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Agriculture in the Murray-Darling Basin of Australia represents a
controversial 'policy experiment' comprising large capital
investments, innovation and enterprise across a hundred-year
period. This book, which contains contributions from some of
Australia's foremost economic, social science and public policy
researchers and writers, examines the evolution of public policy
frameworks that transformed water management from initial
exploitation for irrigation as a dominant single use to a dynamic
multiple use resource system. Water Policy Reform provides both
analytical insights and examples of successes and failures in
developing water policy in a complex and politically-contested
environment. As such, this work attempts to develop a comprehensive
management plan for the Basin and provides novel and invaluable
lessons for an increasingly global problem. This well-researched
study will interest both economists and those with public policy
interest in academia and the public sector, including development
agencies concerned with sustainable water resource management.
Contributors: D. Adamson, O. Banerjee, J. Bennett, S. Chambers, J.
Connor, L. Crase, T. Cummins, S. Driml, T. Goesch, P. Gooday, D.
Hatton MacDonald, T. Mallawaarachchi, A. McClintock, M. Morrison,
N. Nguyen, D. Pannell, J. Quiggin, H. Ross, A. Ryan, P. Schrobback,
S. Tapsuwan, A. Watson, M. Young, Z. Zarezadeh
Flight Lieutenant Thomas Tommy' Rose, a First World War fighter
ace, was a pioneer of private flying. He installed and managed the
UK's first fuel pump for private aviation at Brooklands before
becoming Sales Manager for Phillips and Powis Aircraft Ltd. The
chief flying instructor at several early flying schools, Tommy
became the Chief Test Pilot for Miles Aircraft and was the winner
of air races and pageants. He was undoubtedly a pilot who could
always be relied on to amaze the onlookers with his fast, accurate
stunts and low-level flying. Mentioned in Despatches in 1916 and
awarded the DFC in 1918, Tommy was attacked in his aircraft several
times, yet his astonishing ability at the controls of his aircraft
enabled him to land without serious injury. By the time of the
Armistice, Tommy had been credited with eleven kills'. He continued
to demonstrate these skills after the war and though this true
trailblazer was widely known in his glory days during the early
part of the twentieth century, little is remembered about him
today. Yet Tommy Rose achieved the most incredible feats of
aviation and was considered one of the finest pilots of his era,
completing over 11,200 flying hours up to 1949. In the 1930s, Tommy
took the Imperial Airways route through East Africa, to set up a
new world record on the UK to Cape Town passage, beating Amy
Mollison (Johnson) who took the shorter course down the west coast.
He also won the King's Cup Air Race in 1935. Tommy flew many of the
early RAF fighters from Maurice Farman to the Spitfire Mk.IX, and,
from late 1939, when he was appointed Chief Test Pilot for Phillip
& Powis Aircraft Ltd at Woodley (forerunners of Miles Aircraft
Ltd), he test flew all Miles monoplane training and target towing
aircraft, leaving in January 1946. His last position was as General
Manager of Universal Flying Services Ltd at Fairoaks Aerodrome in
Surrey. The result of decades of research by the author, through
this book the life and adventures of one of history's most
accomplished and daring aviators can finally be told.
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