James Doughney is Senior Researcher in the Workplace Studies Centre at Victoria University in Melbourne. He began researching the economic effects of poker machines on low income communities in 1998. Since then he has become a leading protagonist in the policy debate. Dr Doughney’s other research traverses industrial relations, labour economics and theories of social wellbeing.
| What's Happening at Work? Reports from the Australian Workplace Industrial Relations Surveys 1990 & 1995 | |||
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Provides a snapshot of the environment of the Australian workplace, analysing and commenting on change to the working lives of Australians over time. |
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Book: Print |
$US30.00 | ||
Book: Electronic |
$US22.50 | ||
| The Poker Machine State: Dilemmas in Ethics, Economics and Governance | |||
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Interrogates the ethical and political context in which decisions about poker machines are made. |
||
Book: Print |
$US35.00 | ||
Book: Electronic |
$US26.25 | ||
| The Poker Machine State: Dilemmas in Ethics, Economics and Governance | |||
|
Interrogates the ethical and political context in which decisions about poker machines are made. |
||
Book: Print |
$US30.00 | ||
Book: Electronic |
$US10.00 | ||
| What's Happening at Work? Reports from the Australian Workplace Industrial Relations Surveys 1990 & 1995 | |||
|
Provides a snapshot of the environment of the Australian workplace, analysing and commenting on change to the working lives of Australians over time. |
||
Book: Print |
$US30.00 | ||
Book: Electronic |
$US10.00 | ||