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Sir Gerard Brennan’s address at the launch of Mark McKenna’s This Country: A Reconciled Republic?
The legacy of the Felton Bequest
Anthony Ham investigates renewed efforts at the IWC to resume commercial whaling
Troy Bramston looks at new ideas in Imagining Australia: Ideas for our future.
Warning signs for the Whitlam Government were there in 1974, with an ailing economy, a political storm in the Senate, sliding popularity and a scandal unfolding in secret.
Judith Wright was not just a much greater writer than most of the artist-activists who had preceded her, but also a much greater activist.
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.
Reviews of the books Speaking for Australia: Parliamentary speeches that shaped our nation; Direct action and democracy today; Scraps of Heaven and Lazy Man in China.
Reviews of the books Labour of Love: Tales from the World of Midwives; The Long, Slow Death of White Australia and The Dead Place.
John Mateer’s Semar’s Cave: An Indonesian Journal is best appreciated for its lyrical reflection and vivid detail, writes Madeleine Byrne.
Daniel Herborn finds John Edwards’s Curtin’s Gift a convincing re-examination of some of the key strands of Curtin’s life.
Matthew Lamb on John Ralston Saul’s The Collapse of Globalism: And the Reinvention of the World.
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