- School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
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ItemHollywood ending?Chandler, J (Mark Baker, 2021-04-30)Amid the relief at Joe Biden’s engagement with climate change, did we lose sight of what’s happening on the ground?
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ItemNot drowning, fightingChandler, J ( 2021-06-03)Have reporters’ cliches got in the way of understanding how Pacific islanders are dealing with climate change?
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ItemNo Preview AvailableDigital Citizenship in the City: Chinese Students and Social Media’s Mobile Scene in MelbourneMartin, F ( 2020-04-10)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableA literal game of thrones: why the glamour of royalty doesn’t fadeSparrow, J ( 2021-08-13)Dennis Altman began writing God Save the Queen after he and his editor spotted a peculiar phenomenon. A list compiled by The Economist of the world’s 10 most democratic nations featured eight countries with maintained constitutional monarchies, despite the seeming contradiction between hereditary power and popular rule.
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ItemNo Preview Available“Picturing” Kāi Tahu in 1830’s Poihākena: A Preliminary SketchStandfield, R ; Stevens, M ( 2021)
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ItemArtists are not at the negotiating table at COP26 but art is everywhere. What can they accomplish through their work?De Beukelaer, C ; Breskvar, EJ ; Christoff, P ( 2021)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableIn the Stillness Between Two Waves of the SeaDe Beukelaer, C ; Corcoran, J ( 2020-05)A reflection on being at sea during the COVID-19 pandemic. Text by Christiaan De Beukelaer and Jennifer Corcoran. Photographs by Christiaan De Beukelaer.
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ItemFrom Locked Out to Locked InDe Beukelaer, C ( 2020-09)According to the International Maritime Organization, more than 200,000 seafarers are currently stranded at sea. They cannot return home at the end of their contracts on commercial vessels – including container ships, tankers, bulk carriers and cruise ships – which often have them at sea for months. Since countries around the world started closing their borders to contain the spread of COVID-19, crew change has been prohibited. As a result, the “Seafarers Happiness Index”, a quarterly survey published by the London-based Mission to Seafarers, indicates an unsurprising recent drop in “general happiness” levels.
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ItemCrew change crisis risks supply chains - and livesDe Beukelaer, C ( 2020-10)Some 400,000 seafarers are currently stuck on ships, past the end of their contracts, unable to go home.
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ItemOok Zeelieden Willen Naar HuisDe Beukelaer, C ( 2020-10)De honderdduizenden zeelieden die niet aan wal raken, zijn de onzichtbare slachtoffers van de corona-epidemie, stelt Christiaan De Beukelaer. Toch zijn de rederijen niet snel geneigd om hun bemanningen te wisselen. Daar moet verandering in komen.