The state and the people : Australian Federation and nation-making, 1870-1901

Bibliographic Information

The state and the people : Australian Federation and nation-making, 1870-1901

John Manning Ward ; editors Deryck M. Schreuder and Brian H. Fletcher with Ruth Hutchison

Federation Press, 2001

Other Title

State & the people

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Note

Further reading: p. 145

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The State and the People tells the story of the Australian colonies' coming together into a single federation in the latter years of the 19th century. Author John Manning Ward, pre-eminent Australian interpreter of colonial relations with Great Britain, had a distinct view of Australian federation. His liberal-conservative approach differed sharply from the nationalist or modern progressivist approaches of other scholars. Between the radical republican challenge and the cultural cringe, lies Ward's Australia: essentially pro-British, pragmatic and animated by the 'hope of capital'. Ward's federation reflects pragmatic forces and developments, the constitutional outcome having the common sense of a common law tradition at its core. Federation is not the representation of a nationalist assertion against the mother country, but rather the expression of a colonial nationality anchored within a tradition of British imperial history abroad. Ward's untimely death intervened in 1990 and ,The State and The People is incomplete. It comprises the substantial chapters then written. The editors, Professor Deryck Schreuder and Emeritus Professor Brian Fletcher, make clear that we have been deprived of quantity, not quality. Ward's scholarship remains sharp, his prose elegant and his argument penetrating. The State and The People contributes significantly to our understanding of Federation and to continuing debate on the Australian constitution and identity.

Table of Contents

Foreword/ Acknowledgments/ List of Illustrations/ Editors' introduction/ A note on the text The Stable Society and its Enemies A stable society of growth The population and progress Sectarianism Federation and nationalism Great Expectations -- the 1870s-1880s Federation Advocated Why federation? The role of the state Conservative advocates of federation New liberal advocates of federation Some opponents of federation Federation Achieved The relations of the Commonwealth and the States "A compromise, with all the faults of a compromise" Solving the problem of dissolutions of parliament The electoral franchise problem Establishing a High Court A Constitution of checks and balances The distribution of powers The Australian state is made Epilogue: Federation and the New Liberalism

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