ABSTRACT: The context for regional development has changed substantially. This paper uses the Northern Territory, Australia as a case study and presents an examination of regional dynamics associated with changing distant context with a focus on ICT application and global integration. It reveals the consequent spatial processes occurring where non-Indigenous people have increasingly concentrated onto the capital city of the region, Darwin. The majority Indigenous population has however experienced increasing disadvantages and has been kept away from economic participation and urban concentration
Radically changing ideas and practices around mobility and borders have made the question regarding ...
John Taylor examines 1996 and 2001 Census data to establish recent changes in Indigenous and non-Ind...
Through more contemporary demographic analysis, and some minor spatial analysis, the paper also expl...
ABSTRACT: The context for regional development has changed substantially. This paper uses the Northe...
National boundaries and border cities have been transformed globally. This is partly due to neoliber...
The Northern Territory government’s recent release of a ‘Stronger Regions Policy’ (Northern Territor...
A number of commentators have suggested that the Northern Territory Emergency Response (NTER), intro...
The vast potential of northern Australia is being held back by serious bottlenecks in infrastructur...
Northern Australia has a population of 1.2 million people across nearly half the continental landmas...
In their 1982 publication ‘Lessons from the Ord’ Davidson and Graham-Taylor exposed the lack of info...
As a tribute to the massive contribution of our friend and colleague Graeme Hugo to the population a...
Regional centres are an important but often overlooked set of areas with particular policy and popul...
In Australia's Northern Territory, the Larrakia have been involved in a decades-long effort to gain ...
This research describes the Australian domestic skilled labour migration system as recorded at the 2...
Regional communities are growing rapidly in Australia, with the population of Melbourne's peri-urban...
Radically changing ideas and practices around mobility and borders have made the question regarding ...
John Taylor examines 1996 and 2001 Census data to establish recent changes in Indigenous and non-Ind...
Through more contemporary demographic analysis, and some minor spatial analysis, the paper also expl...
ABSTRACT: The context for regional development has changed substantially. This paper uses the Northe...
National boundaries and border cities have been transformed globally. This is partly due to neoliber...
The Northern Territory government’s recent release of a ‘Stronger Regions Policy’ (Northern Territor...
A number of commentators have suggested that the Northern Territory Emergency Response (NTER), intro...
The vast potential of northern Australia is being held back by serious bottlenecks in infrastructur...
Northern Australia has a population of 1.2 million people across nearly half the continental landmas...
In their 1982 publication ‘Lessons from the Ord’ Davidson and Graham-Taylor exposed the lack of info...
As a tribute to the massive contribution of our friend and colleague Graeme Hugo to the population a...
Regional centres are an important but often overlooked set of areas with particular policy and popul...
In Australia's Northern Territory, the Larrakia have been involved in a decades-long effort to gain ...
This research describes the Australian domestic skilled labour migration system as recorded at the 2...
Regional communities are growing rapidly in Australia, with the population of Melbourne's peri-urban...
Radically changing ideas and practices around mobility and borders have made the question regarding ...
John Taylor examines 1996 and 2001 Census data to establish recent changes in Indigenous and non-Ind...
Through more contemporary demographic analysis, and some minor spatial analysis, the paper also expl...