Australia compared : people, policies and politics

書誌事項

Australia compared : people, policies and politics

edited by Francis G. Castles

Allen & Unwin, 1991

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 15

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注記

Includes bibliographies and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

A comparative study of Australian society, "Australia Compared" starts from the premise that contrasts and comparisons with other Western developed nations are needed to understand properly Australian history, social structure, economy, policies and politics. It highlights what is distinctive about the Australian experience and what is similar, thereby facilitating both an understanding of the country and any evaluation of policy for change. "Australia Compared" brings together a team of scholars from history, demography, sociology, economics, social policy and political science. It asks many questions: whether Australian attitudes to government differ from those in other nations; whether trends in the family, marriage and divorce are the same as elsewhere; why our policy choices about migrations, the economy, education and welfare are sometimes similar and sometimes different; and whether Australian politics is following the same path as other countries? Taken together, the answers give a differentiated picture of what it means to be Australian and what Australia's future holds. This book aims to provide first-year undergraduate introduction for courses in Australian studies, and will be of interest in sociology, political science and social administration courses, where the aim is to provide a broad and challenging perspective on the nature of contemporary Australian society. Francis G. Castles is Professor of Public Policy at the Australian National University and was formerly Professor of Comparative Politics at the Open University. He is an acknowledged world authority on comparative policy development, and is author and editor of many books in the area, including two on Australian public policy in a comparative perspective. He is also author of more than forty major articles. This book is intended for students of Australian studies and the social sciences.

目次

  • Why compare Australia?, Francis Castles. Part 1 People: what are the origins of Australia's national identity?, John Eddy
  • managing ethnic diversity - how does Australia compare?, Jim Juipp
  • are Australian families like others?, Geoffrey McNicoll
  • are Australian attitudes to government differnet? - a comparison with five other nations, Clive Bean. Part 2 Policies: is the privatization of Australian schooling inevitable?, Don Anderson
  • has the pattern of Australian wage growth been unique?, Steve Dowrick
  • comparing income transfer systems - is Australia the poor relation?, Deborah Mitchell. Part 3 Politics: interest group politics - corporatism without business?, Trevor Matthews
  • has the old politics reached in impasse?, Don Rawson
  • does the new politics have a future?, Elim Papadakis
  • why has the women's movement had more influence on government in Australia than elsewhere?, Marian Sawer.

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