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Faculty of the Professions
Level 11
Nexus 10 Building
THE UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE
SA 5005
AUSTRALIA

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Research Update

Research Integrity at The University of Adelaide

Integrity is a concept of perceived consistency of actions, values, methods, measures, principles, expectations and outcome. Responsible research is encouraged and guided by the research culture of the University of Adelaide, which demonstrates:

  • honesty and integrity
  • respect for human research participants, animals and the environment
  • good stewardship of public resources used to conduct research
  • appropriate acknowledgment of the role of others in research
  • responsible communication of research results.

Research Grants

ARC Linkage Grant

"Funding our future: perceptions of the value of financial planning advice"

Plewa Carolin; Sweeney, Prof Jillian C; Zurbruegg, Prof Ralf: Michayluk, Prof David M
Totalling $100,000

Having sufficient funds available at retirement is now largely considered the responsibility of the individual, and the Federal Government encourages financial planning as part of their advice to retirees. Nevertheless, only 30% of eligible Australians take advantage of professional financial planning services. It is imperative that we understand how Australians derive their perceptions of the value of financial advice.

This longitudinal study, conducted in collaboration between the Financial Services Council, the University of Adelaide, the University of Western Australia and the University of Technology Sydney, aims to identify how value perceptions are formed and change over time, as well as why financial advice is assigned value by some and not others. This will contribute to the academic literature on value creation and lead to strategic recommendations on participation in financial planning.

ARC Discovery Grant

"A new history of law in eighteenth-century England"

Lemmings, Prof David F; Prest, Em/Prof Wilfrid R; Gallanis, Prof Thomas; Paley, Dr Ruth; Stern, Asst Prof Simon
Totalling $153,000, in conjunction with HUMMS

The century after 1689 witnessed momentous changes in English traditions of law and governance. This project will result in a new history of English law during the period, centred upon prestigious publications that will become standards and starting-points for future study by historians, lawyers, other scholars, and legal professionals.

ARC Discovery Grant

"Making architectural identity: the architecture of John Andrews"

Walker, A/Prof Paul; Moulis, Dr Antony N; Goad, Prof Philip J; Scriver, Dr Peter C; Lobsinger, A/Prof Mary L; Scrivano, Asst Prof Paolo
Totalling $195,000, administered through The University of Melbourne

The important Australian architect John Andrews had a career unique for its success, first in Canada and the United States and then in Australia. Research into his design work and how it has been understood will develop new knowledge of design practices of the 1970s, how architecture is understood in terms of nationality, and how design has become globalised.

My role will be to examine critical and cultural factors behind the differential reception in Canada vs. Australia of the architectural work and career in question. Better understanding of this case will help explain how modern Australian conceptions of communal and institutional space have had far reaching impact through the globalisation of architectural ideas and expertise since the mid 20th century.

ARC LIEF – Legal History Library

"The Australasian Legal History Library: Creating historical depth in legal data on AustLII,
to improve all legal research"

Williams, Prof John M; Prest, Em/Prof/Wilfrid R et al, administered through the University of Technology, Sydney
Totalling $330,000

This was the only LIEF grant given in the field of Law and Legal Studies. The ARC granted $330,000 (about 75% of the amount requested), so with the contributions from the project partners the total project funding is $856,000, approximately 90% of the original budget.

The Australasian Legal History Library, to be located for free access on AustLII, will provide comprehensive legislation and case law from all colonies (subsequently Australian States, Territories or New Zealand) up to 1950. Its citator will show how these historical materials are used in current legal decisions. It will be a revolution for legal history research.

ARC Discovery Grant

"Effective and efficient corpporate tax enforcement"

Bayer, Dr Ralph C; Sausgruber, Dr Rupert; Cowel, Prof Frank
Totalling $150,000

This project uses economic theory and experimental tests in order to inform tax authorities on how to best audit tax receipts from corporations. The project will result in advice on how audit resources should be allocated across firms, if minimising corporate tax evasion and at the same time maximising social welfare are the authority's objective.

ARC Discovery Grant

"Islam and the ethos of science in the post-Copernican period"

Akkach, A/Prof Samer,
Totalling $652,000

This is the third ARC Discovery Grant in a row received by A/Professor Samer Akkach as a single Chief Investigator, which also includes a Discovery Outstanding Researcher Award (DORA), one of only 26 awarded nationally for projects commencing in 2012.

The tragic destruction of the nearly completed Istanbul observatory by Sultan Murad III (1547-1595) after financing it himself is one of the most puzzling events in the history of Islamic science. By examining this neglected event, the project sheds new light on critical phases in Islam's transition into modernity. It shows how a new fundamentalist cosmology was successfully promoted in the name of science as religious rationalism during the early Ottoman period, how this had led to the destruction of the observatory, how such rationalist approach was later adopted and promoted in the name of modernity and enlightenment by Muslim intellectuals, and how Islamic enlightenment and ensuing modernity had remained ambivalent on modern cosmology.

ARC Discovery Grant

"The molecular basis of zinc toxicity to Gram-positive bacteria"

McDevitt, Dr Christopher A; Paton, Prof James C
Totalling $255,000

Gram-positive bacteria are a major cause of infectious diseases in both developed and developing countries. This project will contribute to our understanding of how zinc causes toxicity to these bacteria and facilitate our exploitation of this Achilles heel, by providing new insights into fundamental aspects of microbial physiology.

ARC Discovery Grant

"Composition, assembly and functions of the pellicle of apicomplexan parasites:
a structure pivotal to disease transmission and progression"

Walker, Dr Ross F; van Dooren, Dr Giel G
Totalling $320,000, administered through The University of Melbourne

Apicomplexan parasites are successful agents of disease (e.g. malaria) due to their superb ability to quickly invade host cells and generate many more parasites. This project will study the dedicated structures beneath the parasite cell covering that are responsible for these abilities to help refine strategies for combating apicomplexan diseases.

AusAID Grant

"Meeting Food Security Goals with Good Policy"

Professor Christopher Findlay
2012 (only) $249,978 received funds in 2011

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Current Research Projects

There are currently no research projects listed for this School.

A/Prof Alfred Yawson, Prof Ralf Zurbrugg, Mr John G Tretola - The adequacy and sustainability of self-managed superannuation funds: Governance, performance, asset allocation, fee structure and compliance.

Prof Z Michalewicz; Prof Ralf Zurbrugg; Mr A Ghandar - Computational Intelligence Methods for Financial Applications

A/Prof PJ Wilson; Prof Ralf Zurbrugg; Dr R Gerlach - The implications for greying Australia of international property market interlinkages.

Professor Christopher Findlay from the School of Economics and Hussain Rammal from the Business School are participants in a 2009 ARC Linkage project: “Approved Australia and the European Union: A study of a Changing Trade and Business Relationship”. The project is led by ANU with $175,000 over three years.

Congratulations to Indrit Troshani and Cate Jerram, both from the Business School, who were awarded a Qantas Research Travel Support Grant in round 1, 2008.

Associate Professor Bryan Howieson from the School of Commerce is part of a cross-University team that has won a Carrick Institute Grant for $217,000 to investigate ‘Enhancing Assessment Feedback Practices in Accounting Education: Issues, Obstacles and Reforms’.

Professor Jiti Gao grant for project topic 'new estimation and testing issues in nonlinear time series econometrics' worth $650,000 over 5 years.

Prof Mark Weder; Assoc Prof Fabrice Collard and Dr Jacob Wong - Understanding the Effects of News Shocks on Macroeconomic Fluctuations.

Professor Christopher Findlay from the School of Economics and Hussain Rammal from the Business School are participants in a 2009 ARC Linkage project: “Approved Australia and the European Union: A study of a Changing Trade and Business Relationship”. The project is led by ANU with $175,000 over three years.

Professor Findlay is also a participant in “Australia’s Baby Boomer Generation, Obesity and Work: Patterns, Causes and Implications”. This University of Adelaide study will receive $641,000 over three years, in conjunction with the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Research Foundation and Workcover SA Council on the Aging and SA Health.

There are currently no research projects listed for this School.

Law

Professor Kym Anderson and Professor Adrian Bradbrook and Professor Judith Gardam, collectively secured almost $650,000 in ARC Discovery Grant funding on research topic “Political economy of distortions to global agricultural markets”, with funding over three years.

Professor Gardam and Professor Bradbrook's four-year project is titled “Creating a Comprehensive International Law of Sustainable Energy: The Contribution of Law to Sustainable Development and Climate Change”.