Search results for: alive

Showing 1 - 10 of 69 results

21 October 2021
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7 August 2019

Zena Safa: All I wanted was to stay alive, after that I wanted to get an education

Zena Safa was 16 years old and in her final year of high school in Libya when her life changed...

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21 June 2018

Keeping the past alive earns Griffith historian high honour

A commitment to research spanning four decades has seen a Griffith University history expert awarded a high honour by the Professional Historians Association (Qld) Inc.

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25 November 2016
Professor Geoff Dean.

Far-Right Extremist groups alive and well in Australia

Australia’s major right-wing extremist groups are involved in a power struggle to determine the alpha dog in extremism, feeding off contemporary anti-Islam and anti-immigration fears, a Griffith University analysis has found.

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14 March 2024
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11 July 2023

Sharing stories and experiences in the Outback

Outback Queensland has just seen an influx of 120 Griffith University-led students and staff who travelled to Winton for the Vision Splendid Outback Film Festival.

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20 February 2023
Australia seen from space

A Theory of Place

Griffith University's Chancellor Andrew Fraser asks us to consider our our provenance. He asks us about place, posits questions of patriotism, of people with a fidelity, about loyalty, connection of place, and of belonging.

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20 December 2022

Regenerative literacy can help build sustainable tourism

When you think about good tourism experience, it’s the things that you have done and the emotions that you felt while doing them that generally come to mind. Tourism also connects us,as tourists and as hosts, to place. How can we rebuild biodiversity as tourists and tourism operators?

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19 July 2022
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11 July 2022
Lakefield National Park, Cape York

Uncovering the changing rhythms of rivers and people

Rivers follow rhythmic changes; they flow with the seasons and respond to longer climatic shifts and often to the actions of people. In turn, people and their societies are shaped by the rhythm of rivers. This relationship where both nature and people’s social habits are synchronized with the rise and fall of river water over time is referred to as river rhythmicity, in a new paper that describes the important implications of this idea for river conservation and water management.

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