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CAPABILITY STATEMENT 2016
Welcome to
The Cairns Institute
BRIGHTON
4
Living x m2
Porch x m2 Patio x m2
Garage x m2
1 12 2
TOTAL – x m2
<— FLOORPLAN OVERLEAF
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
Leo Schoepflin Graphic Design Studio offers
cross-disciplinary graphic design & branding for
all printed and electronic media. Services range
from logo and corporate identity development
to publications, annual-reports, info graphic,
concept and digital design. With over than
10 years experience as visual consultants we
guarantee customised projects to the highest
standard of design and aesthetics.
Our design work is defined by clean and
crisp use of Typography, extensive in-depth
knowledge of latest software and unconventional
fresh ideas. With this combination we realise
comprehensive projects and objectives. The
main focus of our graphic design work lies in
brand development, design conception, creative
consulting, info-graphic and web design.
Our experience and knowledge has grown
from a decade of graphic design work in very
distinct fields of creative projects overseas in
Europe and in Australia. We work in flexible and
creative units realising ideas and implementing
professional projects of all sizes, developed
with great attention to detail. We think and act
interdisciplinary, work passionately and results-
oriented with the greatest visual outcome for
your project in mind.
Leonhard Schoepflin, Creative Director of the
studio, holds a degree in Visual Communication
from the University of the Arts in Berlin.
His European influence and approach to design
is highly valued by his clients when it comes to
face-lifting the appearance of their brand.
· Logo Design
· Corporate Identity Design
· Brand Development
· Stationery
· Publications
· Annual Reports
· Magazines
· Brochures
· Concept
· Infographic
· Branding
· Website Design
· Signage
· Social Media Suites
· Creative Direction
· Campaign Development
INTERNATIONAL CLIENTS
ADIDAS · ARTITUDE BERLIN · CANON · JAMES COOK UNIVERSITY
NISSAN · RED BULL · RASOULUTION · RCR INFRASTRUCTURE
LOCAL CLIENTS
ACCOUSTIC ROO · ALLARO HOMES · AUSTEK · ATH
THE CAIRNS INSTITUTE · CAIRNS REGIONAL COUNCIL
CHOICE AUSTRALIA · CULTURAL PLACE · CUSTOM HOMES
CRUISING CAR RENTALS · ELVA’S CAFE
ESSENTIAL AIR SOLUTIONS · EUCALYPTUS MONTESSORI
INSPIRED BY MARKETING · PUMP N PEDALS · MASSAGE MEL
JUST DIG IT QLD · EHG GROUP MERIBA MONTESSORI
MJ REALTY · MR ANDREW HAYES · STEEL DOMAIN
QUEENSLAND GOVERNMENT [DSDIP] · TEN YEARS YOUNGER
TSIREC · YUMI EDUCATION
CONTACT
Leonhard Schoepflin   M 0466 399 108
Creative Director
T 07 4057 8661 · INTL +61 466 399 108
E info@leoschoepflin.com · W leoschoepflin.com
4 Coronado St · Kewarra Beach · QLD 4879 Australia
TFN 892 069 242 · ABN 378 640 607 04
ABOUT
SERVICES With over 10 years
experience as visual
consultants we guarantee
customised projects to
the highest standard of
design and aesthetics.
We think and act
interdisciplinary, work
passionately and results-
oriented with the greatest
visual outcome for your
project in mind.
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
Explore your future
CAIRNSCAMPUS • 11.00AM-3.00PM • SUNDAY23AUGUST
TOWNSVILLECAMPUS • 11.00AM-3.00PM • SUNDAY30AUGUST
OPENDAY 2015
jcu.edu.au/openday
• Findout about courses and careers • Enjoy interactive activities
• Take a campustour • Speaktothe experts • Exploreourfacilities
• Learn about scholarships and alternative entryoptions
Brand Campaign for JCU Open Day 2015. We were
asked for the second consecutive year to assist with
the design conception for James Cook Universities
annual Open Day.
Open Day is a great opportunity to find out more
about your local university – whether you are
interested in starting, changing or furthering your
career or you are simply curious about what is
happening ‘out at the uni’, Open Day is a great day
out for you and your family.
`Open Day 2015 —
Explore your future.’
BRAND CAMPAIGN SHOWCASE PROJECT:
OPENDAY 2015
Explore your future
OPENDAY2015
CAIRNSCAMPUS • 11.00AM-3.00PM • SUNDAY23AUGUST
TOWNSVILLECAMPUS • 11.00AM-3.00PM • SUNDAY30AUGUST
· Creative Direction
· Concept
· Campaign Development
· Web-Advertising
· Press-Advertising
· Collateral Design
SCOPE OF WORK:
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
Famous for caring
Famous for caring
`Recently Ten Years Younger
Home Care embarked on
a thorough and strategic
planning process to
redevelop our corporate
identity and branding.
Leo’s input with our
redesign of corporate
identity and logo, was
greatly appreciated, timely,
and presented in a very
professional manner.’
Kevin Fields
Business Manager – TenYearsYounger Home Care
CORPORATE IDENTITY SHOWCASE PROJECT:
Logo & Corporate Identity re-design for private home
care provider Ten Years Younger Home Care in Cairns.
We were commissioned to create an overall dynamic,
modern and warm design look and feel, avoiding
stereo typical design-schemes used by traditional
age-care providers.
We solved the brief by introducing bright colours instead
of faded shades, modern sans-serif fonts instead of
conservative serifs and a cheeky photography style
that tells positive stories of aging while maintaining a
professional and premium finish to all applications.
SCOPE OF WORK:
· Creative Direction
· Logo Design
· Corporate Identity
· Style Guide
· Press-Advertising
· Stationery
· Signage
· Web-Design
· Company Fleet
ABOUT US COMPANIONSHIP CLINICAL NURSING OTHER SERVICES CONTACT
1300 883 953 info@tenyearsyounger.com.au
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Ten Years Younger Home Care
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
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Ten Years Younger Home Care
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Ten Years Younger Home Care
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IMPRINT PRIVACY POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONS
Social Companion
Personal Care
Respite Care
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Ten Years Younger Home Care
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
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Ten Years Younger Home Care
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Ten Years Younger Home Care
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Ten Years Younger Home Care
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
IMPRINT PRIVACY POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONS
Social Companion
Personal Care
Respite Care
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
state of the tropics
section 1 the tropics
haiti.
Image: Logan Abassi, UN Photo.
The world’s tropical region has long captivated
the imagination of outsiders. Aristotle viewed
the ‘Torrid Zone’ as an uninhabitable region of
oppressive heat and pestilence; early European
explorers and colonisers considered the region
to be full of opportunity and ripe for discovery
and exploitation; scientists have long worked
to uncover its secrets; artists have been inspired
by it and it has been idealised as a paradise,
characterised by aqua blue seas, benign peoples
and jungles teeming with exotic wildlife.The
Tropics have long been defined by these views,
invariably promoted and sustained by people
who live outside the region: views which have
shaped, and in many cases, framed policies
and approaches to the region that have not
necessarily been appropriate or beneficial.
In recent times, east/west, north/south,
developed/developing axes of understanding
have dominated our worldview, while that
fundamental Aristotelian, lateral perception of
the world has faded from view.
yet, almost half the world’s population call the
Tropics home. People have lived, even thrived
in the region for millennia. Across all parts of
the region, they have mastered their tropical
domains. Many peoples of theTropics continue
to live on their traditional lands, working
determinedly to adapt their traditional ways to
meet the challenges of a rapidly changing world,
even as economic powerhouses have emerged
elsewhere in theTropics.
Despite theTropics being a place of extraordinary
biological and cultural diversity, the peoples of
theTropics across the globe share a common
bond: their ability to adapt to and thrive in
Aristotle’s ‘uninhabitable’ zone.There is much the
wider world can learn from the many innovative
approaches to life adopted by the various peoples
in the region; approaches which have served those
peoples well.
Of course, the region is not without its challenges.
For a variety of reasons, both imposed from the
outside and born from within, theTropics have
lagged behind the rest of the world. In many ways,
this makes theTropics more vulnerable to the
world’s grand challenges than other regions.
At a time of increasing concern about social,
environmental and economic sustainability, a
different approach is long overdue. It is time to
recognise and acknowledge theTropics as a region
defined from within, rather than without, to
embrace the wisdom and experience of its peoples
and to ensure that solutions of merit deployed in
one part of theTropics can be shared elsewhere,
across theTropics and beyond.
This is the approach taken by State of theTropics.
This report provides the first in-depth, impartial
assessment of theTropics as an environmental
and geopolitical entity in its own right. It draws on
the expertise, knowledge and diverse backgrounds
of leading institutions across the region to assess
the state of the region; to better understand the
implications of the immense social, economic and
environmental changes the region is experiencing
and frame a pathway for a prosperous and
sustainable future.
This report demonstrates that nations in the
Tropics have made extraordinary progress across a
wide range of environmental, social and economic
indicators in recent decades. It also highlights the
many significant and unique challenges the region
continues to face.
There is much to learn here.And while this report
shines a spotlight on the tropical world, its power
and potential, the rest of the world is inevitably
engaged, challenged and redefined by its findings
as well.
By taking a unique perspective from within the
Tropics, by and for the people that live in the
region, and acknowledging the critical need
to balance ongoing development and human
wellbeing with environmental sustainability,
State of theTropics provides a base camp for the
long, but increasingly achievable climb to a more
prosperous global future.
Foreword
STATE OF THE TROPICS
XI
professor sandra hardingprofessor sandra harding
STaTE of ThE TropicS 127
chapter 5
Biodiversity
Western tarsier.
image: Mark Ziembicki.
‘If enough speciesare extinguished,willthe ecosystems
collapse, andwillthe extinctionof mostother species
follow soonafterward?Theonlyansweranyone cangive
is: possibly. Bythetimewe find out, however, it might
betoo late.One planet, one experiment.’
E. o. Wilson, 1992
377state of the tropics
chapter 8.2
Governance | Gender equality
‘The education and empowerment of women throughout the
world cannot fail to result in a more caring, tolerant, just and
peaceful life for all.’
aung san suu Kyi
Vietnamese school girl.
Image: Mark Garten, UN photo.
39state of the tropics
Essay 1
The climates of theTropics,
and how they are changing
BlairTrewin
Bureauof Meterology
BlairTrewin has been a climate scientist with the australian Bureau of
Meteorology since 1998. he is a member of the World Meteorological
organisation’s (WMo) ExpertTeam on climate change Detection and
indices, and was the scientific co-ordinator of WMo’s annual Statement
on the Status of the Global climate in 2010 and 2011. he was the 2012-13
president of the australian Meteorological and oceanographic Society and
is the editor of the australian Meteorological and oceanographic Journal.
38 Essay 1 The climaTes of The TropicssEction 2 thE EcosystEm
Storm over Darwin Harbour,Australia.
image: charles rantz Strebor.
‘Kapag may usok, mayapoy’
There is no effectwithout some cause.
filipino proverb
235state of the tropics
Neglected tropical diseases11
(NtDs) are a group
of 17 infectious diseases11
that affect at least 1
billion people worldwide, primarily the poorest
communities in thetropics and subtropics, and kill
more than 500,000 people annually (hotez et al.
2006). NtDs mostly cause chronic conditions that
can lead to long term disabilities or disfigurement,
and significantly affect people’s productive and
social lives which can act to entrench poverty.
NtDs have historically received less policy
attention and funding than diseases such as hIV
and malaria because they generally pose little
threat to the populations of developed nations,
and are largely concentrated in rural areas (Who
2012d).
Dengue is a mosquito-borne viral NtD that
is most prevalent in tropical and subtropical
regions. Its global distribution and public health
burden is highly uncertain, but it is estimated
that around half of the world’s population is at
risk of the disease (Brady et al. 2012), and there
are no vaccines or drugs to treat it.the incidence
of dengue is estimated to have increased 30-fold
over the past five decades due to factors such as
rapid urbanisation, global travel, environmental
change (Who 2007) and ineffective vector control
(Guzman et al. 2010). Dengue is now the most
rapidly-spreading mosquito-borne viral disease
in the world, and is a major global public health
threat (Who 2012d,Who 2012n).
a small percentage of people with dengue develop
dengue haemorrhagic fever (Dhf), which has an
average case fatality rate of 5% (Gubler 2004) and
is responsible for around 22,000 deaths per year
(Who 2012g).appropriate disease management
with well-trained health personnel and good
facilities can reduce Dhf mortality to below 1%,
compared with case fatality rates as high as 40%
in populations that lack access to appropriate
health care (Gubler 2004).although dengue is
responsible for fewer deaths than malaria (another
mosquito-borne disease), it is a significant cause of
disability that places considerable strain on health
services and causes substantial economic losses.
trends
World health organisation (Who) regional
offices and the global dengue surveillance system
DengueNet publish reported cases of dengue
by nation and year, but systemic underreporting
mean they significantly understate the true disease
burden (Bhatt et al. 2013). factors contributing to
underreporting include low levels of health care
access, misdiagnosis and incomplete recording of
data in national systems. studies of hospital case
numbers and dengue incidence in the general
community suggest that only around 30% of
people estimated to have ‘apparent’12
dengue
present to formal healthcare facilities (Bhatt et
al. 2013).also, as there are no uniform criteria for
reporting dengue cases toWho, some nations
report only severe dengue cases, others report all
cases and still others report only cases that have
been confirmed in a laboratory (suaya et al. 2006).
the burden of dengue acrossafrica is largely
unknown due to insufficient data from endemic
nations. Low awareness by health care providers,
low levels of diagnostic testing and limited
surveillance capacity are contributing factors. In
parts ofafrica where there is recognised over-
diagnosis of malaria, dengue may be misdiagnosed
as malaria as the cause for febrile illness
(amarasinghe et al. 2011). Nonetheless, there is
some evidence that dengue outbreaks inafrica are
increasing in size and frequency (Who 2012g).
Data limitations hinder international comparisons
and the assessment of trends over time, which in
turn affects resourcing and program development
for dengue control. Who’s Global strategy for
dengue prevention and control aims to estimate
the true burden of dengue by 2015.
Dengue burden
While only 2.4 million dengue infections were
reported in 2010 (Who 2013e), Who estimates
that there are 50-100 million infections worldwide
each year across more than 100 endemic nations
(Who 2012g). recent research suggests that the
global burden of dengue is significantly higher
thanWho estimates, with around 390 million
infections per year (Bhatt et al. 2013). of these,
96 million are apparent infections, with the
remainder being ‘inapparent’ infections that are
mild or asymptomatic.these inapparent infections
have no immediate implications for clinical
management but are of public health significance
as a reservoir for future infection.
In the period between 2008 and 2011, most of
the apparent dengue infections, 72% (or 70 million
infections per annum), occurred in thetropics, with
the majority of infections in the rest of theWorld
occurring in nations that border or straddle
thetropics.
In thetropics, the caribbean has the highest rate
of dengue infections at 3,274 cases per 100,000
population (see figure 6.2.18). south eastasia and
southasia carry the greatest number of infections
with around 20 million infections per year which,
combined, account for 61% of infections in the
tropics.With around 19 million infections each
year, tropical India alone accounts for 27% of
dengue infections in thetropics. other nations
with more than 1 million infections each year are
Indonesia, Brazil (see Box 6.2.11), Nigeria, china,
philippines,Vietnam,thailand, Mexico, Bangladesh
and colombia.
More than 12 million apparent infections occur
each year in central & southernafrica, indicating
a substantial burden in a region where dengue
is largely hidden (that is, there are no reported
cases). oceania carries the lowest number with
around 170,000 infections per year, or 0.3% of
infections in thetropics.the number of cases
reported toWho represents a very small fraction
of estimated apparent infections in thetropics –
ranging from 0% in theafrican regions to 11% in
southamerica (see figure 6.2.19).
Dengue and other neglected tropical diseases
11
the 17 NtDs are: dengue, rabies, trachoma, Buruli ulcer, endemic
treponematoses (yaws), leprosy (hansen disease), chagas disease,
humanafrican trypanomiasis (sleeping sickness), leishmaniasis,
cysticercosis, dracunculiasis (guinea-worm disease), echinococcosis,
foodborne trematode infections, lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis
(river blindness), schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiases.
12
Dengue infections that result in visible symptoms sufficient to disrupt
a person’s daily routine (Bhatt et al, 2013).
234 chapter 6 societysection 3 the human system
figure 6.2.17 Malaria endemic nations andterritories
Malaria-endemic nations and territories
Malaria-non-endemic nations and territories
Malaria-endemicnationsandterritoriesare:
Democratic republic of the congo, cameroon,
chad, congo, central african republic,
Gabon, equatorial Guinea, sao tome and
principe, Burundi, comoros, Djibouti, eritrea,
ethiopia, Kenya, Mayotte, rwanda, somalia,
sudan, tanzania, Uganda, angola, Botswana,
Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique,
Namibia, south africa, swaziland, Zambia,
Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Niger, Burkina faso, Ghana,
Mali, côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, senegal, Benin,
sierra Leone, togo, Liberia, Guinea-Bissau,
Mauritania, Gambia, cape Verde, algeria, egypt,
Bolivia, Brazil, colombia, ecuador, french
Guiana, Guyana, peru, suriname, Venezuela,
Belize, costa rica, el salvador, Guatemala,
honduras, Nicaragua, panama, Mexico, haiti,
Dominican republic, Jamaica, argentina,
paraguay, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal,
sri Lanka, china, Democratic people’s republic
of Korea, south Korea, cambodia, timor-Leste,
Indonesia, Lao people’s Democratic republic,
Malaysia, Burma/Myanmar, philippines, thailand,
Vietnam, papua New Guinea, solomon Islands,
Vanuatu, afghanistan, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, pakistan,
Uzbekistan, azerbaijan, Iraq, oman, saudi arabia,
syrian arab republic, Yemen, turkey.
Is life in the Tropics getting better? – The State of the
Tropics 2014 Report addresses this nominally simple
question. It provides the first in-depth, objective
assessment of the Tropics as an environmental and
geopolitical entity in its own right. The nature of this
influence will depend on how the region addresses its
many challenges, and whether it realises its potential
and opportunities.
We developed a clean minimalistic design-concept that
features a 4 colour system to highlight and guide through
each of the 4 main sections of the report. A unique format
of 230mm x 270mm gives the report the due importance
and commands attention by not falling back to a known
DIN format.
`Publishing the State of the
Tropics 2014 report was a
huge undertaking and would
not have been possible
without Leo’s hard work.
Throughout the project, Leo
was flexible, efficient and
communicated well, resulting
in a high quality and, quite
frankly, beautiful report.’
Ann Penny
Project Manager – State of the Tropics
Office of the Vice Chancellor and President
James Cook University
ANNUAL REPORT SHOWCASE PROJECT:
· Creative Direction
· Concept
· Layout & Design
· Executive Summary
· Media Suite
· Infographic
SCOPE OF WORK
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
Logo and Identity design, branding and web-design for
Eucalyptus Montessori, a new Montessori Child Care
Centre opening in Canberra in 2017.
The centre has been established to reflect the highest
standards in early childhood programming.
The logo reflects the Montessori approach to provide a
stimulating learning environment that is geared towards
the child – enabling them to proceed at their own pace
in a non-competitive natural environment: to explore;
experiment; and develop their love of learning.
`The design of Eucalyptus
Montessori’s corporate
identity and website is
one of many projects for
which our organisation has
engaged Leo Schoepflin
Graphic Design Studio.
We work with Leo because
he is efficient and
professional. His creative
designs have always fulfilled
our expectations – each
offering a perfect balance
between inventiveness
and familiarity.’
Katie Denzin
Business Manager
CORPORATE IDENTITY SHOWCASE PROJECT:
W eucalyptusmontessori.com.au
E info@eucalyptusmontessori.com.au
P 00 0000 0000 · F 00 0000 0000
A 0 XXX Close · Canberra · ACT 2600
· Logo Design
· Creative Direction
· Corporate Identity
· Stationery
· Signage
· Web-Design
SCOPE OF WORK
P 00 0000 0000 · F 00 0000 0000
A 0 XXX Close · Canberra · ACT 2600
W eucalyptusmontessori.com.au
E info@eucalyptusmontessori.com.au
Lorem Ipsum
CENTRE MANAGER
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
Tropic of Capricorn (23° 26' 16'')
Equator
Tropic of Cancer (23° 26' 16'')
Port Blair
Colombo
Victoria
Dhaka
Kuala Lumpur
Naypyidaw
Vientiane
Hanoi
Dili
Bandar Seri Begawan
Hagåtña
Saipan
Palikir
Honiara
Jakarta
Surabaya
Flying Fish Cove
Mogadishu
Vingt Cinq
Port Louis
Saint-Denis
Kampala
Addis Ababa
Djibouti
Sana'aAsmara
Riyadh
Dubai
Khartoum
N'Djamena
Abuja
Porto Novo
Jamestown
LibrevilleSao Tome
Bangui
Kigali
Bujumbura
Kinshasa
Brazzaville
Luanda
Lusaka
Lilongwe
Moroni
Mamoudzou
DakarPraia
Nouakchott
Banjul
Cairns
Townsville Alofi
Nuku'alofa
Singapore
Nouméa
Pago P
Mata-Utu
Yaren
Majuro
SuvaPort Vila
Algiers
Laayoune
A L G E R I A
W E S T E R N S A H A R A
Cairo
E G Y P T
New Delhi
Taipei
Gaborone
B O T S W A N A
Pretoria
S O U T H A F R I C A
Canberra
F E D E R AT E D S TAT E S O F M I C R O N E S I A
M A R S H A L L I S L A N D S
G U A M
N O R T H E R N M A R I A N A I S L A N D S
P H I L I P P I N E S
B R U N E I
V I E T N A M
TA I W A N
Bangkok
T H A I L A N D
L A O S
S R I L A N K A
A N D A M A N A N D
N I C O B A R I S L A N D S
M Y A N M A R
B A N G L A D E S H
I N D O N E S I A
M A L A Y S I A
C H I N A
S I N G A P O R E
F I J I
T O N G A
N I U E
W A L L I S A N D F U T U N A
V A N U AT U
N E W C A L E D O N I A
A U S T R A L I A
N A U R U
T O R R E S S T R A I T I S L A N D S
T I M O R - L E S T E
S E Y C H E L L E S
R É U N I O N
C O M O R O I S L A N D S
M A Y O T T E
S O M A L I AU G A N D A
B U R U N D I
R W A N D A
M A L A W I
Z A M B I A
A N G O L A
G A B O N
N I G E R I A
B E N I N
Conakry
G U I N E A
S E N E G A L
C A P E V E R D E
G A M B I A
M A U R I TA N I A
Bissau
GUINEA-BISSAU
Freetown
S I E R R A L E O N E
LomeT O G O
C H A D
S U D A N
E T H I O P I A
D J I B O U T I
E R I T R E A
Y E M E N
S A U D I A R A B I A
U N I T E D A R A B E M I R AT E S
I N D I A
C E N T R A L A F R I C A N R E P U B L I C
S A O T O M E A N D P R I N C I P E
S T H E L E N A
DEMOCRATIC REP. OF THE CONGO
R E P. O F T H E C O N G O
M A U R I T I U S
A G A L E G A I S L A N D S C H R I S T M A S I S L A N D
S O L O M O N I S L A N D S
MonroviaL I B E R I A
Port Moresby
P A P U A N E W G U I N E A
West Island
C O C O S I S L A N D S
Phnom Penh
C A M B O D I A
Malé
M A L D I V E S
Kavaratti
L A K S H A D W E E P
Yamoussoukro
C O T E D ' I V O I R E
Bamako
M A L I Ouagadougou
B U R K I N A F A S O
Niamey
N I G E R
Accra
G H A N A Yaoundé
C A M E R O O N
Windhoek
N A M I B I A
Malabo
E Q U AT O R I A L G U I N E A
Nairobi
K E N Y A
Maputo
M O Z A M B I Q U E
Harare
Z I M B A B W E
Dodoma
TA N Z A N I A
Antananarivo
M A D A G A S C A R
Juba
S O U T H S U D A N
Muscat
O M A N
Diego Garcia
B R I T I S H I N D I A N O C E A N T E R R I T O R Y
Manila
Funafuti
T U V A L U
Apia S A M
South Tarawa
K I R I B AT I
Ngerulmud
P A L A U
Hong Kong
Dongguan
Shenzhen
Zhongshan
ShantouGuangzhou
Foshan
Ho Chi Minh City
Nanning
Yangon
Kolkata
Mumbai
Surat
Pune
AhmadabadJeddah
Dar es Salaam
Chennai
Hyderabad
Bangalore
Lagos
Abidjan
A brighter future for
people in the tropics
More than 40% of the world’s population lives in the tropics.
The Cairns Institute undertakes advanced research into the
opportunities and challenges faced by societies living in the
tropics. Research opportunities and challenges include:
• Cultural change
• Economic development
• Education for sustainability
• Environmental change
• Healthy livelihoods
• Language diversity
• Social justice and governance
With experts in more than 20 academic disciplines, the
Institute is also a consulting and training hub for northern
Australia and the tropics worldwide.The Institute was
established in 2009 with a grant from the
Australian Government.
THECAIRNS INSTITUTE
Researching tropical societies
MARKETING COLLATERAL SHOWCASE PROJECT:
Graphic design of two large info-graphic panels for the
foyer of the Cairns Institute. A detailed physical world map
showing all capital and major cities that are located in the
Tropics world-wide and a selection of faces of people all
ages, genders and races living in the tropical zone.
More than 40% of the world’s population lives in the
Tropics. The Cairns Institute carries out advanced research
into the opportunities and challenges faced by societies in
the Tropics.
ABOUT US COMPANIONSHIP CLINICAL NURSING OTHER SERVICES CONTACT
1300 883 953 info@tenyearsyounger.com.au
Home is where the heart is.
Home care has its advantages...
Lorem Ipsum
Ten Years Younger Home Care
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
Lorem Ipsum
Ten Years Younger Home Care
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
Lorem Ipsum
Ten Years Younger Home Care
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
Lorem Ipsum
Ten Years Younger Home Care
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
IMPRINT PRIVACY POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONS
PublicationsPeopleThemes Events
Our strategic intent — Creating a brighter future for life in the Tropics worldwide
Search
MORE MORE MORE
Research Training Dialogue
The Institute’s research addresses critical points of social
and environmental transformation in the tropics. Its aim is
to be visionary, multidisciplinary, and driven by principles of
social justice and reciprocity.
The Institute offers multiple opportunities for learning
via higher degree research programs, focused non-
award professional development and short courses, and
collaborative research.
The Institute informs and supports public debate about
issues shaping life in the tropics, creating democratic
spaces for the dissemination and discussion of ideas and
knowledge from both within and outside the University.
THE CAIRNS INSTITUTE >
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erat volutpat. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, sed consectetuer
adipiscing elit, diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut
laoreet dolore magna aliquam erat volutpat.
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MORE
ABOUT CONNECT SUBSCRIBE FACILITIESRESEARCH TRAINING DIALOGUE
· Creative Direction
· Info-Graphic
· Print Collateral
· Web-Design
SCOPE OF WORK
`Leo’s design work for
The Cairns Institute has
been genuinely outstanding.
On the strength of Leo’s
contributions to our building
interiors we commissioned
additional work on our
promotional material and
a complete re-design of our
website. The results are as
practical as they are beautiful.’
Prof Stewart Lockie
Director, The Cairns Institute
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
Logo & Corporate Identity re-design for long established
local Car Rental Company ‘Cruising’. The existing artwork
looked out dated.
We were commissioned to create a young, fun look and
feel, that inspires to explore the Tropics and Greater
Cairns Region, while having a relaxed and adventurous
character to all communications.
`We engaged Leo to
rebrand our car rental
business. The results have
been outstanding.
Our turnover is up
significantly and we
put that down to our
new professional look
created by Leo.’
Michael Birt
Proprietor, Cruising Car Rentals
CORPORATE IDENTITY SHOWCASE PROJECT:
Special promotion placeholder.
To find out more, click here
SINCE 1996
RESERVATION VEHICLES PROMOTIONS LOCATION F&Q CONTACT
07 4041 4666
1 32 4 5sales@cruisingcarrental.com.au
Stay connected:
Get in touch:
Book a Car
Pickup Location (City, State, Postal Code)
Return car to a different location
Pickup Date & Time
Please select an age
Rental Car Type:
Return Date & Time
Cairns Airport
24/12/2014
21-24
Full-Size Elite
27/12/2014
10:00
10:00
1
2
3
4
?
?
BOOK HERE
CARRENTAL
SINCE 1996 SINCE 1996
CALL NOW FOR IMMEDIATE HOTEL PICK-UP
UNLIMITED KILOMETRES
24HR AIRPORT PICK-UP AND DROP-OFF
LATE MODEL COMPACT, SEDANS, SUV
PEOPLE MOVERS, 4WD’s, UTES, CONVERTIBLES
FREE BABY SEATS
EVERY CAR AIR CONDITIONED
NO NASTY EXTRAS
INSURANCE INCLUDED. EXCESS APPLIES.
OVER 100,000
HAPPY CUSTOMERS…
AND COUNTING
Special promotion placeholder.
To find out more, click here
SINCE 1996
RESERVATION VEHICLES PROMOTIONS LOCATION F&Q CONTACT
07 4041 4666
1 32 4 5sales@cruisingcarrental.com.au
Stay connected:
Get in touch:
Book a Car
Pickup Location (City, State, Postal Code)
Return car to a different location
Pickup Date & Time
Please select an age
Rental Car Type:
Return Date & Time
Cairns Airport
24/12/2014
21-24
Full-Size Elite
27/12/2014
10:00
10:00
1
2
3
4
?
?
· Creative Direction
· Logo Design
· Corporate Identity
· Style Guide
· Press-Advertising
· Stationery
· Signage
· Web-Design
SCOPE OF WORK
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
14 / 17
2. Presentation visual identity design cultural place
CONCEPT 5
CONCEPT 5 COMBINES IN A SMART WAY ABORIGINAL AND ISLANDER VISUAL LANGUAGE/
ELEMENTS WITH MODERN TYPOGRAPHY AND PLAYS IN AN AESTHETIC WAY WITH THE
ASPECT OF HOSPITALITY/RESTAURANT BY ABSTRACTING THE DOTTED CIRCLE AND THE
TWO FEATHERS ON THE LEFT AND RIGHT TO A PLATE AND CUTLERY. THE CONTEMPORARY
TYPE IN WORDMARk GIVES IT A VERY MODERN AND SOPHISTICATED LOOk.
MWB THEATER- UND VERANSTALTUNGSSERVICE
TEL +49 (0)30 5557 54590 · FAX +49 (0)30 / 5557 54599
INFO@MWB-BERLIN.DE · WWW.MWB-BERLIN.DE
LOGO-DESIGN SHOWCASE SELECTION: LOGO-DESIGN SHOWCASE SELECTION:
LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016
· Logo Design
· Corporate Identity Design
· Brand Development
· Stationery
· Publications
· Annual Reports
· Magazines
· Brochures
· Concept
· Infographic
· Branding
· Website Design
· Signage
· Social Media Suites
· Creative Direction
· Campaign Development
Class of Insurance: 	 Professional Indemnity
Named Insured:		 Leo Schoepflin Graphic Design Studio
Insurer: 			 CGU Insurance Limited
Policy Number: 		 05MIS7043410
Covering: 		 Claim Investigation Costs,
Disciplinary Proceedings or Enquiries,
Three Automatic Reinstatements of
Sum Insured, Defamation,
Loss of Documents, Trade Practices
and Fair Trading Legislation,
Fraud and Dishonesty,
Infringement of Intellectual Property,
Extended Continuous Cover,
Joint Venture Liability,
Cover for Employees,
Principals’ Previous Business,
Prior Incorporated Body,
Mergers and Acquisitions,
Estate  Legal Representatives,
Free legal Consultation,
Run Off Cover, Tax Investigation Cover
Limit of Liability: 		$5,000,000 any one claim and
$20,000,000 in the aggregate
Jurisdictional Limits: 	 Australia and New Zealand
Territorial Limits: 		 Worldwide
Expiry Date: 		 4.00pm 20th May 2016
Class of Insurance: 	 Public Liability
Named Insured:		 Leo Schoepflin Graphic Design Studio
Insurer: 			 CGU Insurance Limited
Policy Number: 		 05MIS7043410
Covering: 		 Claims of personal injury or property
damage that a third party suffers (or
claims to have suffered) as a result
of our business activities
Limit of Liability: 		 $20,000,000 any one occurrence
Jurisdictional Limits: 	 Australia and New Zealand
Territorial Limits: 		 Worldwide excluding USA  Canada
Expiry Date: 		 4.00pm 20th May 2016
SERVICESINSURANCES
INTERNATIONAL CLIENTS
ADIDAS · ARTITUDE BERLIN · CANON · JAMES COOK UNIVERSITY
NISSAN · RED BULL · RASOULUTION · RCR INFRASTRUCTURE
LOCAL CLIENTS
ACCOUSTIC ROO · ALLARO HOMES · AUSTEK · ATH
THE CAIRNS INSTITUTE · CAIRNS REGIONAL COUNCIL
CHOICE AUSTRALIA · CULTURAL PLACE · CUSTOM HOMES
CRUISING CAR RENTALS · ELVA’S CAFE
ESSENTIAL AIR SOLUTIONS · EUCALYPTUS MONTESSORI
INSPIRED BY MARKETING · PUMP N PEDALS · MASSAGE MEL
JUST DIG IT QLD · EHG GROUP MERIBA MONTESSORI
MJ REALTY · MR ANDREW HAYES · STEEL DOMAIN
QUEENSLAND GOVERNMENT [DSDIP] · TEN YEARS YOUNGER
TSIREC · YUMI EDUCATION
CONTACT
Leonhard Schoepflin   M 0466 399 108
Creative Director
T 07 4057 8661 · INTL +61 466 399 108
E info@leoschoepflin.com · W leoschoepflin.com
4 Coronado St · Kewarra Beach · QLD 4879 Australia
TFN 892 069 242 · ABN 378 640 607 04
We accept:Paperstocks used are Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified. Cover: Maine, gloss recycled, 350gsm Content: Maine, gloss recycled, 150gsm
LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
• Essential service programmes for fire passage, fire dampers
and smoke management system testing
• Commercial/industrial air-conditioning and refrigeration
• Domestic air-conditioning
• Servicing and installing brands such as Daikin, Mitsubishi electric, Fujitsu and Panasonic
Everything we do is aimed at exceeding customer satisfaction. With our core values of accountability and
integrity we pride ourselves on providing the highest standards in customer service, communication
and operational performance.
P 07 4057 7131
M 0419 030 161
A 4 Yamba Close
Kewarra Beach · QLD 4879
W essentialairsolutions.com.au
E r.marks@essentialairsolutions.com.au
ABN 99 607 444 315 RTA AU38512ACN 607 444 315
ATHEO
MATHEO
3200G 51CM
LENI+GREGOR
EINBISSCHENMAMA,EINBISSCHENPAPAUNDGANZVIELMATHEO!
MATHEO03.11.2015 16:00UHR BERLINKOEPENICK
We acknowledge the Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander peoples as the Traditional Owners of the lands
and waters where we operate our business. We honour the
unique cultural and spiritual relationship to the land, waters
and seas of First Australian peoples and their continuing
and rich contribution to Australian society.
We also pay respect to ancestors and Elders past, present
and future.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

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CapabilityStatement_LS_2016_Web

  • 1. CAPABILITY STATEMENT 2016 Welcome to The Cairns Institute BRIGHTON 4 Living x m2 Porch x m2 Patio x m2 Garage x m2 1 12 2 TOTAL – x m2 <— FLOORPLAN OVERLEAF
  • 2. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM Leo Schoepflin Graphic Design Studio offers cross-disciplinary graphic design & branding for all printed and electronic media. Services range from logo and corporate identity development to publications, annual-reports, info graphic, concept and digital design. With over than 10 years experience as visual consultants we guarantee customised projects to the highest standard of design and aesthetics. Our design work is defined by clean and crisp use of Typography, extensive in-depth knowledge of latest software and unconventional fresh ideas. With this combination we realise comprehensive projects and objectives. The main focus of our graphic design work lies in brand development, design conception, creative consulting, info-graphic and web design. Our experience and knowledge has grown from a decade of graphic design work in very distinct fields of creative projects overseas in Europe and in Australia. We work in flexible and creative units realising ideas and implementing professional projects of all sizes, developed with great attention to detail. We think and act interdisciplinary, work passionately and results- oriented with the greatest visual outcome for your project in mind. Leonhard Schoepflin, Creative Director of the studio, holds a degree in Visual Communication from the University of the Arts in Berlin. His European influence and approach to design is highly valued by his clients when it comes to face-lifting the appearance of their brand. · Logo Design · Corporate Identity Design · Brand Development · Stationery · Publications · Annual Reports · Magazines · Brochures · Concept · Infographic · Branding · Website Design · Signage · Social Media Suites · Creative Direction · Campaign Development INTERNATIONAL CLIENTS ADIDAS · ARTITUDE BERLIN · CANON · JAMES COOK UNIVERSITY NISSAN · RED BULL · RASOULUTION · RCR INFRASTRUCTURE LOCAL CLIENTS ACCOUSTIC ROO · ALLARO HOMES · AUSTEK · ATH THE CAIRNS INSTITUTE · CAIRNS REGIONAL COUNCIL CHOICE AUSTRALIA · CULTURAL PLACE · CUSTOM HOMES CRUISING CAR RENTALS · ELVA’S CAFE ESSENTIAL AIR SOLUTIONS · EUCALYPTUS MONTESSORI INSPIRED BY MARKETING · PUMP N PEDALS · MASSAGE MEL JUST DIG IT QLD · EHG GROUP MERIBA MONTESSORI MJ REALTY · MR ANDREW HAYES · STEEL DOMAIN QUEENSLAND GOVERNMENT [DSDIP] · TEN YEARS YOUNGER TSIREC · YUMI EDUCATION CONTACT Leonhard Schoepflin   M 0466 399 108 Creative Director T 07 4057 8661 · INTL +61 466 399 108 E info@leoschoepflin.com · W leoschoepflin.com 4 Coronado St · Kewarra Beach · QLD 4879 Australia TFN 892 069 242 · ABN 378 640 607 04 ABOUT SERVICES With over 10 years experience as visual consultants we guarantee customised projects to the highest standard of design and aesthetics. We think and act interdisciplinary, work passionately and results- oriented with the greatest visual outcome for your project in mind.
  • 3. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM Explore your future CAIRNSCAMPUS • 11.00AM-3.00PM • SUNDAY23AUGUST TOWNSVILLECAMPUS • 11.00AM-3.00PM • SUNDAY30AUGUST OPENDAY 2015 jcu.edu.au/openday • Findout about courses and careers • Enjoy interactive activities • Take a campustour • Speaktothe experts • Exploreourfacilities • Learn about scholarships and alternative entryoptions Brand Campaign for JCU Open Day 2015. We were asked for the second consecutive year to assist with the design conception for James Cook Universities annual Open Day. Open Day is a great opportunity to find out more about your local university – whether you are interested in starting, changing or furthering your career or you are simply curious about what is happening ‘out at the uni’, Open Day is a great day out for you and your family. `Open Day 2015 — Explore your future.’ BRAND CAMPAIGN SHOWCASE PROJECT: OPENDAY 2015 Explore your future OPENDAY2015 CAIRNSCAMPUS • 11.00AM-3.00PM • SUNDAY23AUGUST TOWNSVILLECAMPUS • 11.00AM-3.00PM • SUNDAY30AUGUST · Creative Direction · Concept · Campaign Development · Web-Advertising · Press-Advertising · Collateral Design SCOPE OF WORK:
  • 4. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM Famous for caring Famous for caring `Recently Ten Years Younger Home Care embarked on a thorough and strategic planning process to redevelop our corporate identity and branding. Leo’s input with our redesign of corporate identity and logo, was greatly appreciated, timely, and presented in a very professional manner.’ Kevin Fields Business Manager – TenYearsYounger Home Care CORPORATE IDENTITY SHOWCASE PROJECT: Logo & Corporate Identity re-design for private home care provider Ten Years Younger Home Care in Cairns. We were commissioned to create an overall dynamic, modern and warm design look and feel, avoiding stereo typical design-schemes used by traditional age-care providers. We solved the brief by introducing bright colours instead of faded shades, modern sans-serif fonts instead of conservative serifs and a cheeky photography style that tells positive stories of aging while maintaining a professional and premium finish to all applications. SCOPE OF WORK: · Creative Direction · Logo Design · Corporate Identity · Style Guide · Press-Advertising · Stationery · Signage · Web-Design · Company Fleet ABOUT US COMPANIONSHIP CLINICAL NURSING OTHER SERVICES CONTACT 1300 883 953 info@tenyearsyounger.com.au Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE IMPRINT PRIVACY POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONS Social Companion Personal Care Respite Care Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE IMPRINT PRIVACY POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONS Social Companion Personal Care Respite Care
  • 5. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM state of the tropics section 1 the tropics haiti. Image: Logan Abassi, UN Photo. The world’s tropical region has long captivated the imagination of outsiders. Aristotle viewed the ‘Torrid Zone’ as an uninhabitable region of oppressive heat and pestilence; early European explorers and colonisers considered the region to be full of opportunity and ripe for discovery and exploitation; scientists have long worked to uncover its secrets; artists have been inspired by it and it has been idealised as a paradise, characterised by aqua blue seas, benign peoples and jungles teeming with exotic wildlife.The Tropics have long been defined by these views, invariably promoted and sustained by people who live outside the region: views which have shaped, and in many cases, framed policies and approaches to the region that have not necessarily been appropriate or beneficial. In recent times, east/west, north/south, developed/developing axes of understanding have dominated our worldview, while that fundamental Aristotelian, lateral perception of the world has faded from view. yet, almost half the world’s population call the Tropics home. People have lived, even thrived in the region for millennia. Across all parts of the region, they have mastered their tropical domains. Many peoples of theTropics continue to live on their traditional lands, working determinedly to adapt their traditional ways to meet the challenges of a rapidly changing world, even as economic powerhouses have emerged elsewhere in theTropics. Despite theTropics being a place of extraordinary biological and cultural diversity, the peoples of theTropics across the globe share a common bond: their ability to adapt to and thrive in Aristotle’s ‘uninhabitable’ zone.There is much the wider world can learn from the many innovative approaches to life adopted by the various peoples in the region; approaches which have served those peoples well. Of course, the region is not without its challenges. For a variety of reasons, both imposed from the outside and born from within, theTropics have lagged behind the rest of the world. In many ways, this makes theTropics more vulnerable to the world’s grand challenges than other regions. At a time of increasing concern about social, environmental and economic sustainability, a different approach is long overdue. It is time to recognise and acknowledge theTropics as a region defined from within, rather than without, to embrace the wisdom and experience of its peoples and to ensure that solutions of merit deployed in one part of theTropics can be shared elsewhere, across theTropics and beyond. This is the approach taken by State of theTropics. This report provides the first in-depth, impartial assessment of theTropics as an environmental and geopolitical entity in its own right. It draws on the expertise, knowledge and diverse backgrounds of leading institutions across the region to assess the state of the region; to better understand the implications of the immense social, economic and environmental changes the region is experiencing and frame a pathway for a prosperous and sustainable future. This report demonstrates that nations in the Tropics have made extraordinary progress across a wide range of environmental, social and economic indicators in recent decades. It also highlights the many significant and unique challenges the region continues to face. There is much to learn here.And while this report shines a spotlight on the tropical world, its power and potential, the rest of the world is inevitably engaged, challenged and redefined by its findings as well. By taking a unique perspective from within the Tropics, by and for the people that live in the region, and acknowledging the critical need to balance ongoing development and human wellbeing with environmental sustainability, State of theTropics provides a base camp for the long, but increasingly achievable climb to a more prosperous global future. Foreword STATE OF THE TROPICS XI professor sandra hardingprofessor sandra harding STaTE of ThE TropicS 127 chapter 5 Biodiversity Western tarsier. image: Mark Ziembicki. ‘If enough speciesare extinguished,willthe ecosystems collapse, andwillthe extinctionof mostother species follow soonafterward?Theonlyansweranyone cangive is: possibly. Bythetimewe find out, however, it might betoo late.One planet, one experiment.’ E. o. Wilson, 1992 377state of the tropics chapter 8.2 Governance | Gender equality ‘The education and empowerment of women throughout the world cannot fail to result in a more caring, tolerant, just and peaceful life for all.’ aung san suu Kyi Vietnamese school girl. Image: Mark Garten, UN photo. 39state of the tropics Essay 1 The climates of theTropics, and how they are changing BlairTrewin Bureauof Meterology BlairTrewin has been a climate scientist with the australian Bureau of Meteorology since 1998. he is a member of the World Meteorological organisation’s (WMo) ExpertTeam on climate change Detection and indices, and was the scientific co-ordinator of WMo’s annual Statement on the Status of the Global climate in 2010 and 2011. he was the 2012-13 president of the australian Meteorological and oceanographic Society and is the editor of the australian Meteorological and oceanographic Journal. 38 Essay 1 The climaTes of The TropicssEction 2 thE EcosystEm Storm over Darwin Harbour,Australia. image: charles rantz Strebor. ‘Kapag may usok, mayapoy’ There is no effectwithout some cause. filipino proverb 235state of the tropics Neglected tropical diseases11 (NtDs) are a group of 17 infectious diseases11 that affect at least 1 billion people worldwide, primarily the poorest communities in thetropics and subtropics, and kill more than 500,000 people annually (hotez et al. 2006). NtDs mostly cause chronic conditions that can lead to long term disabilities or disfigurement, and significantly affect people’s productive and social lives which can act to entrench poverty. NtDs have historically received less policy attention and funding than diseases such as hIV and malaria because they generally pose little threat to the populations of developed nations, and are largely concentrated in rural areas (Who 2012d). Dengue is a mosquito-borne viral NtD that is most prevalent in tropical and subtropical regions. Its global distribution and public health burden is highly uncertain, but it is estimated that around half of the world’s population is at risk of the disease (Brady et al. 2012), and there are no vaccines or drugs to treat it.the incidence of dengue is estimated to have increased 30-fold over the past five decades due to factors such as rapid urbanisation, global travel, environmental change (Who 2007) and ineffective vector control (Guzman et al. 2010). Dengue is now the most rapidly-spreading mosquito-borne viral disease in the world, and is a major global public health threat (Who 2012d,Who 2012n). a small percentage of people with dengue develop dengue haemorrhagic fever (Dhf), which has an average case fatality rate of 5% (Gubler 2004) and is responsible for around 22,000 deaths per year (Who 2012g).appropriate disease management with well-trained health personnel and good facilities can reduce Dhf mortality to below 1%, compared with case fatality rates as high as 40% in populations that lack access to appropriate health care (Gubler 2004).although dengue is responsible for fewer deaths than malaria (another mosquito-borne disease), it is a significant cause of disability that places considerable strain on health services and causes substantial economic losses. trends World health organisation (Who) regional offices and the global dengue surveillance system DengueNet publish reported cases of dengue by nation and year, but systemic underreporting mean they significantly understate the true disease burden (Bhatt et al. 2013). factors contributing to underreporting include low levels of health care access, misdiagnosis and incomplete recording of data in national systems. studies of hospital case numbers and dengue incidence in the general community suggest that only around 30% of people estimated to have ‘apparent’12 dengue present to formal healthcare facilities (Bhatt et al. 2013).also, as there are no uniform criteria for reporting dengue cases toWho, some nations report only severe dengue cases, others report all cases and still others report only cases that have been confirmed in a laboratory (suaya et al. 2006). the burden of dengue acrossafrica is largely unknown due to insufficient data from endemic nations. Low awareness by health care providers, low levels of diagnostic testing and limited surveillance capacity are contributing factors. In parts ofafrica where there is recognised over- diagnosis of malaria, dengue may be misdiagnosed as malaria as the cause for febrile illness (amarasinghe et al. 2011). Nonetheless, there is some evidence that dengue outbreaks inafrica are increasing in size and frequency (Who 2012g). Data limitations hinder international comparisons and the assessment of trends over time, which in turn affects resourcing and program development for dengue control. Who’s Global strategy for dengue prevention and control aims to estimate the true burden of dengue by 2015. Dengue burden While only 2.4 million dengue infections were reported in 2010 (Who 2013e), Who estimates that there are 50-100 million infections worldwide each year across more than 100 endemic nations (Who 2012g). recent research suggests that the global burden of dengue is significantly higher thanWho estimates, with around 390 million infections per year (Bhatt et al. 2013). of these, 96 million are apparent infections, with the remainder being ‘inapparent’ infections that are mild or asymptomatic.these inapparent infections have no immediate implications for clinical management but are of public health significance as a reservoir for future infection. In the period between 2008 and 2011, most of the apparent dengue infections, 72% (or 70 million infections per annum), occurred in thetropics, with the majority of infections in the rest of theWorld occurring in nations that border or straddle thetropics. In thetropics, the caribbean has the highest rate of dengue infections at 3,274 cases per 100,000 population (see figure 6.2.18). south eastasia and southasia carry the greatest number of infections with around 20 million infections per year which, combined, account for 61% of infections in the tropics.With around 19 million infections each year, tropical India alone accounts for 27% of dengue infections in thetropics. other nations with more than 1 million infections each year are Indonesia, Brazil (see Box 6.2.11), Nigeria, china, philippines,Vietnam,thailand, Mexico, Bangladesh and colombia. More than 12 million apparent infections occur each year in central & southernafrica, indicating a substantial burden in a region where dengue is largely hidden (that is, there are no reported cases). oceania carries the lowest number with around 170,000 infections per year, or 0.3% of infections in thetropics.the number of cases reported toWho represents a very small fraction of estimated apparent infections in thetropics – ranging from 0% in theafrican regions to 11% in southamerica (see figure 6.2.19). Dengue and other neglected tropical diseases 11 the 17 NtDs are: dengue, rabies, trachoma, Buruli ulcer, endemic treponematoses (yaws), leprosy (hansen disease), chagas disease, humanafrican trypanomiasis (sleeping sickness), leishmaniasis, cysticercosis, dracunculiasis (guinea-worm disease), echinococcosis, foodborne trematode infections, lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis (river blindness), schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiases. 12 Dengue infections that result in visible symptoms sufficient to disrupt a person’s daily routine (Bhatt et al, 2013). 234 chapter 6 societysection 3 the human system figure 6.2.17 Malaria endemic nations andterritories Malaria-endemic nations and territories Malaria-non-endemic nations and territories Malaria-endemicnationsandterritoriesare: Democratic republic of the congo, cameroon, chad, congo, central african republic, Gabon, equatorial Guinea, sao tome and principe, Burundi, comoros, Djibouti, eritrea, ethiopia, Kenya, Mayotte, rwanda, somalia, sudan, tanzania, Uganda, angola, Botswana, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, south africa, swaziland, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Niger, Burkina faso, Ghana, Mali, côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, senegal, Benin, sierra Leone, togo, Liberia, Guinea-Bissau, Mauritania, Gambia, cape Verde, algeria, egypt, Bolivia, Brazil, colombia, ecuador, french Guiana, Guyana, peru, suriname, Venezuela, Belize, costa rica, el salvador, Guatemala, honduras, Nicaragua, panama, Mexico, haiti, Dominican republic, Jamaica, argentina, paraguay, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, sri Lanka, china, Democratic people’s republic of Korea, south Korea, cambodia, timor-Leste, Indonesia, Lao people’s Democratic republic, Malaysia, Burma/Myanmar, philippines, thailand, Vietnam, papua New Guinea, solomon Islands, Vanuatu, afghanistan, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, pakistan, Uzbekistan, azerbaijan, Iraq, oman, saudi arabia, syrian arab republic, Yemen, turkey. Is life in the Tropics getting better? – The State of the Tropics 2014 Report addresses this nominally simple question. It provides the first in-depth, objective assessment of the Tropics as an environmental and geopolitical entity in its own right. The nature of this influence will depend on how the region addresses its many challenges, and whether it realises its potential and opportunities. We developed a clean minimalistic design-concept that features a 4 colour system to highlight and guide through each of the 4 main sections of the report. A unique format of 230mm x 270mm gives the report the due importance and commands attention by not falling back to a known DIN format. `Publishing the State of the Tropics 2014 report was a huge undertaking and would not have been possible without Leo’s hard work. Throughout the project, Leo was flexible, efficient and communicated well, resulting in a high quality and, quite frankly, beautiful report.’ Ann Penny Project Manager – State of the Tropics Office of the Vice Chancellor and President James Cook University ANNUAL REPORT SHOWCASE PROJECT: · Creative Direction · Concept · Layout & Design · Executive Summary · Media Suite · Infographic SCOPE OF WORK
  • 6. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM Logo and Identity design, branding and web-design for Eucalyptus Montessori, a new Montessori Child Care Centre opening in Canberra in 2017. The centre has been established to reflect the highest standards in early childhood programming. The logo reflects the Montessori approach to provide a stimulating learning environment that is geared towards the child – enabling them to proceed at their own pace in a non-competitive natural environment: to explore; experiment; and develop their love of learning. `The design of Eucalyptus Montessori’s corporate identity and website is one of many projects for which our organisation has engaged Leo Schoepflin Graphic Design Studio. We work with Leo because he is efficient and professional. His creative designs have always fulfilled our expectations – each offering a perfect balance between inventiveness and familiarity.’ Katie Denzin Business Manager CORPORATE IDENTITY SHOWCASE PROJECT: W eucalyptusmontessori.com.au E info@eucalyptusmontessori.com.au P 00 0000 0000 · F 00 0000 0000 A 0 XXX Close · Canberra · ACT 2600 · Logo Design · Creative Direction · Corporate Identity · Stationery · Signage · Web-Design SCOPE OF WORK P 00 0000 0000 · F 00 0000 0000 A 0 XXX Close · Canberra · ACT 2600 W eucalyptusmontessori.com.au E info@eucalyptusmontessori.com.au Lorem Ipsum CENTRE MANAGER
  • 7. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM Tropic of Capricorn (23° 26' 16'') Equator Tropic of Cancer (23° 26' 16'') Port Blair Colombo Victoria Dhaka Kuala Lumpur Naypyidaw Vientiane Hanoi Dili Bandar Seri Begawan Hagåtña Saipan Palikir Honiara Jakarta Surabaya Flying Fish Cove Mogadishu Vingt Cinq Port Louis Saint-Denis Kampala Addis Ababa Djibouti Sana'aAsmara Riyadh Dubai Khartoum N'Djamena Abuja Porto Novo Jamestown LibrevilleSao Tome Bangui Kigali Bujumbura Kinshasa Brazzaville Luanda Lusaka Lilongwe Moroni Mamoudzou DakarPraia Nouakchott Banjul Cairns Townsville Alofi Nuku'alofa Singapore Nouméa Pago P Mata-Utu Yaren Majuro SuvaPort Vila Algiers Laayoune A L G E R I A W E S T E R N S A H A R A Cairo E G Y P T New Delhi Taipei Gaborone B O T S W A N A Pretoria S O U T H A F R I C A Canberra F E D E R AT E D S TAT E S O F M I C R O N E S I A M A R S H A L L I S L A N D S G U A M N O R T H E R N M A R I A N A I S L A N D S P H I L I P P I N E S B R U N E I V I E T N A M TA I W A N Bangkok T H A I L A N D L A O S S R I L A N K A A N D A M A N A N D N I C O B A R I S L A N D S M Y A N M A R B A N G L A D E S H I N D O N E S I A M A L A Y S I A C H I N A S I N G A P O R E F I J I T O N G A N I U E W A L L I S A N D F U T U N A V A N U AT U N E W C A L E D O N I A A U S T R A L I A N A U R U T O R R E S S T R A I T I S L A N D S T I M O R - L E S T E S E Y C H E L L E S R É U N I O N C O M O R O I S L A N D S M A Y O T T E S O M A L I AU G A N D A B U R U N D I R W A N D A M A L A W I Z A M B I A A N G O L A G A B O N N I G E R I A B E N I N Conakry G U I N E A S E N E G A L C A P E V E R D E G A M B I A M A U R I TA N I A Bissau GUINEA-BISSAU Freetown S I E R R A L E O N E LomeT O G O C H A D S U D A N E T H I O P I A D J I B O U T I E R I T R E A Y E M E N S A U D I A R A B I A U N I T E D A R A B E M I R AT E S I N D I A C E N T R A L A F R I C A N R E P U B L I C S A O T O M E A N D P R I N C I P E S T H E L E N A DEMOCRATIC REP. OF THE CONGO R E P. O F T H E C O N G O M A U R I T I U S A G A L E G A I S L A N D S C H R I S T M A S I S L A N D S O L O M O N I S L A N D S MonroviaL I B E R I A Port Moresby P A P U A N E W G U I N E A West Island C O C O S I S L A N D S Phnom Penh C A M B O D I A Malé M A L D I V E S Kavaratti L A K S H A D W E E P Yamoussoukro C O T E D ' I V O I R E Bamako M A L I Ouagadougou B U R K I N A F A S O Niamey N I G E R Accra G H A N A Yaoundé C A M E R O O N Windhoek N A M I B I A Malabo E Q U AT O R I A L G U I N E A Nairobi K E N Y A Maputo M O Z A M B I Q U E Harare Z I M B A B W E Dodoma TA N Z A N I A Antananarivo M A D A G A S C A R Juba S O U T H S U D A N Muscat O M A N Diego Garcia B R I T I S H I N D I A N O C E A N T E R R I T O R Y Manila Funafuti T U V A L U Apia S A M South Tarawa K I R I B AT I Ngerulmud P A L A U Hong Kong Dongguan Shenzhen Zhongshan ShantouGuangzhou Foshan Ho Chi Minh City Nanning Yangon Kolkata Mumbai Surat Pune AhmadabadJeddah Dar es Salaam Chennai Hyderabad Bangalore Lagos Abidjan A brighter future for people in the tropics More than 40% of the world’s population lives in the tropics. The Cairns Institute undertakes advanced research into the opportunities and challenges faced by societies living in the tropics. Research opportunities and challenges include: • Cultural change • Economic development • Education for sustainability • Environmental change • Healthy livelihoods • Language diversity • Social justice and governance With experts in more than 20 academic disciplines, the Institute is also a consulting and training hub for northern Australia and the tropics worldwide.The Institute was established in 2009 with a grant from the Australian Government. THECAIRNS INSTITUTE Researching tropical societies MARKETING COLLATERAL SHOWCASE PROJECT: Graphic design of two large info-graphic panels for the foyer of the Cairns Institute. A detailed physical world map showing all capital and major cities that are located in the Tropics world-wide and a selection of faces of people all ages, genders and races living in the tropical zone. More than 40% of the world’s population lives in the Tropics. The Cairns Institute carries out advanced research into the opportunities and challenges faced by societies in the Tropics. ABOUT US COMPANIONSHIP CLINICAL NURSING OTHER SERVICES CONTACT 1300 883 953 info@tenyearsyounger.com.au Home is where the heart is. Home care has its advantages... Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE Lorem Ipsum Ten Years Younger Home Care CLICK HERE FOR MORE IMPRINT PRIVACY POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONS PublicationsPeopleThemes Events Our strategic intent — Creating a brighter future for life in the Tropics worldwide Search MORE MORE MORE Research Training Dialogue The Institute’s research addresses critical points of social and environmental transformation in the tropics. Its aim is to be visionary, multidisciplinary, and driven by principles of social justice and reciprocity. The Institute offers multiple opportunities for learning via higher degree research programs, focused non- award professional development and short courses, and collaborative research. The Institute informs and supports public debate about issues shaping life in the tropics, creating democratic spaces for the dissemination and discussion of ideas and knowledge from both within and outside the University. THE CAIRNS INSTITUTE > Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, diam consectetuer adipiscing elit, sed nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, sed consectetuer adipiscing elit, diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut laoreet dolore magna aliquam erat volutpat. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, sed consectetuer adipiscing elit, diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut laoreet dolore magna aliquam erat volutpat. Lorem ipsum MORE ABOUT CONNECT SUBSCRIBE FACILITIESRESEARCH TRAINING DIALOGUE · Creative Direction · Info-Graphic · Print Collateral · Web-Design SCOPE OF WORK `Leo’s design work for The Cairns Institute has been genuinely outstanding. On the strength of Leo’s contributions to our building interiors we commissioned additional work on our promotional material and a complete re-design of our website. The results are as practical as they are beautiful.’ Prof Stewart Lockie Director, The Cairns Institute
  • 8. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM Logo & Corporate Identity re-design for long established local Car Rental Company ‘Cruising’. The existing artwork looked out dated. We were commissioned to create a young, fun look and feel, that inspires to explore the Tropics and Greater Cairns Region, while having a relaxed and adventurous character to all communications. `We engaged Leo to rebrand our car rental business. The results have been outstanding. Our turnover is up significantly and we put that down to our new professional look created by Leo.’ Michael Birt Proprietor, Cruising Car Rentals CORPORATE IDENTITY SHOWCASE PROJECT: Special promotion placeholder. To find out more, click here SINCE 1996 RESERVATION VEHICLES PROMOTIONS LOCATION F&Q CONTACT 07 4041 4666 1 32 4 5sales@cruisingcarrental.com.au Stay connected: Get in touch: Book a Car Pickup Location (City, State, Postal Code) Return car to a different location Pickup Date & Time Please select an age Rental Car Type: Return Date & Time Cairns Airport 24/12/2014 21-24 Full-Size Elite 27/12/2014 10:00 10:00 1 2 3 4 ? ? BOOK HERE CARRENTAL SINCE 1996 SINCE 1996 CALL NOW FOR IMMEDIATE HOTEL PICK-UP UNLIMITED KILOMETRES 24HR AIRPORT PICK-UP AND DROP-OFF LATE MODEL COMPACT, SEDANS, SUV PEOPLE MOVERS, 4WD’s, UTES, CONVERTIBLES FREE BABY SEATS EVERY CAR AIR CONDITIONED NO NASTY EXTRAS INSURANCE INCLUDED. EXCESS APPLIES. OVER 100,000 HAPPY CUSTOMERS… AND COUNTING Special promotion placeholder. To find out more, click here SINCE 1996 RESERVATION VEHICLES PROMOTIONS LOCATION F&Q CONTACT 07 4041 4666 1 32 4 5sales@cruisingcarrental.com.au Stay connected: Get in touch: Book a Car Pickup Location (City, State, Postal Code) Return car to a different location Pickup Date & Time Please select an age Rental Car Type: Return Date & Time Cairns Airport 24/12/2014 21-24 Full-Size Elite 27/12/2014 10:00 10:00 1 2 3 4 ? ? · Creative Direction · Logo Design · Corporate Identity · Style Guide · Press-Advertising · Stationery · Signage · Web-Design SCOPE OF WORK
  • 9. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM 14 / 17 2. Presentation visual identity design cultural place CONCEPT 5 CONCEPT 5 COMBINES IN A SMART WAY ABORIGINAL AND ISLANDER VISUAL LANGUAGE/ ELEMENTS WITH MODERN TYPOGRAPHY AND PLAYS IN AN AESTHETIC WAY WITH THE ASPECT OF HOSPITALITY/RESTAURANT BY ABSTRACTING THE DOTTED CIRCLE AND THE TWO FEATHERS ON THE LEFT AND RIGHT TO A PLATE AND CUTLERY. THE CONTEMPORARY TYPE IN WORDMARk GIVES IT A VERY MODERN AND SOPHISTICATED LOOk. MWB THEATER- UND VERANSTALTUNGSSERVICE TEL +49 (0)30 5557 54590 · FAX +49 (0)30 / 5557 54599 INFO@MWB-BERLIN.DE · WWW.MWB-BERLIN.DE LOGO-DESIGN SHOWCASE SELECTION: LOGO-DESIGN SHOWCASE SELECTION:
  • 10. LEO SCHOEPFLIN GRAPHIC DESIGN STUDIO · CAPABILITY STATEMENT · 2016 · Logo Design · Corporate Identity Design · Brand Development · Stationery · Publications · Annual Reports · Magazines · Brochures · Concept · Infographic · Branding · Website Design · Signage · Social Media Suites · Creative Direction · Campaign Development Class of Insurance: Professional Indemnity Named Insured: Leo Schoepflin Graphic Design Studio Insurer: CGU Insurance Limited Policy Number: 05MIS7043410 Covering: Claim Investigation Costs, Disciplinary Proceedings or Enquiries, Three Automatic Reinstatements of Sum Insured, Defamation, Loss of Documents, Trade Practices and Fair Trading Legislation, Fraud and Dishonesty, Infringement of Intellectual Property, Extended Continuous Cover, Joint Venture Liability, Cover for Employees, Principals’ Previous Business, Prior Incorporated Body, Mergers and Acquisitions, Estate Legal Representatives, Free legal Consultation, Run Off Cover, Tax Investigation Cover Limit of Liability: $5,000,000 any one claim and $20,000,000 in the aggregate Jurisdictional Limits: Australia and New Zealand Territorial Limits: Worldwide Expiry Date: 4.00pm 20th May 2016 Class of Insurance: Public Liability Named Insured: Leo Schoepflin Graphic Design Studio Insurer: CGU Insurance Limited Policy Number: 05MIS7043410 Covering: Claims of personal injury or property damage that a third party suffers (or claims to have suffered) as a result of our business activities Limit of Liability: $20,000,000 any one occurrence Jurisdictional Limits: Australia and New Zealand Territorial Limits: Worldwide excluding USA Canada Expiry Date: 4.00pm 20th May 2016 SERVICESINSURANCES INTERNATIONAL CLIENTS ADIDAS · ARTITUDE BERLIN · CANON · JAMES COOK UNIVERSITY NISSAN · RED BULL · RASOULUTION · RCR INFRASTRUCTURE LOCAL CLIENTS ACCOUSTIC ROO · ALLARO HOMES · AUSTEK · ATH THE CAIRNS INSTITUTE · CAIRNS REGIONAL COUNCIL CHOICE AUSTRALIA · CULTURAL PLACE · CUSTOM HOMES CRUISING CAR RENTALS · ELVA’S CAFE ESSENTIAL AIR SOLUTIONS · EUCALYPTUS MONTESSORI INSPIRED BY MARKETING · PUMP N PEDALS · MASSAGE MEL JUST DIG IT QLD · EHG GROUP MERIBA MONTESSORI MJ REALTY · MR ANDREW HAYES · STEEL DOMAIN QUEENSLAND GOVERNMENT [DSDIP] · TEN YEARS YOUNGER TSIREC · YUMI EDUCATION CONTACT Leonhard Schoepflin   M 0466 399 108 Creative Director T 07 4057 8661 · INTL +61 466 399 108 E info@leoschoepflin.com · W leoschoepflin.com 4 Coronado St · Kewarra Beach · QLD 4879 Australia TFN 892 069 242 · ABN 378 640 607 04 We accept:Paperstocks used are Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified. Cover: Maine, gloss recycled, 350gsm Content: Maine, gloss recycled, 150gsm LEOSCHOEPFLIN.COM
  • 11. • Essential service programmes for fire passage, fire dampers and smoke management system testing • Commercial/industrial air-conditioning and refrigeration • Domestic air-conditioning • Servicing and installing brands such as Daikin, Mitsubishi electric, Fujitsu and Panasonic Everything we do is aimed at exceeding customer satisfaction. With our core values of accountability and integrity we pride ourselves on providing the highest standards in customer service, communication and operational performance. P 07 4057 7131 M 0419 030 161 A 4 Yamba Close Kewarra Beach · QLD 4879 W essentialairsolutions.com.au E r.marks@essentialairsolutions.com.au ABN 99 607 444 315 RTA AU38512ACN 607 444 315 ATHEO MATHEO 3200G 51CM LENI+GREGOR EINBISSCHENMAMA,EINBISSCHENPAPAUNDGANZVIELMATHEO! MATHEO03.11.2015 16:00UHR BERLINKOEPENICK We acknowledge the Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Owners of the lands and waters where we operate our business. We honour the unique cultural and spiritual relationship to the land, waters and seas of First Australian peoples and their continuing and rich contribution to Australian society. We also pay respect to ancestors and Elders past, present and future. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT