Showing 7974 items
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Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, McGrath, Ryan, Lake Bunga Oil Bore, 1999
Research, interpretation and management recommendations for the Lake Bunga Oil Bore, Lakes Entrance, East Gippsland, Victoriaindustrial -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Avery, Sally, Nungurner Boat Shed also known as The Red Shed, 2003
Research, interpretation and management recommendations for the Nungurner Boat Shed, Nungurner, East Gippsland, Victoria, by Forestec Student.buildings, community facilities, boats and boating -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Davidson, Rachael, The Nicholson River Railway Bridge, 2004
Research, interpretation and management recommendations for the Nicholson River Railway Bridge, East Gippsland, Victoria, by a Forestec student.bridges, transport -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Van der Heyden Becky, Calulu Mitchell River Bridge, 2004
Research interpretation and management recommendations for the Calulu Mitchell River Bridge, near Bairnsdale, Victoria by a Forestec Studentbridges, waterways, settlers -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Cox Nathan, Aboriginal Scar Tree, 2003
Research interpretation and management recommendations for the Aboriginal Scar Tree at Howitt Park Bairnsdale Victoria by a forestec studentaboriginals, transport -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - COMMUNITY LIFE
Typed notes mentioning Diamond Hill area, advertisements in the three local papers and further sources for research.document, newspaper, community life, bendigo advertiser, sandhurst bee, bendigo independent -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Slide, Alan L. Mitchell, 1965
"Along drive to Burnley Gardens near Research building, looking towards Swan St. 1965."alan l. mitchell, burnley gardens, research building, 1965 -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Slide - Photograph, Eltham Shire Council, Plan of Subdivision, Crown Allotment 8, Section 8A, Parish of Nillumbik,County of Evelyn, 1969
35mm colour positive transparency blue Agfacolour Service plastic mountC1, Pain, Sibbel and Carter, Research-Warrandyte Road, North Warrandyte, 4 August 1969carter, infrastructure, map, north warrandyte, pain, parish of nillumbik, plan of subdivision, planning, research-warrandyte road, sibbel, subdivison lots -
NMIT (Northern Melbourne Institute of TAFE)
Report: Reporting student performance in TAFE CCOT September 1987
One hundred and forty page A4 size report with yellow cover. Spiral bound. Subtitle: A Research Report prepared for The Victorian Technical and Further Education Board. Project Managers: Ross Gillespie and Kieran Batt. Project Research: Roslyn Verity. Produced by Collingwood College of TAFE.collingwood college of tafe, reports, nmit -
Federation University Historical Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Clare Gervasoni, Corellas, 26/10/2015
Colour photographs of corellas on the window ledge of the Geoffrey Blainey Research Centre at the Federation University Mount Helen Campus. corella, bird, mount helen -
Federation University Historical Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Colour, Corella in a Tree, 26/10/2015
Colour photographof a corella in a tree outside the Geoffrey Blainey Research Centre at the Federation University Mount Helen Campus. corella, bird -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Work on paper, List of homes worth of heritage status circa 1970
One typed sheet by the Ringwood Historical Research Group, for homes in the City of Ringwood that have a link to the pioneers of the area -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Photograph - Black and white print, 315/28, 1951
"The Bird Proof Cage used by the Plant Research Laboratory - 500 yds walk from the Laboratory." EMG "1951"bird proof cage, plant research laboratory, e. m. gibson collection -
Federation University Art Collection
Painting - Artwork, Lambeth, Paul, 'This is the Perpetual Journey' by Paul Lambeth, 2008
Paul LAMBETH (15 September 1957- ) Born Melbourne, Victoria This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Followed the Burke and Wills trail while undertaking a Masters of Arts Research, and returning to Ballarat with the beginnings of a body of work. art, artwork, paul lambeth, staffmember -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Book, Coburg Historical Society, Recognising House Styles 1880s-1990s - Laurie Burchell, 1991
Architectural references aimed at assisting researchers in describing, understanding, dting and comparing individual buildings in the Coburg area in Victoria.Foreword by Miles Lewis -
NMIT (Northern Melbourne Institute of TAFE)
Folder: of copy Articles and documents on the history of Technical Education 1970
Manila folder of copy articles and documents used by Paul Scofield in his research on the history of Collingwood Technical School. collingwood technical school, history, technical education, paul scofield, nmit -
Tarnagulla History Archive
Unpublished manuscript: Dunolly District Hospital 1859-2002, Dunolly District Hospital 1859-2002, 2002
Donald Clark Collection. An unpublished research manuscript with title 'Dunolly District Hospital 1859-2002' by Donald Clark. Plastic spiral bound.dunolly hospital -
Tarnagulla History Archive
Article: Tarnagulla Presbyterian Church 1863-1963, 1963
Donald Clark Collection.A typed research article with title: 'Tarnagulla Presbyterian Church 1863-1963', giving the history of the Church and its construction. -
Wangaratta High School
Curriculum and Research Bullitin, 1972
Brown booklet containing CURRICULUM AND RESEARCH BULLETIN vol. VII no. 1 1972, published by the education department of Victoria -
University of Melbourne, School of Chemistry
Trimethyl Sulphine Iodide
Earliest research samples from David Orme Masson's work at Edinburgh. Trimethyl sulphine iodide J.A.Blackie 1878 -
Dandenong/Cranbourne RSL Sub Branch
Photograph - Colour Photograph, Woomera Blue Streak
Framed Photograph depicting "Woomera Blue Streak". Blue Streak was an Upper Atmospheric Research Vehicle dated 1965. -
Camberwell Historical Society
Book, Elizabeth Rushen, Bishopscourt Melbourne: Official Residence and Family Home, 2013
Researched history of the East Melbourne household Bishopscourt, the family home of Melbourne's first Anglican bishop, built in 1854.melbourne, bishopscourt -
Melbourne Legacy
Document, Letter from GE Milne, Lone Pine ANZAC 18/12/1915, 1915
Black and white photocopy of a typed letter written by Company Sergeant Major (later Captain) George Eric Milne on the second last night at Lone Pine, Gallipoli. The letter to his parents show that he was scheduled to be in the second last party to leave the area during the evacuation. The other papers with this letter show that Legatee Don S (probably Simonson) had attended a planting of a Lone Pine seedling at Scotch College and the Head had read the letter out as part of the service. George Milne had attended school at Scotch College and is commemorated with his name on the wall of the Memorial Hall. From NAA his record shows that he had left Australia as part of the 24th Battalion (on the same ship as Legacy founder Stan Savige), he served at Gallipoli. Later with the 46th Battalion he was wounded in action and died in France on 5 April 1918, and is buried at Gezaincourt Communal Cemetery. Full text of the letter is transcribed and attached.A first hand account of the evacuation of Lone Pine from someone in the same battalion as Stan Savige.Black and white A4 photocopy x 5 pages of a typed letter written by GE Milne and associated research.gallipoli, world war one, george milne, evacuation -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Green Os, The Gippsland Lakes, 1978
A summary of knowledge of the history and development on the Gippsland Lakes, Victoria, gathered from newspapers, journals and some original research.Ruth Clark. Thankyou for your interest and Assistance Ruth O S Green 1.3. 1978waterways -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Barned, Kim, Tambo Upper Low Level Bridge, 2003
Research, interpretation and management recommendations for the Tambo Upper Low Level Bridge, East Gippsland,Victoria, by a Forestec student.bridges, waterways, natural disasters -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Book, Cunningham Cliff, Aboriginal Scar Tree Bruthen Valley, 2004
Research interpretation and management recommendations for the Aboriginal Scar tree in Bruthen Valley, East Gippsland Victoria by a forestec studentaboriginals, transport, vegetation -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - BHS ADMINISTRATION COLLECTION: COPY OF BHS MINUTE BOOK 1935, 1935
Copy of Bendigo Historical Society Minute Book 1935. Photocopy of the Minutes stored in a display book To be used for Research. -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Periodical, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Australian Aboriginal studies : journal of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, 2010
'Whose Ethics?':Codifying and enacting ethics in research settings Bringing ethics up to date? A review of the AIATSIS ethical guidelines Michael Davis (Independent Academic) A revision of the AIATSIS Guidelines for Ethical Research in Indigenous Studies was carried out during 2009-10. The purpose of the revision was to bring the Guidelines up to date in light of a range of critical developments that have occurred in Indigenous rights, research and knowledge management since the previous version of the Guidelines was released in 2000. In this paper I present an outline of these developments, and briefly discuss the review process. I argue that the review, and the developments that it responded to, have highlighted that ethical research needs to be thought about more as a type of behaviour and practice between engaged participants, and less as an institutionalised, document-focused and prescriptive approach. The arrogance of ethnography: Managing anthropological research knowledge Sarah Holcombe (ANU) The ethnographic method is a core feature of anthropological practice. This locally intensive research enables insight into local praxis and culturally relative practices that would otherwise not be possible. Indeed, empathetic engagement is only possible in this close and intimate encounter. However, this paper argues that this method can also provide the practitioner with a false sense of his or her own knowing and expertise and, indeed, with arrogance. And the boundaries between the anthropologist as knowledge sink - cultural translator and interpreter - and the knowledge of the local knowledge owners can become opaque. Globalisation and the knowledge ?commons?, exemplified by Google, also highlight the increasing complexities in this area of the governance and ownership of knowledge. Our stronghold of working in remote areas and/or with marginalised groups places us at the forefront of negotiating the multiple new technological knowledge spaces that are opening up in the form of Indigenous websites and knowledge centres in these areas. Anthropology is not immune from the increasing awareness of the limitations and risks of the intellectual property regime for protecting or managing Indigenous knowledge. The relevance of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in opening up a ?rights-based? discourse, especially in the area of knowledge ownership, brings these issues to the fore. For anthropology to remain relevant, we have to engage locally with these global discourses. This paper begins to traverse some of this ground. Protocols: Devices for translating moralities, controlling knowledge and defining actors in Indigenous research, and critical ethical reflection Margaret Raven (Institute for Sustainability and Technology Policy (ISTP), Murdoch University) Protocols are devices that act to assist with ethical research behaviour in Indigenous research contexts. Protocols also attempt to play a mediating role in the power and control inherent in research. While the development of bureaucratically derived protocols is on the increase, critiques and review of protocols have been undertaken in an ad hoc manner and in the absence of an overarching ethical framework or standard. Additionally, actors implicated in research networks are seldom theorised. This paper sketches out a typology of research characters and the different moral positioning that each of them plays in the research game. It argues that by understanding the ways actors enact research protocols we are better able to understand what protocols are, and how they seek to build ethical research practices. Ethics and research: Dilemmas raised in managing research collections of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander materials Grace Koch (AIATSIS) This paper examines some of the ethical dilemmas for the proper management of research collections of Indigenous cultural materials, concentrating upon the use of such material for Native Title purposes. It refers directly to a number of points in the draft of the revised AIATSIS Guidelines for Ethical Research in Indigenous Studies and draws upon both actual and hypothetical examples of issues that may arise when requests are made for Indigenous material. Specific concerns about ethical practices in collecting data and the subsequent control of access to both the data itself and to published works based upon it are raised within the context of several types of collections, including those held by AIATSIS and by Native Title Representative Bodies. Ethics or social justice? Heritage and the politics of recognition Laurajane Smith (ANU) Nancy Fraser?s model of the politics of recognition is used to examine how ethical practices are interconnected with wider struggles for recognition and social justice. This paper focuses on the concept of 'heritage' and the way it is often uncritically linked to 'identity' to illustrate how expert knowledge can become implicated in struggles for recognition. The consequences of this for ethical practice and for rethinking the role of expertise, professional discourses and disciplinary identity are discussed. The ethics of teaching from country Michael Christie (CDU), with the assistance of Yi?iya Guyula, Kathy Gotha and Dh�?gal Gurruwiwi The 'Teaching from Country' program provided the opportunity and the funding for Yol?u (north-east Arnhem Land Aboriginal) knowledge authorities to participate actively in the academic teaching of their languages and cultures from their remote homeland centres using new digital technologies. As two knowledge systems and their practices came to work together, so too did two divergent epistemologies and metaphysics, and challenges to our understandings of our ethical behaviour. This paper uses an examination of the philosophical and pedagogical work of the Yol?u Elders and their students to reflect upon ethical teaching and research in postcolonial knowledge practices. Closing the gaps in and through Indigenous health research: Guidelines, processes and practices Pat Dudgeon (UWA), Kerrie Kelly (Australian Indigenous Psychologists Association) and Roz Walker (UWA) Research in Aboriginal contexts remains a vexed issue given the ongoing inequities and injustices in Indigenous health. It is widely accepted that good research providing a sound evidence base is critical to closing the gap in Aboriginal health and wellbeing outcomes. However, key contemporary research issues still remain regarding how that research is prioritised, carried out, disseminated and translated so that Aboriginal people are the main beneficiaries of the research in every sense. It is widely acknowledged that, historically, research on Indigenous groups by non-Indigenous researchers has benefited the careers and reputations of researchers, often with little benefit and considerably more harm for Indigenous peoples in Australia and internationally. This paper argues that genuine collaborative and equal partnerships in Indigenous health research are critical to enable Aboriginal and Torres Islander people to determine the solutions to close the gap on many contemporary health issues. It suggests that greater recognition of research methodologies, such as community participatory action research, is necessary to ensure that Aboriginal people have control of, or significant input into, determining the Indigenous health research agenda at all levels. This can occur at a national level, such as through the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Road Map on Indigenous research priorities (RAWG 2002), and at a local level through the development of structural mechanisms and processes, including research ethics committees? research protocols to hold researchers accountable to the NHMRC ethical guidelines and values which recognise Indigenous culture in all aspects of research. Researching on Ngarrindjeri Ruwe/Ruwar: Methodologies for positive transformation Steve Hemming (Flinders University) , Daryle Rigney (Flinders University) and Shaun Berg (Berg Lawyers) Ngarrindjeri engagement with cultural and natural resource management over the past decade provides a useful case study for examining the relationship between research, colonialism and improved Indigenous wellbeing. The Ngarrindjeri nation is located in south-eastern Australia, a ?white? space framed by Aboriginalist myths of cultural extinction recycled through burgeoning heritage, Native Title, natural resource management ?industries?. Research is a central element of this network of intrusive interests and colonising practices. Government management regimes such as natural resource management draw upon the research and business sectors to form complex alliances to access funds to support their research, monitoring, policy development, management and on-ground works programs. We argue that understanding the political and ethical location of research in this contemporary management landscape is crucial to any assessment of the potential positive contribution of research to 'Bridging the Gap' or improving Indigenous wellbeing. Recognition that research conducted on Ngarrindjeri Ruwe/Ruwar (country/body/spirit) has impacts on Ngarrindjeri and that Ngarrindjeri have a right and responsibility to care for their lands and waters are important platforms for any just or ethical research. Ngarrindjeri have linked these rights and responsibilities to long-term community development focused on Ngarrindjeri capacity building and shifts in Ngarrindjeri power in programs designed to research and manage Ngarrindjeri Ruwe/Ruwar. Research agreements that protect Ngarrindjeri interests, including cultural knowledge and intellectual property, are crucial elements in these shifts in power. A preliminary review of ethics resources, with particular focus on those available online from Indigenous organisations in WA, NT and Qld Sarah Holcombe (ANU) and Natalia Gould (La Trobe University) In light of a growing interest in Indigenous knowledge, this preliminary review maps the forms and contents of some existing resources and processes currently available and under development in the Northern Territory, Queensland and Western Australia, along with those enacted through several cross-jurisdictional initiatives. A significant majority of ethics resources have been developed in response to a growing interest in the application of Indigenous knowledge in land and natural resource management. The aim of these resources is to ?manage? (i.e. protect and maintain) Indigenous knowledge by ensuring ethical engagement with the knowledge holders. Case studies are drawn on from each jurisdiction to illustrate both the diversity and commonality in the approach to managing this intercultural engagement. Such resources include protocols, guidelines, memorandums of understanding, research agreements and strategic plans. In conducting this review we encourage greater awareness of the range of approaches in practice and under development today, while emphasising that systematic, localised processes for establishing these mechanisms is of fundamental importance to ensuring equitable collaboration. Likewise, making available a range of ethics tools and resources also enables the sharing of the local and regional initiatives in this very dynamic area of Indigenous knowledge rights.b&w photographs, colour photographsngarrindjeri, ethics, ethnography, indigenous research, social justice, indigenous health -
Clunes Museum
Pamphlet - BROCHURES CLUNES MUSEUM
.1 YELLOW A4 SHEET TRIFOLD ABOUT CLUNES MUSEUM (THE RECEPTION MANAGER NORAH CAMPBELL) .2 DARK YELLOW A4 SHEET TRIFOLD INFORMATION ABOUT THE MUSEUM ( SECRETARY PAT COOK) .3 GREEN A4 SHEET TRIFOLD : CLUNES MUSEUM RESEARCH DEPARTMENT. THIS IS FOR RESEARCH INQUIRYpamplet clunes museum, pamplet research department -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Newsletter, No. 74 September 1990
Contents: • Next meeting, Slide Presentation: Roads and Byways of the Shire of Eltham • September Meeting • Walter Withers Commemorative Plaque - Saturday 13 October 1990 • Yarra Track Excursion – Sunday 14 October 1990 • Australian Institute of Genealogical Studies Open Day The Shire of Eltham Historical Society was formed in October 1967. The first newsletter of the Society was issued May 1978 and has been published continuously ever since on a bi-monthly basis. With the cessation of the Shire of Eltham in late 1994, the Society's name was revised to Eltham District Historical Society and this name first appeared with issue No. 103, July 1995. The collection of the Society's newsletters provides a valuable resource on the history of the Society's activities, office bearers and committee members, guest speakers and subjects of historical interest pertinent to the former Shire of Eltham and the Eltham District.A4 photocopied newsletter distributed to membersnewsletter, eltham district historical society, shire of eltham historical society