381 results
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2. The 2009 Defence White Paper and the Rudd Government's Response to China's Rise.
- Author
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Tubilewicz, Czeslaw
- Subjects
- *
MILITARY policy , *DIPLOMACY ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,CHINESE foreign relations, 1976- - Abstract
This research note discusses the 2009 Defence White Paper, particularly its focus on the potential threat the Chinese military might pose to the security of the Asia-Pacific in the foreseeable future. It also examines Chinese responses to the White Paper's main theses. It concludes that the White Paper marked a departure from the Howard government's policy of de-emphasising differences in Canberra's dialogue with Beijing and, by re-affirming commitment to the alliance with the United States (US), delineated the limits of Australia's partnership with China. However, its poorly substantiated predictions regarding the rise of China's power, the US economic and military decline and Beijing's geostrategic objectives raise doubts about the Rudd government's capacity to formulate a coherent vision for the future of Australia's relations with China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Beyond the post‐political: is public participation in Australian cities at a turning point?
- Author
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Legacy, Crystal, Rogers, Dallas, Cook, Nicole, and Ruming, Kristian
- Subjects
MUNICIPAL government ,URBAN planning & politics ,CITIES & towns ,POLITICAL participation ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
This special section builds on Planning the Post‐Political City—Part 1 to examine if and how planning is showing signs of a post‐democratic turn taking place in Australian cities. In Part 1, we presented a collection of papers examining Australia as a post‐political landscape, exploring the new ways in which Australian publics are resisting dominant neoliberal practices and logics of growth and, in doing so, are intervening in decision‐making practices to assert new forms of power and participation. In Part 2, we show how participatory practices continue to evolve. We use this brief editorial to ask a foundational question: have those implicated in the governance and management of Australian cities embarked on a post‐democratic path? As they are presented with new exclusionary and managerial governance systems, the public's participation suggests at the very least that post‐political and post‐democratic conditions are neither immutable nor inevitable. However, more democratic forms of governance rely on a rich array of activist types and approaches requiring greater institutional support in order to challenge Australia's post‐political condition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. On Re-engaging Asia.
- Author
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Elias, Juanita and Johnson, Carol
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,IDENTITY politics ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,DIPLOMACY ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
This collection of papers focuses on the domestic and international politics of Australia's recent engagement with Asia. The theme of Asian engagement appears to be of particular pertinence to the current study of Australian politics given numerous pronouncements that we are entering an 'Asian century' during which key Asian economies will gain greater ascendancy and certain Asian states will come to play a more prominent role in global politics. We employ the idea of 're-engagement' in order to show how engagement with Asia has been turned to again and again by Australian governments, albeit in different political and strategic contexts. This collection aims to consider the politics of re-engagement from a number of different theoretical positions, as well as from a number of different perspectives (be it international relations/foreign policy, domestic politics, identity politics, or from the perspective of bilateral Asian partners). Emphasis is placed not simply on the foreign policy prerogatives behind re-engagement but also on the implications of the 'Asian century' for domestic politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Creativity in the ‘Torrid’ zone: policy, creative industries and the vision for Northern Australia.
- Author
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Daniel, Ryan, Fleischmann, Katja, and Welters, Riccardo
- Subjects
CREATIVE ability ,ECONOMIC development ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,DEVELOPMENT gap - Abstract
Creative industries are recognised as a key driver of economic growth in both developed and developing nations. In addition to recognising the importance of creative industries, the Australian government has recently renewed a focus on the vast northern tropical area of this island nation as key to future economic and population growth, via the release of a white paper focussed on development options for the north. However, the white paper contains virtually no references to creative industries. In addition, Australia’s most recent national cultural policy, Creative Australia, has after only a few years slipped into obscurity and despite major resources being invested towards its development. Drawing on the almost 100 years of policy documentation relevant to Northern Australia, this paper highlights the limited attention paid to arts, culture and creative industries, and considers this relative policy vacuum in the context of global developments in creative industries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The role of universities in nation-building in 1950s Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand.
- Author
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Manathunga, Catherine
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,NATION building ,HIGHER education ,POSTCOLONIALISM ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,NEW Zealand politics & government ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate the diverse rendering of the idea of nation and the role of universities in nation-building in the 1950s Murray and Hughes Parry Reports in Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand. This paper provides trans-Tasman comparisons that reflect the different national and international interests, positioning of science and the humanities and desired academic and student subject positions and power relations. Design/methodology/approach – This paper adopts a Foucauldian genealogical approach that is informed by Wodak’s (2011) historical discourse analysis in order to analyse the reports’ discursive constructions of the national role of universities, the positioning of science and humanities and the development of desired academics and student subjectivities and power relations. Findings – The analysis reveals the different positioning of Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand in relation to the Empire and the Cold War. It also demonstrates how Australian national interests were represented in these reports as largely economic and defence related, while Aotearoa/New Zealand national interests were about economic, social and cultural nation-building. These differences were also matched by diverse weightings attached to university science and the humanities education. There is also a hailing of traditional, enlightenment-inspired discourses about desired academic and student subjectivities and power relations in Australia that contrasts with the emergence of early traces of more contemporary discourses about equity and diversity in universities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Originality/value – The paper demonstrates the value of transnational analysis in contributing to historiography about university education. The Foucauldian discourse analysis approach extends existing Australian historiography about universities during this period and represents a key contribution to Aotearoa/New Zealand historiography that has explored academic and student subjectivities to a lesser extent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Australian Defence: Challenges for the New Government.
- Author
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Dibb, Paul and Brabin-Smith, Richard
- Subjects
DEFENSE industries ,ELECTIONS ,ARMED Forces ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
With the 2013 general election now out of the way, the new government is well placed, if it has sufficient strength of purpose, to address the various issues that are at risk of engulfing the Australian Defence Force (ADF) and Defence Department. The immediate and dominant issue is that likely levels of defence funding are not enough to sustain today's ADF and simultaneously to fund its modernisation. To resolve this core inconsistency will require dispassionate analysis of Australia's evolving strategic circumstances, so that decisions on the size and preparedness of the ADF and on the rate and direction of its modernisation can have a secure foundation. This will both allow assessments of strategic risk and provide a rigorous basis for arguing for different levels of funding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
8. In the shadow of Sputnik: a transnational approach to Menzies support for science education in Australia, 1957–1964.
- Author
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Clark, Jennifer
- Subjects
SCIENCE & state ,SCIENCE education ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,EDUCATION & politics ,TWENTIETH century ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper examines prime minister Robert Menzies decision to support science education in Australian schools in 1963. This was a landmark shift in policy for the federal government, but in many ways mirrors the decision of Eisenhower who brought down the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) in 1958. The paper uses a transnational approach to offer a new way of looking at the 1963 decision by focusing on the need for science education and the environment which supported science advocacy rather than the traditional interpretation of political expediency to court the Catholic vote. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The South Australian Legislative Council: Possibilities for Reform.
- Author
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Bastoni, Jordan
- Subjects
LEGISLATIVE councils ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,POLITICAL parties ,LAW ,POLITICAL reform ,PARTISANSHIP ,FREEDOM of association ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government - Abstract
This paper seeks to enter the current debate over the future of the South Australian Legislative Council by critiquing recent reform proposals and then outlining some modest suggestions for reform. The paper contends that a number of recent reform proposals are explicitly partisan and seek to enlarge the role of large parties and majority government. On the contrary others would ban political parties. The paper contends that whilst the Legislative Council exhibits many of the characteristics of an effective and useful upper house, reform of four areas would enable its review function to be improved. These areas include: the size of the Council; the term lengths of members; the method for resolving deadlocks; and the method for replacing retiring members. The paper then critically examines the proposal to ban political parties; and argues instead that instituting the Robson Rotation system would promote freedom of association and freedom of choice by voters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Towards a Democratic Bill of Rights.
- Author
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Barry, Nicholas and Campbell, Tom
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,DEMOCRACY ,HUMAN rights ,JUDICIAL review ,SEPARATION of powers ,CHECKS & balances (Political science) - Abstract
This paper examines two different bill of rights models for Australia: the Dialogue model and a Democratic model. The Dialogue model aims to protect rights through a bill of rights, strong political review mechanisms, intergovernmental dialogue, and rights-based judicial review. The paper argues that, despite its popularity, there are serious problems with the legitimacy and effectiveness of the Dialogue model and it outlines an alternative model, a 'democratic bill of rights', which attempts to avoid these problems by strengthening democratic institutions and political review mechanisms without adopting rights-based judicial review. The paper concludes that a democratic bill of rights is likely to be an effective and more democratically legitimate way of protecting and promoting human rights in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Provision of public service infrastructure -- the use of PPPs in the UK and Australia.
- Author
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Ball, Robert
- Subjects
PUBLIC sector ,PUBLIC-private sector cooperation ,BUSINESS partnerships ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,BRITISH politics & government, 2007- - Abstract
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to identify key similarities and differences between the approach to employing public-private partnerships (PPPs) for provision of infrastructure in the UK and Australia. Design/methodology/approach - The paper provides a comparison of published studies together with semi-structured interviews with academics and state government representatives. Findings - There are a number of issues on which similar debates are taking place in both countries and which are summarised in the paper. Such issues include the use of the public sector comparators, the process of initiating PPPs, choice of discount rate and differences in costs of capital between conventional procurement and PPPs. There are, however, also significant differences in that there tends to be fewer social projects in Australia which has a strong emphasis on transportation projects. Importantly there is much more discretion about whether to use PPPs in Australia than in the UK. Research limitations/implications - There are considerably fewer schemes in Australia. Practical implications - The main practical implications are that both countries need to at least reconsider their policies in a number of areas, but particularly the issue of the higher cost of borrowing in PPPs. UK government should consider the advantages of the more flexible approach towards adopting PPPs shown in Australia. This should also mean that the evaluation process will be taken more seriously. Originality/value - There are a significant number of articles about PPPs in both the UK and Australia. The author has never come across a report of a comparative study. There are important insights that can be gained from such a comparative study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Gender Equality in National Politics: The Views of Australian Male Politicians.
- Author
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Crawford, Mary and Pini, Barbara
- Subjects
WOMEN in politics ,POLITICAL participation -- Sex differences ,GENDER studies ,SOCIAL conditions of women ,POLITICIANS ,LEGISLATIVE bodies ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
Studies of gender and politics have typically been studies of women and politics. In contrast, this paper places men at the centre of its inquiry by drawing on interviews with 15 current federal male politicians. Of concern is exploring the ways in which men conceptualise the question of gender equity in the Australian parliament. Three frameworks are identified in the men's narratives. These are that the parliament is a masculinised space but that this is unavoidable; that the parliament is now feminised and women are advantaged; and that the parliament is gender neutral and gender is irrelevant. It is argued that collectively these framing devices operate to mask the many constraints which exist to marginalise women from political participation and undermine attempts to address women's political disadvantage as political participants. The paper concludes by highlighting the significance of the paper beyond the Australian context and calling for further research which names and critiques political men and their discourses on gender and parliamentary practices and processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Composition and Productivity of Australian Cooperative Research Centres, with Emphasis on their Participation in Biotechnology, Regional and Sustainable Development.
- Author
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Howgrave-Graham, Alan Roderick
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,RESEARCH & development ,SCIENTISTS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations - Abstract
More than a decade ago, the Australian Commonwealth Government introduced and funded a system of Cooperative Research Centres (CRC's) to bring scientists from universities, CSIRO, other government institutions, industry and private sector organizations from throughout Australia together. These CRC's were to work on specific research and development projects that would benefit from the critical mass of effort. In 2002 there were 65 CRC's in diverse fields but by 2009 there were 49 listed on their dedicated web page, each with its specific R&D focus. For this paper, each of these CRC's (and each of two university-based centres with a sustainability focus) was contacted to determine: its participants; its basic and applied research output; whether it is involved in biotechnology projects; whether clustering is used to enhance knowledge transfer through geographical proximity; and whether it is involved in regional and/or sustainable development. The response rate was 37% and the aggregated results are discussed. An additional questionnaire with open-ended questions was distributed to senior members of local industries, NGO's, government officials, and a local university in Gippsland, Victoria to further investigate collaboration for regional and sustainable development on a local basis. This questionnaire served the additional purpose of testing two previously published models on knowledge flows between such organizations for basic and applied research in Australia. The responses to both of these questionnaires are collated in this paper to depict the drivers and level of innovation in Australia as a whole and one regional area as an example. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. E-Election 2007? Political competition online.
- Author
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Chen, Peter John and Walsh, Lucas
- Subjects
POLITICAL campaigns ,INTERNET & politics ,ELECTIONS ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,BLOGS ,ONLINE social networks ,STREAMING video & television ,COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
This paper examines the use of new media in the 2007 election. This election is commonly seen as a breakthrough for the use of Internet in electoral campaigning due to the high profile use of Internet channels in the 'Kevin 07' campaign and its association with the change of Government. The paper examines the impact of the technology on the presentation of political campaign messages in the campaign. In this election, the Internet played a more visible role in both centralised party and individual candidate campaign strategies. The paper concludes that while some innovation occurred, the overall application of new media was modest, which parties and candidates face unprecedented challenges from a wide variety of alternative online voices. The degree of political engagement with online channels remains limited, however, by the continued dominance of mainstream mass media channels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. One Size Does Not Fit All: The Special Case of Remote Small Local Councils in Outback Queensland.
- Author
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Dollery, Brian, Wallis, Joe, and Akimov, Alexandr
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,LOCAL government ,CITY councils ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POLITICAL change - Abstract
The analysis of Australian local government reform almost invariably focuses on systemic changes that can be wrought by the application of various policy instruments, like the structural reform of the scale of local councils or changes to the enabling legislation governing local government. Scholars typically use this approach and differentiate the efficacy of reform measures according to classifications of council by generic type. While this approach has been exceedingly fruitful in the past, this paper argues that small, remote and isolated Australian local authorities are sui generis in the sense that they are not amenable to standard reform policies because their unique circumstances and special characteristics. The paper considers the case of local shires in the Central West outback region of Queensland that comprise the Remote Areas Planning and Development Board (RAPAD) group of councils and attempts to draw some general lessons for local government policymakers. Despite the recent limited forced consolidation experienced by some RAPAD councils, we find that the 'tyranny of distance' afflicting RAPAD members means that it is not amenable to 'top-down' reform measures, like council amalgamation, and policy makers should instead focus on 'local solutions to local problems' and encourage feasible forms of resource sharing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. THE GOVERNANCE OF FINANCIAL REGULATORY REFORM: THE AUSTRALIAN EXPERIENCE.
- Author
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BAKIR, CANER
- Subjects
REGULATORY reform ,FINANCIAL services industry ,POLICY networks ,GOVERNMENT policy ,GLOBALIZATION ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
The dominant perspective in the literature linking governance, globalization and public policy argues that globalization undercuts state capacity, weakening a government's ability to effectively regulate its domestic affairs. This paper shows otherwise with special reference to the Australian experience in financial regulation. It challenges the conventional wisdom that the Australian state is weak and cannot adopt anticipatory industrial policies. This paper argues that the adoption of the ‘twin peaks' model of financial regulatory arrangements is an example of the existence of government-led steering in Australia which can adopt a proactive approach to financial regulation by steering and coordinating policy networks. ‘Governance through hierarchy’ in the financial services industry may be a function of the government's political entrepreneurship; its skill in setting and implementing an agenda; and an ability to create new policy communities and networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Australian election survey: the tale of the rabbit-less hat. Voting behaviour in 2007.
- Author
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Bean, Clive and McAllister, Ian
- Subjects
ELECTIONS ,ELECTION statistics ,VOTING research ,REALIGNMENT (Political science) ,LABOR laws ,LEADERSHIP ,POLITICAL psychology ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
This paper examines voter attitudes and behaviour at the 2007 Australian federal election, using data from the Australian Election Study. It considers socio-demographic factors as well as the role of policy issues and voter evaluations of the party leaders. The paper concludes that issues, such as the government's WorkChoices policy, as well as health and leadership contributed to Labor's victory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Neo-liberalism and the politics of Australian aid policy-making.
- Author
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Rosser, Andrew
- Subjects
NEOLIBERALISM ,SOCIAL policy ,DOMINANT ideologies ,BUSINESS & politics ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- - Abstract
The article discusses the effect of neo-liberalism upon the formation of Australian aid policy. The influence of neo-liberalism in setting objectives for the development of countries receiving Australian aid is described, citing the political leverage of commercial interests. The tendency of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and Liberal-National Coalition towards neo-liberalism is discussed. This tendency, combined with the institutional context of Australian government, effectively prevents groups who oppose neo-liberalism from participating in the formation of aid policy, according to the author. The methods by which neo-liberalism has risen to its level of dominance are discussed, as well as the potential implications of the 2008 change in Australian government.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Rural Governance in Australia: Changing forms and emerging actors.
- Author
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Cheshire, Lynda, Higgins, Vaughan, and Lawrence, Geoffrey
- Subjects
EDITORIALS ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,RURAL conditions ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,NATURAL resources management areas - Abstract
The authors reflect on the rural governance in Australia. They recount the complexity in the way of contemporary management, in which a growing range of community and non-governmental parties become more engaged in decision making process. They have contemplated on several works including Lionel Pero on natural resource management and Tiffany Morrison on the challenges inherent in the governance ideal. These materials correspond to the current research on rural governance being conducted.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Identity Management: Is an Identity Card the Solution for Australia?
- Author
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Jackson, Margaret and Ligertwood, Julian
- Subjects
IDENTIFICATION cards ,IDENTITY theft ,RIGHT of privacy ,DATA protection laws ,NATIONAL security ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
This paper explores how an identity card scheme might work in Australia by using the UK Identity Card Scheme as a model. It explores the proposal for a national UK identity card scheme and assesses how it would reduce identity theft and fraud, improve national security, and maintain adequate privacy protection. The paper discusses the legal and social difficulties associated with the introduction of such a national identity card scheme and the issues which arise when a government seeks to broaden the scope of the scheme from identity fraud and security issues to include the efficient and effective delivery of public services. It suggests alternative approaches to ensuring identity management which are consistent with privacy and data protection restraints. This paper should contribute to the development of Federal Government policy in the area of a regulatory and legal framework for identity management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Australian Greens: Party Organisation and Political Processes.
- Author
-
Turnbull, Nick and Vromen, Ariadne
- Subjects
POLITICAL parties ,ELECTIONS ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,PARLIAMENTARY practice - Abstract
The Greens challenge the Australian two-party system by promoting an alternative political agenda and by facilitating democratic processes. Their recent successes in federal and state elections suggest that the party itself deserves closer scrutiny. This paper shows how the Greens are organisationally different from other parties currently active in Australian politics due to both their internal processes and their parliamentary practices. Recent theories of parties argue that party organisation has changed significantly for major parties, adopting an electoral-professional or cartel model that centralises power and decision-making in party representatives within parliaments. This paper shows how a smaller party uses identity formation processes to establish a distinctive organisational style. We examine the Greens' party organisation by analysing the interdependent relationships between the party membership, the state and national offices, and Green MPs. The paper is based on original research including in-depth interviews undertaken with state and federal Greens members of parliaments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Unpacking the package.
- Author
-
Evans, Mark and Tucker, Basil Phillip
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL change ,MANAGEMENT controls ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,MANAGERIAL accounting - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the ways in which both formal and informal control, operating as a package, are implicated in responding to organisational change arising from the introduction of the Australian Federal Government’s Clean Energy Act (2011). Design/methodology/approach – This investigation is based on a review of archival data, and semi-structured interviews conducted with 15 staff at different hierarchical levels within an Australian renewable energy company. Findings – Although formal management control systems and informal control both played important roles in the organisation’s reorientation to organisational change, it was the latter form of control that predominated over the former. The influence of the prevailing organisational culture, however, was pivotal in orchestrating both formal and informal control efforts within this organisation. Originality/value – This study contributes to management control theory and practice in two ways: first, it provides much needed empirical evidence about the ways in which management controls act as a package; second, it offers insights into the relative importance of the components of a management control package in the context of a particular organisational change. In addition, it responds to Laughlin’s (1991) call for empirical “flesh” to be added to the skeletal framework he advocates to make this conceptualisation of organisational change, “more meaningful”. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Federalism and Policy Change: An Analytic Narrative of Indigenous Land Rights Policy in Australia (1966–1978).
- Author
-
Scholtz, Christa
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples -- Land tenure ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,INDIGENOUS rights ,HISTORY of federal governments ,FEDERAL government ,LAND tenure ,CITIZENSHIP ,CIVIL rights ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Political Science / Revue Canadienne de Science Politique is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. ‘Connected to Something’: Soccer and the Transnational Passions, Memories and Communities of Sydney's Italian Migrants.
- Author
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Ricatti, Francesco and Klugman, Matthew
- Subjects
SOCCER ,IMMIGRANTS ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,TRANSNATIONALISM -- Social aspects ,IDENTITY (Psychology) ,MULTICULTURALISM ,COLLECTIVE memory ,INTERPERSONAL relations & culture ,SOCCER teams ,SOCIAL conditions in Australia ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
This paper explores the importance soccer can play in the lives, identities and memories of migrants by drawing on 32 oral history interviews conducted with Italians who settled in Sydney in the 1950s and 1960s. Sport can provide an illuminating lens for analysing the experience of migrants, because not only are sports sites of individual, regional, national and transnational identities, they can also facilitate social inclusion or, conversely, become sites of exclusion. Soccer in Australia is often celebrated as a multicultural game. At the same time, the expressions of the complex histories of migration, colonialism, exploitation and racial and ethnic discrimination that have shaped the game have often been silenced. The interviews show that soccer has been a key site of negotiation, agency and at times resistance for first and second generation migrants. We also argue that, while it is the de-ethnicisation of soccer that has understandably dominated media, political and academic debate, the concern of these migrants in recent years has been mostly with the loss of memory and with the removal of an important history made of shared relationships and bonding experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. ‘THUGS AND BULLIES’.
- Author
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Muir, Kathie
- Subjects
MASCULINITY ,CONSTRUCTION industry labor unions ,CONSTRUCTION industry ,GENDER role ,FEMININITY ,POLITICS & gender ,EMPLOYEE rights ,POLITICAL campaigns ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,LABOR unions ,WORKING class - Abstract
Abstract Traditional militant displays of proud working-class masculinity are no longer an advantage in union (or Labor Party) campaigns to win public support. This paper examines the contested masculinities within the construction industry, and specifically those deployed within the campaign by construction unions to achieve workers' rights on site, together with the strategic limitations for their campaigning options. The question of how unions in this sector can effectively campaign to protect their rights is considered, as is the dilemma for union leaders in managing members' legitimate outrage when its usual expression will replicate behaviour demonised by the unions' opponents. In the era of mediated political campaigning, and third-wave labour politics, unions are having to reinvent their public image and campaigning tactics. As the example of the construction unions shows, gender roles and performances of particular masculinities and femininities are highly significant in this process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. From Protection to Competition: The Politics of Trade Practices Reform in Australia and the Trade Practices Act 1965.
- Author
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Round, Kerrie and Shanahan, Martin P.
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL law ,ECONOMIC competition ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,BUSINESS ,COMMERCE ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The Trade Practices Act 1965 was widely criticised as being weak and unproductive. It was a significantly watered-down version of the original Bill overseen by Garfield Barwick. Although the final form of the Act was perceived as ineffective at the time, it is now viewed as an important step towards a national competition policy and a precursor to the opening up of the Australian economy. This paper outlines the economic, political and social background to the introduction of the legislation. We specify some of the factors that explain why its creation caused controversy and its importance in initiating change in Australians' attitudes towards collusive behaviour and economic protectionism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Federal legislative activism in Australia: a new approach to testing Wagner's law.
- Author
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Kirchner, Stephen
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT expansion ,GROSS domestic product ,ECONOMIC development ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,LEGISLATION ,NATIONAL income ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper considers the relationship between government growth and real GDP per capita by developing models of federal legislative output in Australia since 1901. Growth in legislation is found to be negatively related to growth in real income per capita in the short-run, implying that legislation responds to temporary economic shocks, but without a robust long-run relationship with the level of income. The growth in the number of pages of legislation enacted and legislative complexity also show a negative short-run relationship with growth in real national income per capita and a positive long-run relationship with the level of income. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The Australian Welfare State and the Neoliberalism Thesis.
- Author
-
Fenna, Alan and Tapper, Alan
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,WELFARE state ,PUBLIC welfare policy ,EQUALITY ,TAXATION ,SOCIAL conditions in Australia ,NEOLIBERALISM ,FISCAL policy ,SOCIAL policy ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This paper uses Australian Bureau of Statistics fiscal incidence figures to track trends in the Australian welfare state across the period 1984 to 2004. Its general aim is to assess the proposition that recent governments have been ‘grave-diggers’ of the welfare state in Australia. More specifically, it tracks the overall level of social expenditure at the household level and the degree of vertical redistribution between households. Since the period in question covers twelve years of Labor and eight years of Coalition government in Canberra, the authors also seek evidence of political effect in welfare state trends. Their general conclusion is that far from succumbing to neoliberalism, the Australian welfare state became if anything even larger over this period. Neither bipartisan economic liberalisation, nor competing party welfare policies, made much difference to the welfare state when viewed through a fiscal incidence lens. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Australian Standard Garratt: The engine that brought down a government.
- Author
-
Oliver, Bobbie
- Subjects
POLITICAL participation of labor unions ,HISTORY of industrial relations ,RAILROAD employee unions ,RAILROADS ,STEAM locomotives ,WORLD War II & society ,BRITISH politics & government, 1945-1964 ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This paper concerns three significant aspects of twentieth-century history in both Australia and Britain: trade unions, railways and war. During the world wars trade unionists in both countries worked under poor conditions, and sometimes endured the loss of hard-won privileges in order to further the war effort, and in the hope that governments and employers would acknowledge their sacrifices and redress their grievances once peace was restored. The paper discusses two instances, one in Western Australia and one in Britain, where these grievances were not addressed after the war, and examines the different outcomes. After comparing the circumstances in which the Australian Standard Garratt and the WD 'Austerity' heavy freight locomotives were produced, it explores the problems with these engines and the outcomes arising from union grievances. Finally, the paper posits that studying the outcomes of these industrial disputes on the railways, arising out of wartime conditions, furthers our understanding of the stresses of war on society [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Talkin’ ‘bout a revolution: the social, political, and fantasmatic logics of education policy.
- Author
-
Clarke, Matthew
- Subjects
DISCOURSE analysis ,NEOLIBERALISM ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,CRITICAL analysis ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
This paper provides a critical analysis of the Australian government’s education revolution policy as promulgated in the media release document, Quality Education: The Case for an Education Revolution in our Schools. It seeks to problematize the government’s claim to marry quality and equity, via an analysis of the discursive strategies of the Australian government’s revolution talk. My analysis draws on the work of political theorists Jason Glynos and David Howarth and their synthesis of key ideas from Laclau and Mouffe’s discourse theory and Lacanian psychoanalytic theory into a framework of explanatory ‘logics.’ This framework provides conceptual tools for conducting critical policy analysis, including: characterizing a discursive regime on a synchronic plane; accounting for its constitution, reproduction, and/or subversion on a diachronic plane; and explaining the ways in which it grips or seduces subjects at a nonrational level. Overall, the analysis of the education revolution in this paper demonstrates the value of this framework of explanatory logics for education policy analysis, in the process shedding some new light on the Australian government’s education revolution policy agenda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Legislative Recruitment and Models of Party Organisation: Evidence from Australia.
- Author
-
Miragliotta, Narelle and Errington, Wayne
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,POLITICAL candidate recruitment ,POLITICAL parties ,NOMINATIONS for public office ,POLITICAL doctrines ,REPRESENTATIVE government - Abstract
This paper considers the relationship between the growing dominance of career politicians in the Australian federal legislature and models of party organisation. Using data on MPs in the Australian federal parliament, this study maps changes in models of party organisation to the occupational profiles of MPs between 1949 and 2007. The findings show a correspondence between the phenomenon of cartelisation and the appearance of legislators whose previous occupation was in the political sphere. The authors suggest that there is a relationship between different modes of party organisation and both the supply of candidates and the demand-side factors influencing party selectors. The paper concludes that theories of recruitment should include a greater emphasis on models of party organisation to explain better the uniformity of recruitment outcomes across advanced democracies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. OPPORTUNITY OR CHALLENGE? AUSTRALIA AND EUROPEAN INTEGRATION, 1950-57.
- Author
-
BENVENUTI, ANDREA
- Subjects
EUROPEAN integration ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,EUROPEAN foreign relations ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
This paper examines Australia's approach to Western European integration in the 1950s. While superficially supportive of steps towards greater Western European cooperation, the Menzies government had an ambivalent attitude towards the integration process. Ministers and officials in Canberra recognised the importance of a strong and prosperous Western Europe, but the formation of a tightly knit Continental grouping also posed a number of major challenges to the makers of post-war Australian foreign policy. The Menzies government soon began to wonder whether attempts to create supranational bodies in Continental Europe accorded with Australian political, economic, and security interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Henry Tax Review, Cartel Parties and the Reform Capacity of the Australian State.
- Author
-
Eccleston, Richard and Marsh, Ian
- Subjects
POLITICAL change ,TAX laws ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,AUSTRALIAN economy, 1945- ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The Henry Tax Review is a work in progress, but it has already advanced sufficiently to constitute an important case study of state capacity in Australia. Using the Henry Tax Review as a case study, this paper sheds light on the question of whether the national political system is capable of devising and implementing long-term reforms. Whilst specific policy failures inevitably have a contingent dimension in the form of poor strategy and leadership or unfavourable economic conditions, the paper discusses the erosion of institutional and relational structures which, arguably, has diminished systemic political capacity. This is tantamount to a structural weakening of state capacity in Australia, a development which has the potential to erode the potential of any government to enact significant strategic policy change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Back to the Future? Planning for environmental outcomes and the new Caring for our Country program.
- Author
-
Morrison, T.H., McAlpine, C., Rhodes, J.R., Peterson, A., and Schmidt, P.
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,NATURAL resources management ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection planning - Abstract
The Australian government Caring for our Country (CfoC) program, first announced in 2008, has sought to build on and enhance previous experience with Australian natural resource management policy. This paper critically examines the initial design, planned delivery, and first round of competitive funding outcomes of the new program. This analysis shows that the initial design and delivery of the CfoC model was ad hoc, politicised, and lacking in transparency. The paper concludes that a more systematic and transparent approach for achieving sustainable environmental outcomes is required in order for this new program to achieve its intended objectives. These implications are of interest to Australian and international geographers, natural resource planners, scientists and policy makers concerned with the design, delivery and outcomes of large natural resource and environmental management programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Stakeholders, politics and power Towards an understanding of stakeholder identification and salience in government.
- Author
-
de Bussy, Nigel M. and Kelly, Lorissa
- Subjects
STAKEHOLDERS ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,QUALITATIVE research ,POLITICIANS ,PUBLIC relations ,INVESTORS ,STAKEHOLDER theory ,PUBLIC-private sector cooperation ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Purpose - This paper seeks to explore the meaning of the stakeholder concept in politics, using theories drawn from the fields of management, political science and public relations. In particular, the theory of stakeholder identification and salience is to be used as a framework. Design/methodology/approach - This qualitative study involved in-depth interviews with 23 politicians and political advisers in Western Australia and was conducted in the style of a grounded theory investigation. Findings - The results indicate that in politics, as in business, controversy and confusion continue to surround the stakeholder concept. Participants thought "stakeholder" should imply possession of a legitimate interest in an issue, but did not believe this was always the case. There is a gulf between how politicians think stakeholder status should be accorded in principle and what happens in reality. In practice, power seems to play a far greater role than legitimacy in determining stakeholder salience among political decision-makers. Research limitations/implications - Although the study focuses on a single jurisdiction (Western Australia), there are implications for policy development in other contemporary democracies. Excluding or marginalising stakeholders with a legitimate right to be heard contributes to the phenomenon known as "democratic deficit", whereby citizens feel alienated from the political process. Originality/value - This is one of the few empirical studies to investigate the application of stakeholder theory - as developed in the management literature - to politics. It integrates theories from different disciplines of direct relevance to what should be the primary focus of public relations - the management of stakeholder relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A multiculturalism-feminism dispute: Muslim women and the Sharia debate in Canada and Australia.
- Author
-
Ghobadzadeh, Naser
- Subjects
MUSLIM women ,CANADIAN politics & government, 1980- ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,MULTICULTURALISM ,FEMINISM ,ISLAMIC law ,MUSLIMS in non-Islamic countries ,POLITICAL participation - Abstract
Canadian Muslim women, as opposed to their Australian counterparts, have attained prominent social status not only in terms of their contribution to electoral politics but also in other political spheres. With its focus on the Sharia debate, this paper investigates one potential explanation for this difference. Challenging Okin's feminist perspective, which claims that multiculturalism is an undesirable policy for emancipation, it is argued that multiculturalism facilitates agency of female members of Muslim communities. A comparative examination of the Sharia debate between the two secular countries of Canada and Australia demonstrates that the former's more robust multicultural polity in terms of responding to requests to adopt the Sharia have not only culminated in Muslim women's empowerment but have enhanced their political representation. In contrast, Australian Muslim women have neither had the opportunity to articulate their position with regard to Sharia nor to contribute to an important issue that could have empowered them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Quadrivium of Online Public Consultation: Policy, Culture, Resources, Technology.
- Author
-
Macnamara, Jim
- Subjects
POLITICAL communication ,TELEDEMOCRACY ,REPRESENTATIVE government ,POLITICAL consultants ,COMMUNICATION & technology ,DELIBERATIVE democracy ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
Concerned by declining interest, trust, and participation by citizens in democratic politics, governments and political institutions worldwide are turning to the internet in attempts to revitalise democracy through online public consultation and citizen participation, referred to as e-democracy or 'government 2.0'. This paper reports research into the planning and conduct of a series of online public consultation trials launched by the Australian federal government in late 2008, and it compares and contrasts Australian experiences with international e-democracy developments, including the Obama presidential campaign and findings of the Digital Dialogues review of online technologies to enhance citizen engagement in the UK, the UK Power of Information Task Force review, and experiments conducted as part of the MIT Deliberatorium. This paper presents qualitative analysis of findings in 10 areas, which it argues can be further grouped into four main areas of management focus of which technology, often the major topic of discussion, is important but less significant than policy, culture and resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Beyond Cricket: Australia-India Evolving Relations.
- Author
-
Mayer, Peter and Jain, Purnendra
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,FOREIGN relations of India, 1984- ,DIPLOMACY ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,URANIUM industry ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
Australia's relationship with India stands in apparent contrast with its relations elsewhere in Asia. Most accounts of Australia's links to India liken them to recurrent bouts of amnesia, arguing that Australia has not put the same efforts into engaging with India that it has into fostering ties with Japan, China and Indonesia and that, like a patient with injury to the hippocampus who has lost the ability to lay down long-term memories, Australia appears to approach each episodic moment of contact without recollection of the past. Australia's relationship with India has passed through distinct phases, from a brief moment of warmth in the years immediately after India achieved independence, through frosty decades of the Cold War. In contrast to many other accounts, the paper argues that since the 1980s Australia has sought with considerable consistency to engage with India and that the tenuousness of the relationship is primarily due to Indian indifference. Recent bilateral issues, including the supply of uranium to India and attacks on Indian students, have led to an enlargement of contacts which may signify that the engagement is at last becoming a mutual one. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Frontier Vigilantism? Australia and Contemporary Representations of Australian Antarctic Territory.
- Author
-
Dodds, Klaus and Hemmings, Alan D.
- Subjects
ANTARCTIC Treaty system ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,UNITED Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982) - Abstract
This article considers the way in which recent commentators have represented Australia's relationship with Antarctica including current and future challenges. While successive Australian governments from the 1950s onwards have sought inter alia to develop and protect the country's southern oceanic and Antarctic interests, concern has persisted about the activities of other parties. The signing of the 1959 Antarctic Treaty helped to ensure that the territorial status quo prevailed with regard to the Australian Antarctic Territory. The entry of the United Nations Law of the Sea Convention (UNCLOS) into force in 1994 created new opportunities for further expressions of sovereign rights in this region. While mindful of the evolving legal geographies affecting Antarctica, our paper asks a series of questions about this relationship with the far south: how has Australian national identity been informed and influenced by Antarctic engagements? Will UNCLOS actually weaken the Antarctic Treaty System? Finally, do contemporary Australian pronouncements on the Antarctic hint at anxieties reminiscent of the 1950s? We conclude with a warning that nationalistic evocations may well unsettle a delicate balance concerning the Southern Ocean and disputed ownership of Antarctica. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Getting it wrong while getting it right: the polls, the press, and the 2007 Australian election.
- Author
-
Goot, Murray
- Subjects
PUBLIC opinion polls ,VOTING research ,POLITICAL opposition ,POLITICAL campaigns ,ELECTIONS ,COALITION governments ,MASS media & politics ,REALIGNMENT (Political science) ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
In the 2007 election, which the Labor Party won comfortably, some political journalists and some of the polling organisations hedged their bets: despite the fact that every national poll, after allowing for preferences, showed Labor ahead, several predicted a close race and the possibility of a Liberal-National Party win. This paper examines the plethora of polls on voting intentions published during the campaign. After the election, the diversity of this polling allowed journalists and pollsters to assess the performance of the polls against their own criteria of 'success'. The paper tracks the polls across the campaign period, assesses their performance against various criteria, and compares their performance in 2007 with their performance in earlier elections. It shows the difficulty of using the polls to identify when the Opposition's lead narrowed, the devices pollsters used to hedge their bets, and the possible use by pollsters of a last-mover advantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Disability citizenship: an Australian human rights analysis of the cultural industries.
- Author
-
Darcy, Simon and Taylor, Tracy
- Subjects
CIVIL rights of people with disabilities ,DISABILITY laws ,RECREATION for people with disabilities ,PEOPLE with disabilities research ,SERVICES for people with disabilities ,ANTI-discrimination laws ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
Research on disability and cultural life (the arts, leisure, recreation, sport and tourism) in the Australian context has largely been captured by medical approaches to disability. In contrast, this paper takes direction from social approaches to disability that place the experience of people with disabilities (PwD) at the centre of the research paradigm by examining this population's human rights' experiences. The paper is framed by reviewing the United Nations' disability initiatives including the Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities. The research then analyses the implementation and operation of Australia's Disability Discrimination Act, 1992 in respect to the cultural life of PwD. The research design uses a mixed method interpretive approach drawing on the management information systems of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission and the Federal Court. The analysis of 420 complaint cases and 80 Federal court actions show a relationship between the types of discrimination experienced in cultural life and gender, disability type and industry sector. The recurring themes of discrimination demonstrate an ongoing struggle by PwD to assert their rights of citizenship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Star traveller: celebrity, Aboriginality and Bruce Chatwin's The Songlines (1987).
- Author
-
Clarke, Robert
- Subjects
ESSAYS ,POLITICS & literature ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,TRAVEL writing - Abstract
Within the international field of contemporary Anglophone travel writing Bruce Chatwin looms large as a celebrity traveller and writer. This paper tracks Chatwin's celebrity through various fields, examining his most enduring and controversial book The Songlines (1987) to analyse how its representation of Aboriginality contributes to the mythologization of the author. The essay makes two claims. The first is that the discourses through which Songlines values Aboriginality coincide with those employed to represent its narrator and author, and consequently contribute to the celebrity persona of 'Bruce Chatwin'. Moreover, the representation of Aboriginality and celebrity in Songlines is compatible with a discourse within contemporary consumer culture that putatively eschews consumerism and gestures nostalgically to romantic notions of self and other even as it exploits the exotic manifestations of Aboriginality as cultural commodity. The second and related claim is that Chatwin's celebrity performs a specific function within the context of the postcolonial field of cultural production. Chatwin's celebrity functions to resolve the dissonance created by competing regimes of value through which Aboriginality as a symbolic commodity is defined. In this regard, Chatwin, as celebrity traveller, performs a role akin to that Pierre Bourdieu ascribes to cultural intermediaries. As such, Chatwin does not necessarily provide non-Aboriginal readers with 'knowledge' about Aboriginal culture; rather, his public persona provides his readers with an example of how to manage the conflicting values attributed to Aboriginality within national and transnational postcolonial public spheres. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Uncounted Votes: Informal Voting in the House of Representatives as a Marker of Political Exclusion in Australia.
- Author
-
Young, Sally and Hill, Lisa
- Subjects
REPRESENTATIVE government ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,ELECTIONS ,BALLOTS ,VOTER registration ,VOTING abstention - Abstract
This article examines the implications of high levels of informal (or invalid) voting in Australian national elections using a social exclusion framework. The rate of the informal vote is an indicator of social and political exclusion with particular groups of Australians experiencing inordinate electoral disadvantage. Poorer voters, voters from non-English speaking backgrounds and those with low education levels are especially disadvantaged by factors peculiar to the Australian voting experience. We begin by exploring the character and pattern of informal voting and then canvass the technical and socio-economic factors which explain it. We conclude by considering proposed options for reducing informality, some of which are: the abandonment of compulsory voting, major structural change to the voting system as well as ballot re-design, electoral education and community information initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Is Bipartisanship on National Security Beneficial? Australia's Politics of Defence and Security.
- Author
-
Carr, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
BIPARTISANSHIP , *NATIONAL security , *POLITICIANS , *JUDICIAL oversight , *INTERNATIONAL relations policy , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
One of the most widely-endorsed norms in Australian politics is the requirement for bipartisanship in the management of defence and security policy. This norm is assumed to lead to good policy creation, foster political unity, and protect those who implement national policy (particularly the military). The paper argues that evidence for all three of these claims is overstated. In addition, the effects of the norm are often counter-productive and even harmful to the conduct and management of Australian policy. The paper concludes by arguing that the norm of bipartisanship for Australian defence and security policy should be abandoned. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Rise and Fall of Paid Maternity Leave Policy in the Years of the Keating Government.
- Author
-
Newsome, Lucie
- Subjects
- *
MATERNITY leave , *WOMEN , *LABOR movement , *MASS mobilization , *POLICY sciences , *GOVERNMENT policy , *HISTORY ,OECD countries politics & government ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
In 2010, Australia finally introduced maternity leave, making it one of the last OECD nations to do so. Yet this policy had been announced by the Keating Government some sixteen years earlier, only to be watered down and then ultimately scuppered by subsequent governments. How, then, do we make sense of the rise and fall of this policy in the 1990s? This paper examines this question, arguing that while effective mobilisation by women in the labour movement was crucial to placing this issue on the Keating Government's policy agenda, the continued dominance of a male breadwinner model ultimately served to provide powerful impediments to policy implementation. The paper draws on interviews with key actors and analysis of policy debate to make this case, employing the concepts of policy windows and path dependency to make sense of the opportunities and impediments to policy change respectively. While an important and neglected story of maternity leave policy in Australia, this analysis has important implications for understanding policy-making, policy trajectory and even gender roles in Australian politics and society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The role of political uncertainty in Australian financial markets.
- Author
-
Smales, Lee A. and Berkman, Henk
- Subjects
FINANCIAL markets ,ELECTIONS ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,AUSTRALIAN economy, 1945- ,INVESTMENTS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Within the developed world, recent Australian political history is uniquely turbulent. This situation invokes indecision regarding investment decisions in both the real economy and the financial markets. This paper explores the relationship between uncertainty in Australian federal election polling and resulting financial market uncertainty. Empirical evidence suggests that increasing (decreasing) levels of uncertainty around the election result induce higher (lower) levels of uncertainty in financial markets. The effect is more pronounced as polling day approaches. Industry-level analysis suggests that the base materials sector is most significantly affected by election uncertainty in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. MISLEADING THE ETHICAL CONSUMER: THE REGULATION OF FREE-RANGE EGG LABELLING.
- Author
-
PARKER, CHRISTINE and DE COSTA, JOSEPHINE
- Subjects
- *
EGGS , *FREE range (Animal culture) , *FOOD labeling laws , *CONSUMER law , *ANIMAL welfare , *EGG industry , *CONSUMER ethics , *GOVERNMENT policy , *LAW ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- - Abstract
In mid-2014, Australian consumer affairs ministers announced that they would together set 'a national, legally enforceable definition of free-range eggs'. A response to significant conflict, claims and counterclaims about what free-range should mean, the proposed code could take the form of a mandatory information standard under the Australian Consumer Law. This paper asks whether this approach would adequately respond to the underlying conflict between various actors as to what free-range means. Conflict over the meaning of free-range on the label is the latest expression in an ongoing series of challenges, defences and counter-challenges to the legitimacy of intense, industrial-scale animal food production and particularly conventional cage egg production. This paper briefly explains how it is that the regulation of welfare of layer hens is now largely a matter of voluntary labelling for consumer choice rather than mandatory government regulation of animal welfare in production conditions. It goes on to critically evaluate whether the current network of voluntary regulation of free-range labelling adequately informs consumers about animal welfare conditions using data collected about the claims on egg carton labels between 2012 and 2014 to do so. It goes on to assess the potential of a mandatory information code or other consumer regulation to improve animal welfare labelling on eggs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
48. Conceiving of Telecom: The Politics of Australian Telecommunications Reform 1967-1972.
- Author
-
Doyle, John
- Subjects
TELECOMMUNICATION ,TELECOMMUNICATION policy ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,REFORMS ,POSTMASTERS general ,HISTORY of government policy ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
This article explores the politics of telecommunications reform between 1967 and 1972, during which time Labor developed a new policy approach that included committing to reconstitute the Postmaster-General's Department as a relatively independent statutory authority. This represented the first serious attempt to reconcile the conflicting objectives of Australian policy: to provide affordable universal services by a government department expected to operate as a 'business-like' enterprise, and ended the political consensus about how national telecommunications should be delivered. The paper contrasts Labor's policy with the Liberal-Country government's more incremental approach; and highlights a significant public policy shift that has received insufficient attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Engaging, Persuading, and Entertaining Citizens: Mediatization and the Australian Political Public Sphere.
- Author
-
Flew, Terry and Swift, Adam
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,PUBLIC sphere ,TELEVISION programs ,SOCIAL media ,POLITICAL advertising ,ELECTIONS - Abstract
This paper draws upon public sphere theories and the “mediatization of politics” debate to develop a mapping of the Australian political public sphere, with particular reference to television. It discusses the concept of a “political public sphere,” and the contribution of both non-traditional news media genres, such as satirical television and infotainment formats, to an expanded conception of the political public sphere. It considers these questions in the context of two case studies: the Q&A program on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), and its uses of social media and interactive formats to engage citizens, and the comedy program Gruen Nation, also on the ABC, which analyzed the use of political advertising to persuade citizens during the 2013 Australian Federal election. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The future of stapled structures.
- Author
-
O'Connell, Glenn and Angeline Young
- Subjects
AUSTRALIAN politics & government, 1945- ,REAL property ,FISCAL policy ,MUTUAL funds - Abstract
The article reports on the working of Australian Government reagrding foreign investment into Australian real property assets through tax policy. It metnions the use of managed investment trust (MIT) for foreign direct investment into a range of asset classes such as privatised government assets and infrastructure. It also mentions the working of Australian superannuation funds and Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) as real estate investment trusts (REITs).
- Published
- 2017
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