Intro -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Foreword by Geoff Gallop -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- 1 The Two-party System and its Discontents -- 2 Two Leftist Traditions: What divides Labor and the Greens? -- 3 The View from the Top: Why Labor or the Greens? -- 4 Beautifully Ugly? Labor, the Greens and minority government -- 5 The Diabolical Problem -- 6 Refugee Politics -- 7 Taxing Mining -- 8 A 'Red-Green' Coalition? -- Conclusion: 'Certainly, the impotent are pure' -- References -- Index
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Over the past three decades, progressive politics in Australia has undergone a gradual but unmistakable transformation. Where the Australian Labor Party once enjoyed dominance over the political left it now shares space with the Greens; at times depending on minor-party support to form government, and even more often to pass contentious legislation. Based on over forty interviews with politicians and party figures, Whitlam's Children is the first study of this increasingly important relationship in Australian politics. Did previous attempts at cooperation, particularly minority government under Julia Gillard, deliver successful government, and how do each judge the experiment in hindsight? Why are certain policy areas, like refugee settlement and environmental policy, so stubborn and divisive? And will we ever see a more lasting coalition on the Australian left, to mirror the established arrangement on the Australian right? While revealing a variety of perspectives, even within parties, the research uncovers a productive, if often hostile relationship; united by a series of shared values, but divided by different approaches to politics, elections and parliament. Featuring a preface by Geoff Gallop
Studies of six Australian novelists whose works are examples of political fiction: three women writing before before Federation, Catherine Spence, Rosa Praed, Catherine Martin; and three contemporary male writers, Tim Winton, Christos Tsiolkas, and Kim Scott.