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Perth will host two international netball matches, featuring four of the top seven teams in the world, and an international hockey tournament with an exciting new format in the week leading up to the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) this October.
Australian University Sport (AUS) has been selected to manage the 13th Australian Masters Games in Adelaide in 2011.
Information regarding the Public Service Award 1992 Clause 40 - International Sporting Leave
Standards Australia produces two documents to assist in determining what surface is applicable to a particular sport. These documents are Handbook ─ Sporting Facilities Manual Part 2: Sporting Surfaces SAA HB49.2 ─ 1993 and Synthetic Sporting Surfaces Part 1 General Principles AS 3541.1 ─ 1988.
Sports lighting concerns not only large stadiums but also the thousands of local recreation facilities in our communities. It is more than just floodlighting — it is about how we use light to create appropriate environments for televised and recreational activity.
In many cases of facility provision, it is not possible to accommodate individual courts for separate activities because of cost and space factors.
The orientation of outdoor playing areas is an important planning consideration. The time of day (early morning or late afternoon) as well as the time of year (winter or summer) has a bearing on optimum orientation.
A list of references used for the sports dimensions guide.
Link to Code of practice aquatic facilities
Link to the State Law Publisher's website.
Polo is a four-a-side game whose players are mounted on horses and use wooden mallets or sticks to strike a plastic ball in an attempt to score goals. An area of five hectares is required.
Kendo literally means ‘the way of the sword’. Kendo is one of Japan’s oldest martial arts and the one most closely associated with the Samurai. The concept of Kendo is to discipline the human spirit through the principles of the katana (Japanese sword).
This guide has been prepared by the Department of Sport and Recreation to provide general information regarding the designing of, and marking out for, a range of sporting activities played in Western Australia.
Codes of conduct, or behaviour, give everyone a guide to what is expected of them if they are part of an organisation, are playing sport, or standing on the sideline cheering. They help us to behave ethically and professionally.
Any form of violent behaviour outside the rules of a sport or recreational activity should not be condoned. Organisations need to clearly articulate their stance on violent behaviour.

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