In an Australian first, Charles Darwin University (CDU) is introducing a nationally accredited course in Therapeutic Horticulture, bringing an alternative therapy technique to complement a range of health and social services.
The Advanced Database Searching workshop focuses on searching specific databases like CINAHL, Medline and PSYCHinfo by using MeSH (Medical Subject Headings). This session will focus on systematic searching that you can use for your scoping/umbrella/rapid/systematic reviews.
Fish farms have historically been a black box in terms of understanding the behavioural needs and preferences of the fish within them, as the only chance to assess what they are up to is when they break the surface. Sunil has been monitoring fish behaviour below the surface of farms for 35 years
Join us for an inspiring talk with Rachael Maza, Artistic Director of ILBIJERRI Theatre Company and director of the acclaimed music theatre performance, 'Big Name, No Blankets', which tells the story of the Warumpi Band, the first rock 'n' roll band to sing in an Aboriginal language.
A new book on the violent frontier expansion of Australia’s north will introduce readers to who led massacres of Aboriginal people, the names of their benefactors, and how these horrific events occurred.
Linguistics, the scientific study of language, is a wide and diverse field with many areas of specialisation. Through studying linguistics, students have the opportunity to explore the structure of languages (their sounds, words, sentences and meanings), how language shapes identity, the ways language differs depending on context, culture and society, and how languages change over time.
Successful serial entrepreneur Dr Mark Englund has had a life-long fascination with all things technical. A supportive mother and an inspiring engineering academic changed the course of Mark's young life, leading to him study engineering in the Territory before taking the tech world by storm.
Associate Professor Beth Penrose is passionate about the sustainability and profitability of pasture and livestock systems in Australia and Asia.
Migratory species are among the most vulnerable of the world’s creatures because they rely on sympathetic management of not just a single place where they live out their lives but multiple places, with their numbers controlled by conditions at the place where life is most difficult.
We undertake research to improve understanding the extent of the global influence of Indigenous Peoples and try to provide evidence that their interests, and their world view, needs to be accommodated into national and global conservation policy and practice.