1606 - Political Science
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This collection contains Flinders' research in Political Science, as reported for ERA 2012.
Where copyright and other restrictions allow, full text content is available.
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ItemThe 2007 Australian federal election and a 'steadfast, straight-talking' alliance( 2008) Kelton, Maryanne
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ItemAboriginal policy in South Australia(Wakefield Press, 2009) Robbins, Elizabeth Jane
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ItemAfrica in/and the World( 2009) Lyons, Tanya Julie
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ItemAfterword(Routledge, 2009) Schech, Susanne Barbara
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ItemAgeing well, ageing productively: the essential contribution of Australia's ageing population to the social and economic prosperity of the nation( 2009) Harvey, Peter William ; Thurnwald, Ian P
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ItemAs if for a thousand years: A history of Victoria's Land Conservation and Environment Conservation Councils(Victorian Environmental Assessment Council, 2006) Clode, Danielle
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ItemAspirational voters' and the 2004 federal election( 2005) Manning, Haydon Richard
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ItemAssimilation as multiracialism: the case of Singapore's Malays( 2005) Barr, Michael Dominic ; Low, Jevon
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ItemThe Atlantic peace: European expansion overseas and the international system/ international society dialectic(University of Queensland, 2008) Fitzpatrick, John Edmond
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ItemAustralia(Berkshire Publishing Group, 2007) Andressen, Curtis Arthur
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ItemThe Australia - United States free trade agreement: the boomerang of competitive liberalisation?( 2005) Leaver, Richard LawrenceNot all that long ago, considerable intellectual energy was spent across Australia analysing the formation of trade policy. And, much as elsewhere, there were two basic approaches. The first approach focussed on the evolution of 'the rules of the game' in multilateral trade, stepping off from the assumption that national policy was essentially an autonomous instrument designed to leverage those rules in directions broadly favourable to local industries. The second approach consisted of tracking the course of pressure group politics, and worked on the assumption that national policy was the vector outcome of many conflicting interests. But under the Howard government, it seems that much of the hard analytic work required by both these approaches can, at critical junctures, be suspended. Trade policy has twice defaulted to settings that were flavour-of-the-month in Washington.
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ItemAustralia and Asia-Pacific energy security: the rhymes of history(Routledge, 2007) Leaver, Richard Lawrence
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ItemAustralia and the United States: New Directions under Prime Minister Kevin Rudd( 2010) Andressen, Curtis Arthur
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ItemAustralia in Asia(University of Guadalajara, 2006) Leaver, Richard Lawrence
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ItemAustralia's nuclear horizon: moving beyond the drumbeat of risk inflation( 2007) O'Neil, Andrew Kevin ; Manning, Haydon Richard
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ItemAustralia's Re-engagement with Africa( 2010) Lyons, Tanya Julie
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ItemAustralia's role in feeding Asia's energy demand(Institute for Security and Development Policy, 2009) Leaver, Richard Lawrence
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ItemAustralian Cartoonists' Caricatures of Women Politicians - From Kirner to Stott-Despoja(Network Books, 2008) Manning, Haydon RichardIn June 1999, the Labor Party’s deputy leader, Jenny Macklin, argued that cartoons such as the following two of Meg Lees were offensive and demeaning to women politicians because they reflect the cartoonists’ limited and unimaginative view of senior women in politics. For Macklin, women politicians are stereotyped as housewives, or objects for male sexual gratification, rather than depicted as ‘the politician that is the woman’.1 These claims are worth examining and are done so here in relation to cartoonists’ caricatures of some senior women politicians, in particular former Democrat leaders Meg Lees, Cheryl Kernot and Natasha Stott- Despoja; former Victorian Premier, Joan Kirner and the phenomenon that was Pauline Hanson’s One Nation.
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ItemAustralian Election Campaign Cartooning - 1983 to 2004(Network Books, 2008) Manning, Haydon RichardCartoons offer a marvellous means of chronicling any election campaign through their capacity to provide a compact and pungent summary of, and commentary on, issues, events and characters. Graphic islands in a sea of words, political cartoons frequently capture a campaign’s ebb and flow. Certainly they can over-simplify complexity, but they can also cut through the persiflage that is particularly abundant during campaigns. The editors of this collection have been analysing the cartoons in Australian federal campaigns since 1996, so it is time to present some broader observations about election cartooning in this country.
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ItemAn Australian international political economy? The high road and the low road( 2010) Leaver, Richard Lawrence