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Staff

Welcome to

CARSS

Director

currently vacant

Senior Advisor

Professor Michael Bittman

Project team leader responsible for the implementation of the project and delivery of milestones.

Professor Michael Bittman is recognized as a world authority on how people use their time. He is President of the International Association of Time Use Researchers, chair of the relevant United Nations Expert Group, and was invited to address the United States’ National Academy of Sciences on these topics. Michael Bittman was elected a Fellow of Academy of Social Sciences in Australia in 2006. He has extensive experience in conducting applied research. He has acted as a high level consultant to government departments and community organisations in Australia and overseas. The total value of all the contracts and grants on which Michael is a named researcher exceeds $4,000,000. About a third of this research funding was awarded via the highly competitive, peer-reviewed Australian Research Council and National Health and Medical Research Council schemes.

He was one of the lead researchers on a national study into the social costs and benefits of migration to Australia which has entailed extensive community participative social research across several metropolitan and regional communities in Australia. He led the teams that have studied the living standards of apprentices; children and the communication media; patterns of physical activity and obesity; and the social impact of the mobile.

Fields of Expertise: social change; work and family balance; the social organisation of care; social impact of new technologies; social policy; leisure studies;  and community living standards.

Skills: Extensive experience in conducting quantitative & qualitative research; social policy skills, statistical skills; report writing, project management, and senior executive and leadership skills.

Relevant Experience: Director, Centre for Applied Research in the Social Sciences.Ten years experience as part of the Senior Management Team at the Social Policy Research Centre, including one year as Acting Director.  Director of the Budget Standards Unit, consultant on a range of projects jointly funded by state and commonwealth governments on economic and social participation, work-family balance, mature age employment, volunteering, informal carers, children’s media consumption and apprentice living standards.

Deputy Director

Dr Elaine Barclay: Elaine has a degree in Social Science, postgraduate qualifications in psychology and a PhD in Sociology/Criminology. She also has significant experience in social impact assessment, risk evaluation and program evaluation. For fifteen years she was employed as a social researcher at the Institute for Rural Futures at the University of New England. She has conducted studies in collaboration with colleagues in Australia, US and UK on biosecurity on farms, environmental services on farms, recreational use of farmland, farm succession, information technology in rural areas, nutrient management, attitudes to the environment and to climate change, the social and economic impacts of water trading in the Murray Darling Basin, crime in rural communities, crime on farms, and tourism and crime. Her PhD focused upon crime on farms in Australia. Over the past eleven years, Elaine has developed a speciality in research into the problem of crime within rural communities. She is director of the Centre for Rural Crime which was established as a result of two international conferences on rural crime convened at UNE in 1991 and 2006. The Centre incorporates an international research network of criminologists and criminal justice practitioners with an interest in crime in rural areas.

Deputy Director

Dr Debra Dunstan: My primary research interests are in the areas of pain-related work-disability and occupational rehabilitation. My past work has involved the validation of a screening tool to identifying physically injured workers at risk of chronic disability; and, the development and evaluation of a related biopsychosocial intervention. At present I am exploring the use of a social cognition model to inform a comprehensive treatment for unemployed pain-disabled workers. As I am a clinician with extensive experience in rural practice, I am also interested in research relating to mental health issues in rural Australia, and practice-based outcomes of evidence-based practice.

Deputy Director

Dr Liz Ellis: Dr Ellis’ research interests are in the intersection of bilingual and multilingual studies and teacher cognition, and in sociolinguistic approaches to language education and language policy. Her most recent CARSS project was on Aboriginal English in ACT preschools.

Dr Ellis is a founding member of SLATS (Second Language Acquisition Twin Study), an international research team led by Prof. Brian Byrne with members in the UK, US, Norway and Australia. SLATS is investigating behaviour-genetic approaches to second language acquisition via twin studies.

Deputy Director

Dr John Scott: Dr John Scott is a specialist in qualitative methods, especially focus groups. Research interests include social impact assessment, project evaluation and community planning.

Senior Project Officer

Ron Reavell is the Project Manager for the Centre of Applied Research in Social Science (CARSS) and has a Bachelor of Arts from the University of New England (majoring in Politics and Sociology) he also possesses a Masters in International Studies from The University of Sydney. He taught for many years at the University of the Sunshine Coast and also at the Oorala Centre for Indigenous students at the UNE, and is a member of the Australasian Evaluation Society.

Ron Reavell has extensive experience in project proposals, application and procedure and the supervision and administration of projects and staff. He is an experienced researcher and was a member of the research team on the DIMA Project, the Community Social Plan for Tamworth Regional Council Project and the Armidale Youth Speeding Project. Ron designed, analysed and wrote the evaluation report for the 2007 Tamworth “Keeping Youth in Focus” conference commissioned by the NSW Department of Community Services through the Tamworth Joint Investigative Response Team and was a lead researcher and author on the ‘Living Wage for Apprentices ‘ for Group Training Australia.

As an experienced teacher and researcher he is, therefore, familiar with the processes of research, analysis and publication. His most recent publication discusses the pros and cons of the proposed Compact of South Pacific States in a co-edited book, The Eye of the Cyclone: Governance and Stability in the Pacific, Molloy, I., & Reavell, R., (eds) Rock Mountain Corp, QLD, 2006.

Fields of Expertise: Evaluation methodology,Sociology and Sustainable Communities.

Skills: Research ProjectManagement,staff administration, communication and editing, research and analysis.

Current research activity: Community issues and governance in Australia and the Pacific Islands; Youth Off the Streets (YOTS) Evaluation of “Our Place, Walgett Youth and Young Families” Project. Evaluations of various programs for Centacare, Tamworth and Armidale; Innovative Regional Business Options for Growth in Cotton Communities (Cotton Catchment Communities CRC).

Relevant Experience: Research organiser, administrative Project Officer and researcher on major contracts and consultancies including: The Immigration Report, Tamworth Community Consultative Plan, Youth Off The Streets Evaluation and Consultative Survey(s) for Cotton Communities Growth Options.

Senior Research Associate

Dr Alison F McIntosh  (BUrbRegPlan (Hons) (UNE), PhD (UNE)
Affiliations
Member of Planning Institute of Australia
Member of Institute of Australian Geographers

Alison worked for two decades in private industry (predominantly in computing and as a business analyst) prior to making a tree-change in the mid-1980s away from capital city living. She then became a beef cattle producer and small business operator on the Mid North Coast of NSW where she still resides. In the mid-1990s, she commenced external studies at UNE as an undergraduate student. Alison essentially works from her home as a researcher and consultant. Through affiliations with two universities, she continues her involvement and interest in aspects of geography and planning while remaining firmly committed to and involved with local issues and events. She is very active and a recognised leader within her place-based communities.

Alison has cross-disciplinary interests, particularly in relation to neighbourhoods and communities; migration; aspects affecting wellbeing; relevance of a sense of belonging; how, where and with whom close social ties are maintained; engaging people in consultation processes; and the relevance of grass-roots activities. She is also interested the physical landscape, recognising that understanding the natural environment can help to provide important indicators for ways to reduce negative human impacts.

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