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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Trends In Bmi, Diet And Lifestyle Between 1976 And 2005 In North Sydney, Lillian M. Kent, Anthony Worsley Jan 2009

Trends In Bmi, Diet And Lifestyle Between 1976 And 2005 In North Sydney, Lillian M. Kent, Anthony Worsley

Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Papers (Archive)

Although the prevalence of overweight and obesity in Australia has increased during the past 30 years, little is known about the dietary and behavioural antecedents of body mass index (BMI). We examined changes in mean BMI, diet, and other lifestyle behaviours between 1976 and 2005 and described the cross-sectional associations between these factors and BMI. A series of biennial biomedical surveys by Sydney Adventist Hospital from 1976 to 2005 allowed examination of BMI trends, while the selection of three surveys enabled detailed examination of likely dietary and lifestyle associations. Subjects included in this study were: 384 men and 338 women …


Marrying Out Part 2- Between Two Worlds, Siobhan Mchugh Jan 2009

Marrying Out Part 2- Between Two Worlds, Siobhan Mchugh

Faculty of Creative Arts - Papers (Archive)

MARRYING OUT: a documentary radio series about mixed marriage and religious bigotry: 2 x 55mins

A woman is denied a deathbed visit to her father. A couple’s honeymoon vehicle is sabotaged. A man is cut out of three wills. Children practise their faith in secret. A quarter of the population is barred from applying for jobs.

The cause: religion. The place: Australia. The time: until the 1960s.

Just two generations ago, before multiculturalism was the norm, Australian society was polarised between two groups: Protestants and Catholics. Religion was code for identity, with tensions fuelled by historical grievances that dated back …


Working In The Space Between, Stephanie Hemelryk Donald, Vera C. Mackie Jan 2009

Working In The Space Between, Stephanie Hemelryk Donald, Vera C. Mackie

Faculty of Arts - Papers (Archive)

Questions arising from the negotiation of difference are increasingly relevant in all spheres of contemporary life.1 The processes of globalisation are implicated in the circulation of finance, capital, commodities, knowledge, information, and cultural representations, and there are complex circuits for the movement of people associated with these phenomena. As mobility increases, so encounters with differences of language, culture, deportment and habitus become more common (Mackie & Stevens, in press). There are various modes of mobility: permanent migration; temporary sojourns; tourism; documented and undocumented labour migration; marriage migration; asylum seeking; and overseas study. In Australia, issues of the negotiation of difference …