Skip to main content
University of SydneyLibrary
  • Home
  • Browse
  • Stories
  • Visit
  • Support
  • About
  • University website
Always was, always will be Aboriginal land
Recent submissions 
  • SeS Home
  • The University of Sydney
  • University of Sydney Business School
  • Recent submissions
  • SeS Home
  • The University of Sydney
  • University of Sydney Business School
  • Recent submissions
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Home About Support
Submit Sign in
Advanced search Simple search

Browse

All of SeS Repository CollectionsTitlesAuthorsPublication yearSubjects
This collection TitlesAuthorsPublication yearSubjects

My account

Sign inRegister

Statistics

Most popular itemsStatistics by countryMost popular authors
University Library Current students Staff intranet

Advanced search Simple search

Filters

Use filters to refine the search results.

University of Sydney Business School: Recent submissions

    • Sensing Ethics in Postdigital Future Classrooms 

      Wardak, Dewa; Zeivots, Sandris
      Published 2025
      In this paper, we introduce and develop the concept of ‘sensing ethics’ as a relational approach to thinking about postdigital future classrooms that is informed by our material realities, social and institutional structures, ...
      Open Access
      Article
      View
    • Critical studies of education and technology … reasons to be hopeful? 

      CSET collective
      Published 2025
      The past couple of decades have seen the steady rise of digital technologies as a prominent element of education around the world. Digital technologies are now a key feature of education provision in the global north from ...
      Open Access
      Working Paper
      View
    • How poor land use planning has created an unfixable problem for transport: a case study of the City of Johannesburg 

      Pisa, Noleen; Ho, Chinh Q.; Hensher, David A.; Luke, Rose; Heyns, Gert; Mageto, Joash; Chakamera, Chengete
      Published 2025-05-30
      Rapid urbanisation and apartheid‐era land-use legacies leave many South Africans captive to long, costly, and unsafe commutes. Yet rigorous evidence on how township residents value transport attributes is scarce. This study ...
      Open Access
      Working Paper
      View
    • Low Cost Flat Public Fare Policy: Induced Demand, Mode Switching and Policy Beneficiaries 

      Rose, John M.; Pellegrini, Andrea; Hensher, David A.; Beck, Matthew J.
      Published 2025-05-29
      This study analyses six waves of cross-sectional survey data collected both before and after the introduction of a $0.50 flat fare structure across all public transport modes operating within Queensland Australia. The ...
      Open Access
      Working Paper
      View
    • A comparative analysis of the drivers and outcomes of work, location and commuting choices of the office only, hybrid, and home/other location only workers 

      Wei, Edward; Hensher, David A.
      Published 2025-05-27
      Hybrid work in an office and non-office locations on the same or different days, has become a mainstream work pattern in addition to only working in the office or working from home (WFH). This paper compares the three work ...
      Open Access
      Working Paper
      View
      • Sydney eScholarship repository
      • Digital Collections repository
      • Sydney University Press
      • Sydney Open Journals
      • Library Staff Intranet
      University of Sydney

      Library

      Visit the main university website
      Browse
      Stories
      Visit
      Support
      About
      Browse
      Stories
      Visit
      Support
      About

      Follow the Library

      Group Of Eight
      APRU
      Athena Swan member
      Disclaimer
      Privacy statement
      Accessibility
      Website feedback
      Library sitemap
      ABN: 15 211 513 464
      CRICOS Number: 00026A
      TEQSA: PRV12057

      Export search results

      The export option will allow you to export the current search results of the entered query to a file. Different formats are available for download. To export the items, click on the button corresponding with the preferred download format.

      Administrators can export up to 15000 items. Regular users can export no more than 500 items.

      To select a subset of the search results, click "Selective Export" button and make a selection of the items you want to export. The amount of items that can be exported at once is similarly restricted as the full export.

      After making a selection, click one of the export format buttons. The amount of items that will be exported is indicated in the bubble next to export format.