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・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1909–10
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1913–14
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1920–21
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1927–28
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1945–46
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1949–50
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1956–57
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1959–60
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1966–67
・ Australian cricket team in New Zealand in 1969–70
・ Australian Committee on Computation and Automatic Control
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Australian Communications and Media Authority
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・ Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Baxter Healthcare Pty Ltd
・ Australian Competitive Grants Register
・ Australian Computational and Linguistics Olympiad
・ Australian Computer Museum Society
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・ Australian Conservation Foundation
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・ Australian Constitution (Public Record Copy) Act 1990
・ Australian Constitutional Convention 1998


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Australian Communications and Media Authority : ウィキペディア英語版
Australian Communications and Media Authority

The Australian Communications and Media Authority (the ACMA) is an Australian Government statutory authority within the Communications portfolio. The ACMA is tasked with ensuring media and communications works for all Australians. It does this through various legislation, regulations, standards and codes of practice.
The ACMA is a 'converged' regulator, created to oversee the convergence of the four 'worlds' of telecommunications, broadcasting, radio communications and the internet. The ACMA was formed on 1 July 2005 by a merger of the Australian Broadcasting Authority and the Australian Communications Authority. It is one of only a handful of converged communications regulators in the world.
==Organisation==
The ACMA is an independent agency with the Authority composed of the Chairman, Deputy Chair, one full-time Member, five part-time Members, and one Associate Member. The ACMA is managed by an executive team comprising the Chairman (who is also the Chief Executive Officer of the agency), the Deputy Chair, the full-time Member, six general managers and 16 executive managers. The corporate structure comprises five divisions - Communications Infrastructure, Digital Economy, Content, Consumer and Citizen, Corporate Services and Coordination, and Legal Services.
The ACMA has responsibilities under four principal Acts - the ''Broadcasting Services Act'' 1992, the ''Telecommunications Act'' 1997, the ''Telecommunications (Consumer Protection and Service Standards) Act'' 1999 and the ''Radiocommunications Act'' 1992. There are another 22 Acts to which the agency responds in such areas as spam, the Do Not Call Register and interactive gambling. The ACMA also creates and administers more than 523 legislative instruments including radiocommunications, spam and telecommunications regulations; and licence area plans for free-to-air broadcasters.
The ACMA collects revenue on behalf of the Australian Government through broadcasting, radiocommunications and telecommunications taxes, charges and licence fees. It also collects revenue from price-based allocation of spectrum.
The ACMA's main offices are located in Canberra, Melbourne and Sydney.

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