Winners and Losers

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A01=Stuart Macintyre
Aboriginal land rights
Australian history
Australian Schools Commission
Australian social justice policy development
Author_Stuart Macintyre
Category=JHB
Commonwealth Employment Service
Convict System
David Syme
Dole Bludgers
economic justice history
education equity Australia
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Face To Face
Harvester Judgment
Human Suffering
indigenous rights policy
Karmel Report
labour market regulation
Land Reformers
Liberal Protectionists
Moreton Bay
National Aboriginal Conference
National Aboriginal Consultative Committee
National Welfare Fund
Port Phillip District
Preschool Education
public policy
social policy Australia
Social Welfare Commission
State Aid Issue
Trades Hall
Unemployment Relief
Vacant Crown Land
Van Diemen's Land
Van Diemen’s Land
welfare state analysis
Whitlam Government

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367720087
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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What is a fair wage? Is there a right to work? Is there a right to shelter or to good health? What are the entitlements of those who cannot work? Can opportunities be equal? For women? For Aborigines?

For more than a century, Australians have addressed expectations of social justice to their governments and have had to live with the consequences.

This book looks at how changing circumstances have generated changing popular aspirations, and how these in turn have been translated into public policy. It argues that social justice has no single meaning and is in fact the site of conflicting and divergent endeavours. Precisely for this reason it has a special relevance for the age of consensus.

The first part of this book uses these shifting interpretations of social justice as a lodestar to chart a new course through the history of this country. The second part shows how it operates today as a focus of debate in areas ranging from education to Aboriginal land rights.

The book therefore offers a new perspective on the past and a trenchant analysis of the present. It draws together a wide range of material and presents it by means of case studies that assume no specialist knowledge. It will appeal to students of Australian history, public policy and social welfare; and it is addressed to all readers with an interest in the future of their country.

Stuart Macintyre is a senior lecturer in history at Melbourne University who has written extensively on historical and contemporary subjects.

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