Academic literature on the topic 'South Australian Country Women's Association'

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Journal articles on the topic "South Australian Country Women's Association"

1

Teather, Elizabeth Kenworthy. "MANDATE OF THE COUNTRY WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION OF NEW SOUTH WALES." Australian Journal of Social Issues 31, no. 1 (February 1996): 73–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1839-4655.1996.tb01043.x.

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Teather∗, Elizabeth Kenworthy. "The first rural women's network in New South Wales: seventy years of the country women's association." Australian Geographer 23, no. 2 (November 1992): 164–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049189208703065.

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3

Teather, Elizabeth K. "Remote Rural Women's Ideologies, Spaces and Networks: Country Women's Association of New South Wales, 1922-1992." Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology 28, no. 3 (December 1992): 369–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/144078339202800304.

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4

Jones, Jennifer. "Voluntary Organisations and the Assimilation of Non-British Migrant Women in Rural Australia: The Efforts of the Country Women’s Association of New South Wales 1952–66." Australian Historical Studies 48, no. 3 (July 3, 2017): 381–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1031461x.2017.1328450.

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Teather, Elizabeth Kenworthy. "The country women's association of new south Wales in the 1920s and 1930s as a counter‐revolutionary organisation." Journal of Australian Studies 18, no. 41 (June 1994): 67–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14443059409387177.

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Kotzé, Marthinus J. "Prosthetic joint infection, dental treatment and antibiotic prophylaxis." Orthopedic Reviews 1, no. 1 (June 10, 2009): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/or.2009.e7.

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Current international and national prophylactic antibiotic regimens have been analyzed in respect of the prevention of bacteremia after dental and surgical procedures and, therefore, of joint prosthesis infection. This information was used to formulate guidelines for the Department of Maxillofacial and Oral Surgery. Publications since 2003 were used in this research. In addition, recommendations of accredited institutions and associations were examined. These included the guidelines of the American Dental Association in association with the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (2003), the American Heart Association (2007), the Working Party of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (2006) and the Australian Dental Guidelines (2005). No guidelines published by any institution in South Africa were found. The general rationale for the use of antibiotic prophylaxis for surgical (including dental) interventions is that those procedures may result in a bacteremia that may cause infection in joint prostheses. Antibiotics, however, should therefore be administered to susceptible patients, e.g. immunocompromised patients, prior to the development of bacteremia. The guidelines recommended for use in South Africa are based solely on those used outside South Africa. South Africa is regarded as a developing country with its own population and demographic characteristics. Eleven percent of our population is infected with HIV, and a specific guideline for prophylactic antibiotic treatment is, therefore, essential.
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7

Evans, Raymond. "From Deserts the Marchers Come: Confessions of a Peripatetic Historian." Queensland Review 14, no. 01 (January 2007): 11–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1321816600005857.

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The whole country was trapped in a lie … We were the only truthtellers, as far as we could see. It seldom occurred to us to be afraid. We were sheathed in the fact of our position. It was partly our naiveté which allowed us to leap into this position of freedom, the freedom of absolute right action. I wish I had said that. But it was written in 1988 by Casey Hayden, a female civil rights worker with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, or ‘Snick’, in the American South of the mid-1960s, remembering that horrific/heroic time of bombings and burnings. In Brisbane, a distant metropolis on the historical bypass, it was nothing as bad as that. No one was murdered — not right then anyway, though there would also be threats, beatings, bombing and arson attacks (and the odd trashing) of leftist personnel, headquarters and bookshops. There would be moments to be afraid. But there is a purer applicability in Hayden's words to the local experience. For there was indeed a whole country trapped in the lie of Vietnam, of ‘White Australia’, of Aboriginal segregative gulags, of the biological fixity of men's and women's uneven positionings, of the sanctity of an intense moral and political censorship, tighter here than just about anywhere in the West: a place where Anzac ruled, sport and politics never mixed and the yawning gulf between Australian values and Australian practices was rarely noticed. A whole traffic-snarl of lies and deception really, and we were the only truth-tellers as far as we could see.
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8

Gillespie, GR, and GJ Hollis. "Distribution and habitat of the spotted tree-frog, Litoria spenceri Dubois (Anura : Hylidae), and an assessment of potential causes of population declines." Wildlife Research 23, no. 1 (1996): 49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9960049.

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An extensive survey of the distribution and abundance of the spotted tree frog, Litoria spenceri, was conducted throughout its range in the Central and Eastern Highlands of Victoria and parts of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory between November 1991 and April 1994. Of the 64 streams surveyed, Litoria spenceri was recorded along 16, 15 in Victoria and one in New South Wales. The species was located along six streams in which it had not been recorded before, but could not be found along four streams in which it had previously been recorded. The survey failed to detect L. spenceri at historical sites on four other streams but located it elsewhere along those streams. Frogs were located predominantly in association with rocky banks adjacent to fast flowing water. Most populations occurred in dissected mountainous country, generally in areas with limited access and disturbance. Analysis of disturbance histories at individual sites and within catchments supporting the species indicates an association between the contraction in distribution and a number of human disturbances to forest and riparian habitats.
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9

Callander, Emily, Sarah Larkins, and Lisa Corscadden. "Variations in out-of-pocket costs for primary care services across Australia: a regional analysis." Australian Journal of Primary Health 23, no. 4 (2017): 379. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/py16127.

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The aim of this study is to describe average out-of-pocket costs across different regions of Australia, as defined by Primary Health Network (PHN) boundaries, and assess the association between population characteristics and out-of-pocket costs for selected primary care services. A combination of descriptive and regression analysis was undertaken using administrative data from the Australian Department of Human Services reporting on the health services used across PHNs in Australia. Those in regional areas paid significantly more for Allied Health services than those in capital cities (A$5.68, P=0.006). The proportion of an area’s population aged 65 years and over was inversely related to out-of-pocket charges for Allied Mental Health (–A$79.12, P=0.029). Some areas had both high charges and disadvantaged populations: Country South Australia, Northern Queensland, Country Western Australia, Tasmania and Northern Territory, or populations with poor health: Northern Territory and Tasmania. Although there was a large amount of variation in out-of-pocket charges for primary care services between PHNs in Australia, there was little evidence of inequality based on health, age and socioeconomic characteristics of a population or the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
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10

F., A., T. W. F., J. H. A., J. A. K. G., J. A. K. G., A. R. O., J. A. S., et al. "Reviews of Books." Irish Geography 4, no. 6 (January 4, 2017): 454–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.1963.1063.

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HISTORICAL GEOLOGY OF IRELAND. J. K. Charlesworth. 9×6 in. xxiii + 565 pp. Oliver and Boyd: Edinburgh and London. 1963. 84s.JACKSON, John N., Surveys for Town and Country Planning, London, Hutchinson University Library, 1963, 15s.THE IRISH BORDER AS A CULTURAL DIVIDE. M. W. Heslinga. 225 pp. Assen. 1962.SHELL GUIDE TO IRELAND, by Lord Killanin and Michael V. Duignan. London: The Ebury Press, 1962. 478 pp. 9 3/4 × 6 in. 45s.IRELAND BY THE IRISH, edited by Michael Gorman. London: Galley Press Ltd., 1963. 162 pp. 9 3/4 × 7 in. 30s.MARINE CARTOGRAPHY IN BRITAIN. A history of the sea chart to 1855. A. H. W. Robinson. 11¼ × 9 in. 222 pp., 30 text figures, 42 photographic plates. Leicester: Leicester University Press, 1962. £5. 5s.VEGETATION AND SOILS, A WORLD PICTURE, by S. R. Eyre. London: Edward Arnold, 1963. pp. 324. 36/‐.MORPHOGENESIS OF THE AGRARIAN CULTURAL LANDSCAPE, (ed.) S. Helmfrid. Published as Geografiska Annaler, Vol. XLIII, 1961, Number 1–2. Stockholm. Pp. 1–328.NOTIONS ESSENTIELLES DE GÉOGRAPHIE ÉCONOMIQUE, by Jean Mérigot and Roland Froment, Volume one, Sirey, Paris, 1963; 555 pp., 54 illustrations.THE MONSOON. Pierre Pédelaborde. 8 × 5½ in. xii + 196 pp. Methuen, London, 1963, 21s.ON THE MARGINS OF THE GOOD EARTH. The South Australian Wheat Frontier 1869–1894. D. W. Meinig. Murray, London, 1963. 231 pp. 35s.INDEX TO AUSTRALIAN RESOURCES MAPS OF 1940–59. Canberra : Dept. of National Development, 1961. 241 pp. 9 × 6½ in.BRITISH LANDSCAPES THROUGH MAPS. Numbers 1 to 5. The Geographical Association. Price 4/6 each.‘SAMPLE STUDIES’. The Geographical Association. 1962. Price 4/6.
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Books on the topic "South Australian Country Women's Association"

1

Beard, Mary. A contintuation of the history of C.W.A. on Eyre Peninsula. Cleve, S. Aust: Cleve Printery, 1985.

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2

Marsh, Bill. Great Australian CWA stories. Sydney, NSW: ABC Books, 2013.

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Marsh, Bill. Great Australian CWA stories. Sydney, N.S.W: ABC Books / HarperCollins, 2011.

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4

Pan Pacific and Southeast Asia Women's Association, ed. The changing world: Our heritage and our future, proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference of the Pan Pacific and South East Asia Women's Association, 4-11 November 1990, Rose Garden Country Resort, Thailand. [Bangkok]: Pan Pacific and Southeast Asia Women's Association, 1990.

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5

Roberts, Fiona, and Jacqui Way. Calendar of Cakes: Recipes, Tips and Tricks from the South Australian Country Women's Association. Wakefield Press Pty, Limited, 2015.

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6

Jones, Jennifer. Country women and the colour bar. Aboriginal Studies Press, 2016.

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Jones, Jennifer. Country women and the colour bar. Aboriginal Studies Press, 2016.

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Jones, Jennifer. Country Women and the Colour Bar. Aboriginal Studies Press, 2016.

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9

Staff, Country Womens Association. Country Women's Association Country Classics: Over 400 Favourite Recipes. Penguin Random House, 2018.

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10

Country Women's Association of New South Wales Staff. 365 Country Women's Association Favourites: Luncheons, Puddings and Afternoon Tea Delicacies. Murdoch Books Pty Limited, 2015.

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