Academic literature on the topic 'Republicanism Australia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Republicanism Australia"

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Irving, Helen. "The Republic is a Feminist Issue." Feminist Review 52, no. 1 (March 1996): 87–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/fr.1996.9.

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The growth during the 1990s of a republican movement in Australia has stimulated among other things a feminist examination of both the gendered nature of republicanism and the under-representation of women in senior positions in republican organizations. Feminists have adopted several critical perspectives on Australian republicanism: one involves the claim for the redesign of Australian political institutions in order to maximize the representation of women and women's interests; another suggests that the neglected history of women's involvement in constitutional politics during the last century needs to be understood to throw light on ways in which republicanism can be made more meaningful for women now, while a third argues that republicanism is not essentially a feminist issue and should not be pursued as such. The article challenges this conclusion.
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Sharman, Campbell, and Mark McKenna. "The Captive Republic: A History of Republicanism in Australia 1788-1996." Pacific Affairs 71, no. 3 (1998): 455. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2761454.

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Davidson, Alastair, Mark McKenna, and Bruce Scates. "The Captive Republic: A History of Republicanism in Australia 1788-1996." American Historical Review 103, no. 5 (December 1998): 1672. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2650098.

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Curthoys, Ann. "Republicanism and Responsible Government: The Shaping of Democracy in Australia and Canada." Australian Historical Studies 47, no. 2 (May 3, 2016): 332–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1031461x.2016.1162684.

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Warhurst, John. "Nationalism and republicanism in Australia: The evolution of institutions, citizenship and symbols." Australian Journal of Political Science 28, no. 4 (December 1993): 100–120. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00323269308402270.

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Woollacott, Angela. "Republicanism and Responsible Government: The Shaping of Democracy in Australia and Canada by Benjamin T. Jones." Journal of World History 26, no. 3 (2015): 698–700. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jwh.2015.0040.

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Ritchie, Jonathan, and Don Markwell. "Australian and Commonwealth republicanism." Round Table 95, no. 387 (October 2006): 727–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00358530601046976.

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Henderson, Jarett. "Republicanism and Responsible Government: The Shaping of Democracy in Australia and Canada, by Benjamin T. JonesRepublicanism and Responsible Government: The Shaping of Democracy in Australia and Canada. Benjamin T. Jones. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2014. Pp. 312, $100.00 cloth, $34.95 paper." Canadian Historical Review 96, no. 4 (December 2015): 601–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/chr.96.4.br03.

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Wellings, Ben. "Britishness and the Failure of Australian Republicanism." Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism 3, no. 2 (September 2003): 35–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1754-9469.2003.tb00048.x.

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Gascoigne, John. "Republicanism and Responsible Government: The Shaping of Democracy in Australia and Canada, by Benjamin T. JonesRepublicanism and Responsible Government: The Shaping of Democracy in Australia and Canada, by Benjamin T. Jones. Montreal & Kingston, McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2014. x, 299 pp. $100.00 Cdn (cloth), $34.95 (paper)." Canadian Journal of History 50, no. 1 (April 2015): 218–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.50.1.218.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Republicanism Australia"

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Pinillos, Matsuda Derek Kenji. "The doctrine of the educational policies for foreign students in Japan: A comparison between Australian and French educational policies for children of immigrants." Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2018. http://repositorio.pucp.edu.pe/index/handle/123456789/123968.

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In this article, readers are going to see how foreigners’ children have been treated in the Japanese educational system. Until now, Japan does not have a specific principle idea in their policies; therefore, those are not stable and concrete. In order to investigate how national policies and its doctrine are important in the educational system, this article has examined Australia as a nation introducing the principles of multiculturalism and France as a nation introducing the republicanism in their integrated politics by doing a literature research. The literature that was used in this paper include the policies and critical papers written by experts that has allow us to analyze the pros and cons of their policies. As a result, the Japanese government is urged to create a concrete policy that would support foreign students to better adapt to the society and become a productive human resource to improve the country’s wellbeing.
Este artículo examinó la situación actual y pasada de los hijos de extranjeros insertos en el sistema educativo japonés. Hasta ahora, Japón no tiene una idea concreta en sus políticas y es por eso que se puede afirmar que este sistema presenta algunas deficiencias/problemas que pueden ser mejorados. Con el objetivo de ver cómo los principios de las políticas nacionales afectan a la educación, en este artículo se han presentado los ejemplos de Australia, como una nación llevando los principios del multiculturalismo y a Francia, como ejemplo de una nación llevando los principios del republicanismo y sus políticas para la integración de sus ciudadanos. La literatura utilizada en este trabajo incluye las políticas y documentos críticos escritos por expertos, los cuales fueron de gran ayuda para poder analizar los pros y contras de las políticas de los distintos países estudiados.Como resultado, el gobierno japonés va a necesitar una política concreta para apoyar a los estudiantes extranjeros a adaptarse a la sociedad y convertirse en un recurso humano productivo para mejorar el país.
Neste artigo, pode-se verificar como os filhos de estrangeiros têm sido tratados dentro do sistema educacional japonês. Até o momento, o Japão não tem uma política de inclusão bem definida e, consequentemente, seu sistema não está bem estabelecido. Como medida para avaliar a influência dos princípios das políticas nacionais na educação, neste trabalho, foram apresentados exemplos de outros países. Através de uma investigação da literatura, foram estudados os seguintes países, a Austrália, uma nação que cultiva os princípios do multiculturalismo, e a França, levando os princípios do republicanismo e suas políticas de integração dos cidadãos. Esta revisão foi baseada nos princípios e nos respectivos documentos analíticos escritos por especialistas com o objetivo de avaliar as vantagens e desvantagens da política de integração desenvolvida nos países anteriormente mencionados. Em vista disso, sugere-se ao governo japonês a adoção de uma política concreta de apoio aos estudantes estrangeiros a fim de facilitar sua adaptação a sociedade, resultando na formação de recurso humano qualificado e produtivo, contribuindo para o desenvolvimento do país.
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Jones, Benjamin Thomas. "Commonwealth of republics : the lost republican history of Australia and Canada." Phd thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/150428.

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This thesis is a history of ideas and seeks to provide the first study of civic republican ideas and their impact on Britain's Australian and Canadian colonies in the mid-nineteenth century. In particular, the way in which civic republican ideas manifested themselves during the debates over responsible government is explored. The period between 1837 and 1855 is the primary focus of the thesis. Beginning with the Canadian rebellions and finishing with the Eureka rebellion, those eighteen years saw a fundamental shift in British policy towards the colonies and the birth of Lord Durham's second empire. The principle argument here is that civic republican ideas made a significant impact on the reform leaders who petitioned for greater democracy. Australian and Canadian historiography has tended to view the granting of responsible government as a triumph of liberal politics. This thesis examines the language of reform leaders and contends that the calls to end the corruption of the ruling tory cabals and to encourage widespread political participation by virtuous citizens are reflective of the civic republican tradition which can be traced back to Sidney, Harrington, Milton, Cromwell and ultimately, Machiavelli, Cicero and Aristotle. While acknowledging the place of Lockean liberalism, this thesis concludes that for many reform leaders and papers, the emphasis was on collectivism and communalism not the advancement of personal rights and individualism. Although not a contemporary word, this thesis contends that civic republicanism was a major political ideology and one which has been missing from the historical orthodoxies of Australia and Canada.
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Williams, John Matthew. "The protection of rights under the Australian Constitution : a republican analysis." Phd thesis, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/145902.

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Hong, Seung-Hun. "Dynamics of reciprocal regulation." Phd thesis, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/110383.

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Reciprocity pervades regulation more than meets the eye. This thesis examined how regulators’ forbearance gives regulatees a chance to reciprocate with reforms or compliance. Compliance with laws or regulations is a reciprocal response to legitimate regulation. Compliance can also be a response to the observed compliance of fellow citizens. This is one aspect of indirect reciprocity, a concept that was developed theoretically as a key to successful regulation in this thesis. Reciprocity is also indirectly exercised when stakeholders in a wide regulatory space impose costly sanctions on irresponsible corporations after observing their histories of defiance. How reciprocity emerges in regulation remains largely unexamined in the literature. Past analyses of the limits of reciprocity in regulation and responsive regulation have been flawed as they failed to consider a broad range of types of reciprocity. This thesis explored ways in which diverse types of reciprocity are harnessed in regulatory space and the effects they have on regulatory outcomes. As a theory-building project, this thesis sought to answer: How diverse are the types of reciprocity observed across a broad regulatory landscape? What are the dynamics by which reciprocity renders regulators as well as corporate and individual agents responsible? What systematic tools can redress the drawbacks immanent in some reciprocal relationships? Theoretically, I explored ancient as well as contemporary thinking on the value of reciprocity in promoting responsible behavior. Classical republicans such as Aristotle and Cicero understood reciprocity as a measure of good governance. They valued the claim that reciprocity sustains solidarity among citizens and bonds between the ruler and the ruled. Contemporary scholars have suggested that diverse types of reciprocity exist. Reciprocity sometimes conveys substantive principles or involves a strong intention to trigger costly sanctions. Reciprocity also takes place in dispersed populations or in an indirect fashion. This means that we can arrange regulation to promote responsiveness and responsibility not only from regulatory agencies but also from regulated agents and social stakeholders. Based on this theoretical underpinning, I elaborated on six reciprocal strategies that can be intentionally harnessed by agents involved in regulation to achieve their goals. Empirical case studies of Australian and South Korean prudential regulation illustrated how those strategies are deployed. Data were acquired primarily through interviews with frontline supervisors of Australian and Korean prudential regulators. Regulators actively harnessed different types of reciprocity in encounters with regulated agents. Regulators indirectly signaled responsiveness to regulated agents they had never encountered before; they passed on information regarding compliance attitudes to other colleagues highlighting their responsibility for their regulatory tasks. At their best, institutions maintained transparent inter-organizational structures so as to minimize arbitrariness at the regulatory frontline. Non-intrusive ways of nudging regulatee’s performance became a possibility. Two reciprocal strategies that were not fully supported in the data were projected in a discussion of recent Korean childcare regulatory reforms. The thesis mapped dynamics of reciprocal regulation in which agents directly and indirectly engaged with one another to engender the possibility of responsible regulatory governance. Overall, this thesis revealed that in the Internet age of networked governance, responsible and responsive regulation is more possible than critics believed when they worried about scarce state resources for face-to-face regulatory inspection. On the other hand, reciprocal regulation has the power to be a cause of domination as well as a remedy for it. Resources for a principled responsible and responsive regulation were found in Philip Selznick’s and Philip Pettit’s work.
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DuRinck, Lachlan. "The inevitable Australian republic and the unlearning of traditional national identity." Thesis, 1997. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32973/.

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After numerous proposals, the final decision was to write a piece which demonstrated that Australian national identity and the most recent push for an Australian republic are intertwined, and that one issue, at present cannot be discussed without the other.
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Books on the topic "Republicanism Australia"

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Janet, Baker. For queen or country?: Republicanism in Australia. Victoria: CIS Publishers, 1994.

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McKenna, Mark. The captive republic: A history of republicanism in Australia, 1788-1996. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1996.

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Why I want to be king of Australia. Ringwood, Vic: Penguin, 1999.

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Booker, Malcolm. A republic of Australia: What would it mean? Sydney: Left Book Club Co-operative, 1992.

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Wayne, Hudson, and Brown A. J, eds. Restructuring Australia: Regionalism, republicanism and reform of the nation-state. Annandale, N.S.W: Federation Press, 2004.

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Oldfield, Audrey. The great republic of the southern seas: Republicans in nineteenth-century Australia. Alexandria, NSW: Hale & Iremonger, 1999.

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A concise history of Australia. 3rd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.

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Abbott, Tony. The Minimal Monarchy: And Why It Still Makes Sense For Australia. Kent Town, S.A: Wakefield Press, 1995.

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O'Rourke, Rory James. It's time-: The republic of Australia. Perth, W.A: O'Rourke Pub., 2009.

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Winterton, George. The resurrection of the republic. Annandale, N.S.W: Federation Press in association with the Centre for International and Public Law, Australian National University, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Republicanism Australia"

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Irving, Helen. "Republicanism and citizenship." In New Developments in Australian Politics, 127–47. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-15192-9_7.

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James, Paul, and Stephanie Trigg. "Rituals of Nationhood: Medievalism, Neo-Traditionalism and Republicanism." In Medievalism and the Gothic in Australian Culture, 255–75. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.mmages-eb.4.000036.

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John M, Williams. "Part III Themes, Ch.16 Republicanism." In The Oxford Handbook of the Australian Constitution. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198738435.003.0017.

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This chapter discusses and evaluates the various approaches to republicanism in Australia. It first briefly outlines Australia's current monarchical Constitution, highlighting the textual ties to the monarchy and those aspects that confirm Australia's status as something less than constitutionally independent. The chapter then deals with three faces of Australian republicanism. It explores a number of manifestations of Australian independence that have shaped the narrative that has simultaneously advanced and retarded the republican debate. Afterward, this chapter explores the technical steps and alterations that have emerged with the republican debate in the late 1990s. It highlights key influences on this debate and in particular the quest for a ‘minimalist’ republic. Finally, the chapter briefly investigates the future direction of Australian republicanism.
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Malcolm, Elizabeth, and Dianne Hall. "Catholic Irish Australia and the Labor Movement." In Frontiers of Labor. University of Illinois Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252041839.003.0008.

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The Australian and American labor movements attracted the support of many Irish Catholic immigrants. Yet in Australia, the relationship between the Catholic community and organized labor was never an easy one. State funding of church schools was a perennial problem: Catholic leaders demanded it, while the Australian Labor Party (ALP) equivocated over the issue. This chapter investigates two further issues that also seriously tested the relationship: one involving race, the other nationalism. In the 1890s, the labor movement supported a ban on “colored” immigration, yet the Catholic Church aspired to play a leading role in missions to China. In debates around immigration restriction, Cardinal Moran of Sydney therefore sought to avoid offending the Chinese by attacking instead British attempts to dictate Australia’s immigration policy. During World War I, the ALP, which supported Britain and the empire, found the rise of anti-British republicanism in Ireland a difficult issue to manage. As a result, although sympathetic to Irish grievances, labor newspapers were very selective in their reporting and sought to impose a class, rather than a nationalist, interpretation on events. In both these cases conflict was contained, and it was not until the 1950s that a major split involving Catholics and the ALP occurred, this time over the issue of communism.
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"Ike vs Taft – International Impact of the Republican’s Choice." In Letters to Australia, Volume 4, 55–57. Sydney University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvx8b7c5.26.

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Jouet, Mugambi. "One Nation, Divisible." In Exceptional America. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520293298.003.0002.

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The misconception that “exceptionalism” means American superiority stems from how Republicans turned this longstanding concept into a rhetorical weapon against Obama by accusing him of unpatriotically lacking faith in “American exceptionalism” given his “socialist” and “un-American” agenda. These accusations paralleled conspiracy theories claiming that Obama is not really American due to his fake U.S. birth certificate and Islamism. Meanwhile, intense polarization became a major dimension of American exceptionalism’s true meaning. The huge rift between conservatives and liberals under George W. Bush worsened under Obama. It may grow worse following the Clinton-Trump presidential election. Intriguingly, America and other Western nations are moving apart and closer at the same time. While liberal America is mainly evolving in the same direction as the rest of the West, conservative America is an outlier in light of its peculiar ideology, including profound anti-intellectualism, anti-governmentalism, and Christian fundamentalism. Liberal America’s worldview is not simply different from the worldview in conservative America, but also closer to the dominant worldview elsewhere in the West: Europe, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Tellingly, universal health care is broadly supported by both liberals and conservatives in all Western nations except America, where Republicans relentlessly denounce the evils of “socialized medicine.”
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"Lunching for the republic: Feminism, the media and identity politics in the Australian republicanism debate: Meaghan Morris." In Multicultural States, 231–57. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203007549-23.

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