Race : John Howard and the remaking of Australia
著者
書誌事項
Race : John Howard and the remaking of Australia
Allen & Unwin, 2001
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 263-265) and index
"Current affairs"--p. [4] of cover
内容説明・目次
内容説明
In recent years race has moved from the fringe and to centre stage.The number of immigrants; the contest over Aboriginal land rights; the 'Asianisation' of Australia; the response to the Stolen Generations; the treatment of asylum-seekers; the fate of Reconciliation; international scrutiny of our human rights record: hardly a day passes without news stories prompted by current policies on these and other issues with a racial dimension.Race has an old history in the making of the Australian nation but why has it now re-emerged with renewed vigour? How has race become so prominent? Who reaps the benefits? Will race continue to shape politics in the years ahead?Race sets out to make sense of this issue's new and increasingly disturbing profile in public life.
目次
List of tables and figuresAcknowledgmentsIntroductionPART I CONTEXT1. The racial imagination2. Change in post-war AustraliaPART II STYLE3. The new conservatism and the naturalness of bigotry4. John Howard, Leader of the Opposition, Prime Minister5. The politics of paranoia6. Pauline Hanson's One NationPART III MEANING7. Interpretations8. The role of chance in national lifeAppendix 1 - Immigration intakeAppendix 2 - Confederate Action Party and One Nation polices comparedAppendix 3 - The electoral fortunes of One NationSourcesSelect bibliographyIndex
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