Academic literature on the topic 'Socialism Australia History'

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Journal articles on the topic "Socialism Australia History"

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Battin, Tim, and Graham Maddox. "Socialism on Contemporary Australia." Capital & Class 22, no. 1 (March 1998): 154–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030981689806400120.

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Bongiorno, Frank. "Love and friendship: Ethical socialism in britain and australia∗." Australian Historical Studies 32, no. 116 (April 2001): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10314610108596144.

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Cahill, A. E. "Catholicism and Socialism-The 1905 Controversy in Australia." Journal of Religious History 1, no. 2 (October 9, 2007): 88–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9809.1960.tb00017.x.

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Griffiths, Tom G., and Jack Downey. "“What to do about schools?”: The Australian Radical Education Group (RED G)." History of Education Review 44, no. 2 (October 5, 2015): 170–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/her-12-2013-0025.

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Purpose – The Australian Radical Education Group (RED G) was created in June 1976, which in turn launched a magazine for radical(ising) teachers, the Radical Education Dossier (RED), that would be published for the next 30 years. The purpose of this paper is to characterise the emergence and first phase of RED’s publication up to its name change in 1984. Design/methodology/approach – The authors draw on interviews with key members of the magazine’s editorial collective, and a review of RED’s contents, to identify the major political ambitions as manifest in RED in historical context. The authors contextualise this radical education project in the post-1968 world context of social and political upheaval, rejecting the Cold War options of either Soviet style Communist or US-based capitalist pathways. Findings – In this context RED generated powerful critiques of dominant educational policy in multiple areas. The critique was part of a project to promote a socialist understanding of mass education, and to promote the transformation of Australian society towards socialism. The authors argue that the debates and struggles within RED in this period, seeking to define and advance a socialist educational project, reflected a broad and consistent critique of progressive educational reforms, rooted in its radical political foundations. Originality/value – This paper provides an historical review of a 30-year radical education publishing initiative in Australia, about which no accounts have been published. It connects directly with contemporary educational issues, and offers insights for interviews with those directly involved in the historical project.
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Byrne, Liam. "Visions of the future: political labour’s temporality and socialist objectives in Britain and Australia, 1918–21." Historical Research 93, no. 261 (August 1, 2020): 503–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hisres/htaa004.

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Abstract This article is a comparative study of political temporality and the concept of the ‘future’ in British Labour and Australian Labor. It deepens knowledge of how Labo(u)r’s political culture has been forged through debates over socialism, focusing on the socialist objectives of 1918 and 1921. As a result, it allows an appreciation of phenomena such as the rise of Jeremy Corbyn and ‘Corbynism’. It is focused around a reading of the major conferences of each party, as sites of power negotiation, debate and ideological creation. These sources are complemented by an extensive reading of labour newspapers and pamphlets from both countries.
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Irving, Terence H., and Terry Irving. "The Roots of Parliamentary Socialism in Australia, 1850-1920." Labour History, no. 67 (1994): 97. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/27509278.

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Koehne, Samuel. "‘Never Forget That You Are a German’: Die Brücke, ‘Deutschtum’ and National Socialism in Interwar Australia." Australian Historical Studies 44, no. 1 (March 2013): 151–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1031461x.2013.761586.

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Fry, Simon, and Bernard Mees. "Two discursive frameworks concerning ideology in Australian industrial relations." Economic and Labour Relations Review 28, no. 4 (November 3, 2017): 483–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1035304617739505.

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There are two discursive frameworks concerning ideology in Australian industrial relations. In many disciplines concerned with aspects of industrial relations, including political science, law and history, it is the traditional political ideologies of the industrial era which take centre stage: liberalism (classical, social and neoliberalism), socialism (Marxism, social democracy and labourism) and conservatism. By contrast, ideological issues in the discipline of employment relations are chiefly addressed in terms of Fox’s three analytical perspectives: unitarism, pluralism and radicalism. The disjunction between these parallel discourses goes largely unnoted in the literature of the relevant disciplines, which all tend to proceed using their own preferred approach without making reference to the other. This article critically explores the relationship between these two discourses and investigates the broader implications that the existence of the two different discursive traditions has for the analysis of industrial relations phenomena in Australia.
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Markey, R. A. "Frank Farrell, International Socialism and Australian Labor: The Left in Australia, 1919–1939. Sydney: Hale and Iremonger, 1981. xviii + 284 pp." International Labor and Working-Class History 30 (1986): 132–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0147547900016938.

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Markey, R. A. "Frank Farrell, International Socialism and Australian Labor: The Left in Australia, 1919–1939. Sydney: Hale and Iremonger, 1981. xviii + 284 pp." International Labor and Working-Class History 30 (1986): 132–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s014754790000257x.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Socialism Australia History"

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Bellamy, Robyn Lyle, and robyn bellamy@flinders edu au. "LIFE HISTORY AND CHEMOSENSORY COMMUNICATION IN THE SOCIAL AUSTRALIAN LIZARD, EGERNIA WHITII." Flinders University. Biological Sciences, 2007. http://catalogue.flinders.edu.au./local/adt/public/adt-SFU20070514.163902.

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ABSTRACT Social relationships, habitat utilisation and life history characteristics provide a framework which enables the survival of populations in fluctuating ecological conditions. An understanding of behavioural ecology is critical to the implementation of Natural Resource Management strategies if they are to succeed in their conservation efforts during the emergence of climate change. Egernia whitii from Wedge Island in the Spencer Gulf of South Australia were used as a model system to investigate the interaction of life history traits, scat piling behaviour and chemosensory communication in social lizards. Juveniles typically took ¡Ý 3 years to reach sexual maturity and the results of skeletochronological studies suggested longevity of ¡Ý 13 years. Combined with a mean litter size of 2.2, a pregnancy rate estimated at 75% of eligible females during short-term studies, and highly stable groups, this information suggests several life history features. Prolonged juvenile development and adult longevity may be prerequisite to the development of parental care. Parental care may, in turn, be the determining factor that facilitates the formation of small family groups. In E. whitii parental care takes the form of foetal and neonatal provisioning and tolerance of juveniles by small family or social groups within established resource areas. Presumably, resident juveniles also benefit from adult territorialism. Research on birds suggests that low adult mortality predisposes cooperative breeding or social grouping in birds, and life history traits and ecological factors appear to act together to facilitate cooperative systems. E. whitii practice scat piling both individually and in small groups. Social benefits arising from signalling could confer both cooperative and competitive benefits. Permanent territorial markers have the potential to benefit conspecifics, congenerics and other species. The high incidence of a skink species (E. whitii) refuging with a gecko species (N. milii) on Wedge Island provides an example of interspecific cooperation. The diurnal refuge of the nocturnal gecko is a useful transient shelter for the diurnal skink. Scat piling may release a species ¡®signature¡¯ for each group that allows mutual recognition. Scat piling also facilitates intraspecific scent marking by individual members, which has the potential to indicate relatedness, or social or sexual status within the group. The discovery of cloacal scent marking activity is new to the Egernia genus. E. Whitii differentiate between their own scats, and conspecific and congeneric scats. They scent mark at the site of conspecific scats, and males and females differ in their response to scent cues over time. Scat piling has the potential to make information concerning the social environment available to dispersing transient and potential immigrant conspecifics, enabling settlement choices to be made. This thesis explores some of the behavioural strategies employed by E. whitii to reduce risks to individuals within groups and between groups. Scents eliciting a range of behavioural responses relevant to the formation of adaptive social groupings, reproductive activity, and juvenile protection until maturity and dispersal are likely to be present in this species. Tests confirming chemosensory cues that differentiate sex, kin and age would be an interesting addition to current knowledge. The interaction of delayed maturity, parental care, sociality, chemosensory communication and scat piling highlights the sophistication of this species¡¯ behaviour. An alternative method for permanently marking lizards was developed. Persistence, reliability and individual discrimination were demonstrated using photographic identification and the method was shown to be reliable for broad-scale application by researchers. Naturally occurring toe loss in the field provided a context against which to examine this alternative identification method and revealed the need to further investigate the consequences of routine toe clipping, as this practice appears to diminish survivorship.
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Duffy, Gavan. "The groups." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 1999.

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This thesis deals with the history of the Catholic Social Studies Movement (the Movement), the ALP Industrial Groups and the events leading up to the split in the Labor Party which occurred between 1955 and 1957. These events are portrayed and analysed from the perspective of the Movement and the Industrial Groups. The thesis challenges many of the conventional propositions as to the reasons for, and the facts surrounding the split. Directly challenged is the view that Herbert Vere Evatt was a principled champion of traditional Labor values who acted expeditiously to save the Australian Labor Party from being subverted by a Machiavellian Catholic layman, B.A. Santamaria, for the 'sinister' purposes of Catholic action. Also challenged is the suggestion that the ideology and policies of Movement activists within the Labor Party, were contrary to Labor's platform. It will be argued to the contrary, that Labor in the fifties was impeded by doctrinaire Marxist theory, and hence, the radicalism of the Movement did not sit easily with many of the older power brokers within the labor movement. It will also be argued that The Movement was formed on the initiative of the late B.A. Santamaria and a few associates only after repeated requests from Labour politicians and unionists, often motivated by quite selfish concerns, for assistance in the struggle against Communism in the trade unions. Emphasis will be placed in this thesis on the importance and the role of anti-Catholic sectarianism as a weapon of the Communists and the Extreme Left of the Labor movement against their opponents. An emphasis will be placed on the importance of anti-Catholic sectarianism in determining the outcome of the struggle within the Labor Party and the nature of the split. It will be suggested that Dr Evatt's attack on The Movement and the industrial groups of the 5 October 1954 could not have succeeded without the divisiveness of sectarianism, never far beneath the surface in Australian society of the 50s and 60s. The impact of the Petrov Affair on the internal politics of the Labor party is canvassed. In this regard startling new evidence is advanced by the writer that the ALP parliamentary leader, Dr. Herbert V. Evatt had, in October 1953, several months before the establishment of the Petrov Royal Commission, knowledge of, or at the very least strong grounds for suspicion that his press secretary Fergan O'Sullivan, was a source of information for the Communist party and Ergo, Soviet intelligence. It will also be stated that for reasons known only to himself and about which one can only surmise, Evatt failed to act on the intelligence provided to him concerning the activities of O'Sullivan. Historically speaking, the implications of this revelation concerning Dr Evatt and Fergan 0' Sullivan are considerable.
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Urrutia, Reveco Santiago. "El sueño por una carretera: Carretera Austral, representaciones sociales y geopolítica durante la dictadura militar chilena, 1973-1990." Tesis, Universidad de Chile, 2016. http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143752.

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Tesis para optar al grado de Magíster en Historia
Esta Tesis nace a partir de la pregunta ¿Es posible escribir “otra” historia de la Carretera Austral, una que no preste atención únicamente a su manifestación material sino también a las representaciones sociales que legitimaron su construcción y, en definitiva, le dieron sentido y significado a esta obra en un contexto histórico específico? Este es el propósito al plantear el objetivo de estudiar las representaciones sociales de la Carretera Austral durante la dictadura militar chilena entre 1973 y 1990. El análisis de las representaciones aplicado en este período particular permite acercarse al entendimiento de la obra y su contexto de una manera distinta a la tradicional. Los estudios históricos sobre la Carretera Austral han enfocado su interés en los grandes hitos que dan cuenta de su manifestación material, además la mayoría han sido escritos en clave laudatoria respecto de la obra y del régimen militar que la llevó mayormente a cabo. Aquí se pretende mostrar que la ruta austral se construyó no sólo mediante la apertura de sendas, detonaciones de roca, superación de ríos y lagos, sino también a través de una serie de representaciones que arraigaron -o intentaron arraigar- un significado determinado en el sentido común. Se sostiene que el pensamiento geopolítico, entendido entonces como conocimiento útil para el estadista, fundamentó y condicionó estas representaciones. Asimismo, las representaciones sociales con las que se promociona la obra expresaron principios fundamentales para el régimen en relación a la política del territorio, económica y de gobierno. Mediante ellas se busca no tan solo legitimar la obra vial, sino también el nuevo orden autoritario y su institucionalidad en su totalidad, de ahí el interés en mostrar el camino longitudinal como producto único y representativo del régimen militar. De este modo, sus representaciones sociales revelan que la Carretera Austral está atravesada también por nociones e intereses políticos, ideológicos, simbólicos que trascienden las características ingenieriles y técnicas que siempre han servido como base para su promoción y legitimación. La tesis propone una base metodológica interdisciplinar teniendo como base el estudio histórico del camino desde una perspectiva espacial, cultural y social. Para ello se considera el trabajo de búsqueda, selección, organización, análisis y crítica de fuentes documentales, en paralelo a la utilización de herramientas teóricas y nociones provenientes de la geografía y sociología.
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Davis, Glen Anthony. "The relationship between the established and new left groupings in the anit-Vietnam War movement in Victoria, 1967-1972." Thesis, 2001. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/36042/.

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This thesis examines the relationship between the various left groupings that constituted the opposition to the war in Vietnam in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The focus is on how the newer radical groups of this period interacted with and influenced the established Left and peace movement. The work concentrates on opposition to the war within the Australian State of Victoria, drawing upon interviews with participants as well as written material from primary and secondary sources.
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Books on the topic "Socialism Australia History"

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Damousi, Joy. Woman come rally: Socialism, communism and gender in Australia, 1890-1955. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1994.

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Women come rally: Socialism, communism, and gender in Australia, 1890-1955. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1994.

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Turner-Graham, Emily. "Never forget that you are a German": Die Brücke, "Deutschtum" and National Socialism in interwar Australia. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2011.

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Turner-Graham, Emily. "Never forget that you are a German": Die Brücke, "Deutschtum" and National Socialism in interwar Australia. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2011.

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Sheppard, Barry. The party: The Socialist Workers Party, 1960-1988. Chippendale, N.S.W: Resistance Books, 2005.

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Stevens, Joyce. Taking the revolution home: Work among women in the Communist Party of Australia: 1920-1945. Fitzroy, Australia: Sybylla Co-operative Press and Publications, 1987.

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Lovell, David W. Marxism & Australian socialism before the Bolshevik Revolution. Melbourne: Australian Scholarly Pub., 1997.

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McKinlay, Brian. Australian labor history in documents. Melbourne: Collins Dove, 1990.

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Souter, Gavin. A peculiar people: William Lane's Australian utopians in Paraguay. 3rd ed. Lucia, Qld., Australia: University of Queenland Press, 1991.

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Macdougall, A. K. Australians at war: A pictorial history. Rowville, Vic: Five Mile Press, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Socialism Australia History"

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Ergas, Henry, and Jonathan Pincus. "Infrastructure and colonial socialism." In The Cambridge Economic History of Australia, 222–44. Cambridge University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cho9781107445222.015.

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Bongiorno, Frank, and Sean Scalmer. "The Australian Labor Party." In The Cambridge History of Socialism, 172–93. Cambridge University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108611107.010.

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Conference papers on the topic "Socialism Australia History"

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Xinting, Liang. "The Trajectory of Collective Life: The Ideal and Practice of New Village in Tianjin, 1920s-1950s." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a4026pt85d.

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Originated from New Village Ideal in Japan, New Village was introduced to China in the early 1920s and became a byword for social reform program. Many residential designs or projects whose name includes the term “Village” or “New Village” had been completed in China since that time. This paper uses the Textual Criticism method to sort out the introduction and translation of New Village Ideal theory in China, and to compare the physical space, life organization and concepts of the New Village practices in ROC with in early PRC of Tianjin. It is found that the term “New Village” continued to be used across several historical periods, showing very similar spatial images. But the construction and usage of New Village and the meaning of collective life changed somewhat under different political positions and social circumstances: New Village gradually became an urban collective residential area which only bore the living function since it was introduced into modern China. The goal of its practice changed from building an equal autonomy to building a new field of power operation, a new discourse of social improvement and a new way for profit-seeking capital. With the change of state regime, the construction had entered a climax stage. New Village then became the symbol of the rising political and social status of the working class, and the link between the change of urban nature and spatial development. Socialism collective life and the temporal and spatial separation or combination between production and live constructed the collective conscience and identity of residents. The above findings highlight the independence of architecture history from general history, help to examine the complexity of China’s localization New Village practice and the uniqueness of Tianjin’s urban history, and provide new ideas for the study of China’s modern urban housing development from the perspective of changes in daily life organization.
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