Brainfruit(1st Edition) Turning Creativity into Cash from East to West by HughMason, Mark Chong Paperback, 324 Pages, Published 2011 by Mcgraw-Hill Education (Asia) ISBN-13: 978-0-07-132495-3, ISBN: 0-07-132495-X
"OverviewNow is a time of great opportunity for creative people who have some understanding of business. We are more connected than ever. The Internet has brought East and West closer. Wherever we are, whatever we do, we are all on the same map. Brainfruit is the essential travel guide for anyone setting out to try and make money from their ideas.•You might be a recent graduate of a creative course. This book shows how you can get paid.• ..."
Homestead. by HughMason Paperback, 244 Pages, Published 2001 by Envirobook, Sydney, N.S.W., Australia ISBN-13: 978-0-85881-182-9, ISBN: 0-85881-182-0
The Last Enemy by HughMason Published 1976 by Inchcape Books ISBN-13: 978-0-9598478-0-2, ISBN: 0-9598478-0-4
"P. Lowe, "The Rural Idyll Defended: From Preservation to Conservation," in The
Rural Idyll, ed. G. E. Mingay (London: Routledge, 1989), 113-31. 60. M. Berlan-
Darque and P. Collomb, "Rural Population-Rural Vitality," Sociologia Ruralis 31,
no.4 (1991): 252-61. 61. W D. Rubinstein, "Cutting Up Rich: A Reply to F. M. L.
Thompson," Economic History Review 45, no.2 (1992): 350-61. 62. M. Winter,
Rural Politics: Policies for Agriculture, ..."
Plant Genetic Resources The Public Interest and Private Profit : a Submission to the 1985 Inquiry Into Australia's Plant Breeding Needs by Judy Messer, HughMason 37 Pages, Published 1985 ISBN-13: 978-0-9590507-2-1, ISBN: 0-9590507-2-8
"The future of public space is uncertain. Although public spaces have become increasingly shabby and crowded, novel alternatives have appeared in the form of fantastic, semi-public pleasure grounds, developed by well-heeled, crowd-pleasing entrepreneurs and devoted to profit, consumption, and self-indulgence. Philosophers and geographers have converged on the topic of public space, fascinated and in many ways alarmed by fundamental chang ..."
"The future of public space is uncertain. Although public spaces have become increasingly shabby and crowded, novel alternatives have appeared in the form of fantastic, semi-public pleasure grounds, developed by well-heeled, crowd-pleasing entrepreneurs and devoted to profit, consumption, and self-indulgence. Philosophers and geographers have converged on the topic of public space, fascinated and in many ways alarmed by fundamental chang ..."