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Hits 181 – 192 of 192

181
Education and female aspiration in the work of Jacqueline Massard
Charnley, Joy; Pender, M.. - : P. Lang, 2002
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182
Cleaning up after the Celtic Tiger : calar fixes in the political ecology of Tiger economies
Boyle, Mark. - 2002
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183
An invitation to social construction
Gergen, Kenneth J.. - London : Sage Publications, 1999
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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184
Cross cultural communciation problems in Aboriginal Australia
Walsh, Michael. - : North Australia Research Unit, The Australian National University, 1997
Abstract: Encounters between Aboriginal and other Australians too often create discomfort despite good will on both sides. A few examples of such encounters are presented and these raise the question of how common cross cultural communications problems can be avoided. ¶ Despite observations by a number of scholars on communication problems in Aboriginal Australia (eg Eades, Harris, Liberman) there is no unifying explanatory model. Two intersecting sets of variables are posited: dyadic vs communal; continuous vs contained. Anglo Australia is dyadic and contained in typical conversational interaction while Aboriginal Australia is communal and continuous. Put briefly the first set of variables concerns the relationship between participants. In Anglo Australian interactions there is an ideology of talking in twos in which talk is directed to a particular individual, people should face each other, eye contact is important, and perhaps most importantly control is in the hands of the speaker. By contrast the relationship among participants in Aboriginal Australia is communal: talk is not directed to a particular individual; it is ‘broadcast’, people need not face each other and often don’t, eye contact is less important, and control is in the hands of the hearer. The other crucial factor in characterising talk is how the communication channel is used. The strong tendency in Aboriginal conversations is turn the communication channel (talk) on and leave it on; it is continuous. By contrast Anglo conversation is contained: talk is packaged into discontinuous bits. ¶ The model has considerable explanatory power: accounting for the differential acceptance of new communication channels (literacy, telephones and television) and the differences between the two groups in public meetings, educational settings and conflict resolution. However, while the model may help to explain some of the problems in communication it should only be thought of as one step in the direction of further, much needed research.
Keyword: Aboriginal Australians; Anglo Australians; communication problems; cross cultural communication; social interaction
URL: http://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/47329
https://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/bitstream/1885/47329/3/CrossCulturalCommunicationProblemsinAboriginalAustralia2.pdf
https://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/retrieve/18281/CrossCulturalCommunicationProblemsinAboriginalAustralia2.pdf.jpg
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/47329
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185
Me da veisautaka na vuravura
Barr, Kevin J. - : Suva, Fiji : Faca Barr, 1994
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186
Family participation in initial child protection case conferences: report on a pilot project for Liverpool Area Child Protection Committee
Gallagher, Bernard. - : Liverpool Area Child Protection Committee, 1993
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187
Observa Prøvevalg 1979, august-undersøgelsen ... : Observa Political Index Polls 1979: August ...
Observa. - : Danish Data Archive, 1991
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188
Impact of technology on agriculture : a study of the mechanization of Guyana's rice industry
Thakur, Andra. - : University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, CA, 1978
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189
Personality & social change : attitude formation in a student community
Newcomb, Theodore Mead. - New York, NY : Dryden Press, 1943
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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190
Social forces in England and America
Wells, Herbert G.. - New York, NY : Harper & Brothers, 1914
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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191
Informing Science InSITE- “Where Parallels Intersect ” June 2002 Content Management- Concept and Indexing Term Equivalence in a Multilingual Thesaurus
In: http://www.informingscience.org/proceedings/IS2002Proceedings/papers/keran122conte.pdf
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192
Growing like a weed : ballad singers in the communications culture of renaissance Italy
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