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Lucy Barnes replied to the topic bOokmArks events – Open Conversations about Open Access Books in the discussion
Open Access Books Network on Humanities Commons 3 years, 3 months agoHi all, join us for an OA Week event on climate justice and open access books on Tuesday next week:
25th October, 3pm BST, ‘Lowering the Barriers to Climate Research: Climate Change and OA Books’: during Open Access Week, we’ll bring together a panel including authors, publishers and campaigners to discuss the impact of open access books relat…[Read more]
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Subaveerapandiyan A deposited A Study of Obstacles in Plagiarism Software Subscribing by Colleges in Tamil Nadu in the group
Open Access Books Network on Humanities Commons 3 years, 3 months agoThis article attempts to comprehend the current issues and hurdles that Indian colleges affiliated with Tamil Nadu State Universities encounter when trying to subscribe to a software that detects plagiarism. The study’s goals are to determine whether colleges employ anti-plagiarism software, whether they ensure that their student-given a…[Read more]
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Ian Willis deposited The quay transforms from transport to tourist mecca in the group
Place Studies on Humanities Commons 3 years, 3 months agoCircular Quay was one of the first points of contact between First Nations people and Europeans, and to this day, it is one of the busiest localities on Sydney Harbour. The quay’s history is rich as it is still a busy transport hub, government administration area and commercial zone. In more recent decades, it’s expanded to include thriving…[Read more]
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Ian Willis deposited Sydney’s Customs House – a means of collecting taxes in the group
Place Studies on Humanities Commons 3 years, 3 months agoTaxes and dying. Two certainties in life, and that was certainly the case in colonial Sydney. For more than 150 years Customs House has provided the means of collecting taxes on the movement of goods
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Ian Willis deposited A new horizon on Sydney’s urban frontier: the St Elmo land releases. in the group
Place Studies on Humanities Commons 3 years, 3 months agoJournalist Jeff McGill recently wrote an opinion piece in the Campbel/town Macarthur Advertiser with the heading ‘Nothing “yucky” about fibro cottages’. He continued that ‘Macarthur’s first big housing development was Campbelltown’s St Elmo Estates of the 1950s, guided by Neil McLean, a much-loved developer’.1 The McLean St Elmo land releases were…[Read more]
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