HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING • An overview of the causes and course of World War II • An examination of significant events of World War II, including the Holocaust and use of the atomic bomb depth study • The experiences of Australians during World War II (such as Prisoners of War (POWs), the Battle of Britain, World War II Kokoda, the Fall of Singapore) (1939–1945) • The impact of World War II, with a particular emphasis on the Australian home front, including the changing roles of women and use of wartime government World War II was one of the de ning events of the 20th century. e war was controls (conscription, manpower controls, rationing played out all across Europe, the Paci c, the Middle East, Africa and Asia. and censorship) e war even brie y reached North America and mainland Australia.