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George Morgan on the cruelty of punitive attitudes to children.
Frank Brennan’s Tampering with Asylum prompts Peter Mares to look at this issue again.
John Howard and Alexander Downer do Australia no favours in suggesting that to place Australia’s interests ahead of those of the United States, is proof of anti-Americanism or unsound policy.
The High Court’s judgment that the Family Court did not have the authority to release children from the Baxter detention centre provides a compelling reason for Australia to revisit the question of a Bill of Rights.
Robert Hefner sees more than just coincidence in these weather patterns.
D. L. Lewis commends Andrew Mercador’s Super Aussie Soaps to those with an interest in popular culture and television.
Troy Bramston takes a closer look at America’s founding fathers in Gore Vidal’s Inventing a Nation: Washington, Jefferson, Adams.
Has John Howard ever been so much in charge of affairs? He has a complete ascendency over a defeated, demoralised and directionless Opposition.
The old firm is now entirely back in charge of the Labor Party. Not just Kim Beazley but the NSW Right.
Sally Young’s The Persuaders: Inside the Hidden Machine of Political Advertising is an important book for those interested in political and social change, says Peter Yewers.
John Button reviews The Great Labor Schism: A Retrospective, edited by Brian Costar, Peter Love and Paul Strangio.
The healing begins
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