(C) The Conversation This story was originally published by The Conversation and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . The University of Western Australia on The Conversation [1] ['Arnold Japutra', 'Ben Mcallister', 'Caleb Goods', 'Cecilia Leong-Salobir', 'Clive Seed', 'Daniel Jan Martin', 'Darren Jorgensen', 'Emily Van Eyk', 'Ratih Kabinawa', 'Renae Barker'] Date: 2022-08-14 20:03:48+00:00 Farley Webb August 14, 2022 Jess Ho’s ‘unflinching’ hospitality memoir is a Cantonese-Australian Kitchen Confidential Jess Ho’s acerbic, sad, funny memoir of combines a compelling critique of the Melbourne food scene that became her family with memories of a traumatic childhood. Universiti Malaya August 11, 2022 Kunjungan Pelosi ke Taiwan, ketegangan AS-Cina : Bagaimana pengaruhnya terhadap negara ASEAN? Peningkatan aktivitas militer di Selat Taiwan akan mempengaruhi dinamika politik dan ekonomi di Asia Tenggara. August 1, 2022 Farewell to David Ireland, three-times Miles Franklin winner and master of mosaic fiction David Ireland’s masterful mosaic novels explored sweeping existential issues and their impact on the lives of those oblivious to them. They were characterised by his vision, compassion and wit. Christopher Riseley (Università di Bologna) July 31, 2022 We found some strange radio sources in a distant galaxy cluster. They’re making us rethink what we thought we knew. One of the objects is a ‘fossil’ radio source – a leftover from the death of a supermassive black hole that once shot out huge jets of plasma. Shutterstock July 25, 2022 This Australian experiment is on the hunt for an elusive particle that could help unlock the mystery of dark matter Regular matter makes up just one-sixth of all the matter in the universe. What would it mean to finally understand what makes up the rest? Getty July 12, 2022 Not just ramps and doorways – disability housing is about choosing where, how and who you live with Successful housing projects for people living with disabilities have inviting communal spaces, private individual dwellings, commercial opportunities for residents and on-site support. Pexels/Michael Block July 4, 2022 Perhotelan paling tersungkur selama pandemi: Belajar dari pengalaman mereka untuk hadapi krisis masa depan Hotel terpaksa memangkas karyawannya dan menawakan harga diskon demi bertahan selama pandemi. Kita perlu belajar dari pengalaman mereka untuk menyusun strategi yang lebih baik ke depannya. Pixabay July 4, 2022 The hotel industry was hit hardest during the pandemic. We should learn from their experiences to devise future strategies Hotels had to cut their employees and offer discounted prices to retain occupancy during the COVID-19 pandemic. We should learn from their experiences to devise better strategies for the future. National Archives of Australia. NAA: A1200, L28199. July 3, 2022 Rediscovering the art of Tracker Nat: ‘the Namatjira of carving’ During the 1950s, Nat made hundreds of carvings. Today, many of these are likely to be lying unidentified in people’s homes and in museum basements. Shutterstock June 29, 2022 What’s driving Uber’s historic agreement with the TWU on gig work Uber, the poster company of the gig economy, has agreed its Australian workers deserve more employee-like conditions. Why it has done this now isn’t too hard to work out. Shutterstock June 24, 2022 Our flood predictions are getting worse as the climate changes. We have to understand how hills shape floods A warmer atmosphere can hold more water – and that makes floods harder to predict. To help, we improved one common tool used to predict floods. State Library of Western Australia June 20, 2022 Religious women set up some of Australia’s first schools, but their history remains veiled These women showed diverse skills while developing education in Australia. In a country enamoured with egalitarianism, the neglect of their stories speaks of a broader historical reality. Thought Catalogue/Unsplash June 2, 2022 Social media spreads rumours about COVID vaccine harms … but it doesn’t always start them Contrary to the popular belief that social media creates rumours about COVID vaccine harms, new research suggests social media generally only aids the spread of these rumours. Rachel Austin May 31, 2022 Meet the world’s largest plant: a single seagrass clone stretching 180 km in Western Australia’s Shark Bay A single seagrass plant in Shark Bay is around 4,500 years old, covers 200 square kilometres of seabed, and thrives in harsh conditions. [END] --- [1] Url: https://theconversation.com/institutions/the-university-of-western-australia-1067 Published and (C) by The Conversation Content appears here under this condition or license: Creative Commons CC BY-ND 4.0. via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds: gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/theconversation/