University General - Research Publications

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    The City as a Mix of Mixes
    DOVEY, K ; Pafka, E (Melbourne School of Design, The University of Melbourne, 2016)
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    Modelling for Value Systems in a Diverse Online Program in the Caribbean
    Dickson-Deane, C ; Hill, L ; Gray, LE ; Milheim, KL (IGI Global, 2018-01-01)
    The authors present a conceptual framework to guide the participation of students in an online instructional design program. The online program has socio-cultural influencing factors that confound the already diverse nature of the offering. The framework intends to encourage a value system for students that can be used to guide their knowledge and performance as they pursue the tenets of the field of instructional design. Elmore's mode of leadership, Bourdieu's theory of habitus and Hofstede's cultural dimensions theory are used to create a foundation for the framework whilst acknowledging the complexities of the diverse environment. The framework supports and acknowledges the knowledge expected of novice instructional designers through the use of guides whilst acknowledging the systemic and systematic individualistic change processes that will occur.
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    Animals in Victorian Literature and Culture
    MOORE, G ; Mazzeno, LW ; Morrison, RD (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2017)
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    Everyday online conversation, emotion and political action
    WRIGHT, S ; Graham, T ; Jackson, D ; reilly, P ; veneti, A ; Atanasova, D (Information School, University of Sheffield., 2017)
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    Third Space, Social Media and Everyday Political Talk
    WRIGHT, S ; Graham, T ; jackson, S ; Bruns, A ; Enli, G ; Skogerbo, E ; Larssson, AO ; Christensen, C (Routledge, 2016)
    The social media platforms Facebook and Twitter include political areas, for example presentations of political parties or elected representatives, or political hashtags linking tweets to specific political public spheres. In a sense, such areas might not be considered as third spaces because they are explicitly political. This chapter argues that everyday political talk—particularly in third spaces—has the potential to overcome many of the identified issues with online deliberation, including political polarisation and the avoidance of political talk. Content analysis of political, and particularly partisan-framed online groups, has also found polarization. One of the most prominent debates, to date, has been whether the Internet will become polarized, with like-minded people flocking together, enabling them to ignore alternative viewpoints. Moreover, as the use and understanding of the Internet as a space for political debate expanded, this was accompanied by more refined theorizing of the Internet as a public sphere and space for deliberation.
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    Nature
    MOORE, G ; Broomhall, S (Routledge, 2017)
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    'So Wild and Beautiful a World Around Him': Trollope and Antipodean Ecology
    MOORE, G ; Morse, DD ; Markwick, M ; Turner, M (Routledge, 2016)
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    Anticipating the social impacts of deep sea mining
    Bice, SJ (Secretariat of the Pacific Community, 2014)
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    Becoming-Animal Is a Trap for Humans: Deleuze and Guattari in Madagascar
    LAURIE, T ; Stark, HS ; Roffe, JR (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015)