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Mapping Connections : Postcolonial, Feminist And Legal Theory, Ian Duncanson, Nan Seuffert Jan 2005

Mapping Connections : Postcolonial, Feminist And Legal Theory, Ian Duncanson, Nan Seuffert

Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive)

Introduction to special issue of collected papers from symposium 'Mapping Law at the Margins', Brisbane, December 2004 - covering operation of the law at the intersections of race, class and gender from colonial times to the present through the lens of postcolonial theory. This Special Issue of the Australian Feminist Law journal collects papers largely from the second Symposium 'Mapping Law at the Margins' Brisbane, December 2004, organized to make visible the operation of the law at the intersections of race, class and gender from colonial times to the present through the lenses of postcolonial theory. Practices of map drawing …


Call Centres: Where To Next?, Zeenobiyah Naadiyah Hannif, Pamela Mathews, Bernadine Cantrick-Brooks Jan 2005

Call Centres: Where To Next?, Zeenobiyah Naadiyah Hannif, Pamela Mathews, Bernadine Cantrick-Brooks

Faculty of Commerce - Papers (Archive)

Call centres, as a rapidly growing industry, have attracted research attention due to associated development, organisation and work practices. However, there is still much to be investigated, particularly given rapid developments in the industry which can already be seen through the evolution of call centres into contact centres providing both telephony and internet services to customers. As call centres continue to evolve there are various alternatives available to them in regards to strategy and structure. This paper considers the emergence of teleworking as an attractive option for specialist call centre staff, and briefly examines the implications for HRM, unions and …


An Intimate Monument (Re)-Narrating 'The Troubles' In Northern Ireland: The Irish Linen Memorial 2001-2005, Lycia Danielle Trouton Jan 2005

An Intimate Monument (Re)-Narrating 'The Troubles' In Northern Ireland: The Irish Linen Memorial 2001-2005, Lycia Danielle Trouton

University of Wollongong Thesis Collection 1954-2016

The Irish Linen Memorial creative project is an ongoing site conscious memorial installation which seeks to re narrate the almost 4,000 deaths which took place during the fraught period in contemporary Northern Ireland, called ‘the troubles’. The dead, far from being gone, remain as a powerful part of the community. How we think about the dead, and the stories we tell about the relationship between the dead and the living, are central to imagining new forms of community and narratives of nationhood. An intimate, yet public, monument to those killed, The Irish Linen Memorial is created on white, linen handkerchiefs, …