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Kirsty Sangster looks at the effectiveness of truth commissions.
John Langmore reflects on the relationship between Australia and the United Nations
Luke Fraser reviews On the warpath: An anthology of Australian military travel, edited by Robin Gerster and Peter Pierce.
Is Australia’s intervention in the Solomon Islands healing the wounds of the tension?
Traces of Rome have become part of the scenery.
Madeleine Byrne explores the boundaries, both geographical and moral, between Australia and Timor-Leste.
John Mateer’s Semar’s Cave: An Indonesian Journal is best appreciated for its lyrical reflection and vivid detail, writes Madeleine Byrne.
Hope emerges for the Karen people forced to flee Burma for refugee camps just over the border in Thailand.
Matthew Lamb on John Ralston Saul’s The Collapse of Globalism: And the Reinvention of the World.
The final year of the Whitlam Government was tumultuous, but despite enormous obstacles and ultimate dismissal, the government implemented a visionary and far-reaching policy agenda that forever changed the face of Australia.
With the encouragement of an Australian nun, inmates at Becora Prison are finding ways out of the darkness of their crimes into the light of new hope.
Dr Sara Niner is a Post-Doctoral Fellow in the Arts Faculty at Monash University. She is the editor of To Resist is to Win: the Autobiography of Xanana Gusmão with selected letters and speeches. Her new research into women and handcrafts in East Timor is available here and here.
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