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Books & Arts
The Qing is dead! Long live the Qing!
John Fitzgerald
11 August 2015
Books
| Political philosopher Daniel A. Bell wants us to see China as a meritocracy-in-progress, writes
John Fitzgerald
. But is he really defending autocracy?
Books & Arts
The rising tide that lifts some yachts
Jane Goodall
13 July 2015
Books
| Why are we angered by stories of Greek hairdressers retiring at fifty on public pensions, asks
Jane Goodall
, yet unmoved at the thought of bailed-out…
Books & Arts
Timber to ashes, ashes to earth
Sylvia Lawson
21 May 2015
Cinema
|
Sylvia Lawson
on Canberra’s last Electric Shadow, George Brandis and the Australia Council, and
Testament of Youth
and
X+Y
Books & Arts
Groups are dumber than you think (but we can make them smarter)
Paul ’t Hart
14 May 2015
Books
| Cass Sunstein and Reid Hastie want us to think differently about making decisions in groups. But there’s a small herd of elephants in the room, writes…
National Affairs
Austerity ends, but where’s the vision?
Tim Colebatch
5 May 2015
Victoria’s Labor treasurer might have echoed Tolstoy in his budget speech, writes
Tim Colebatch
, but the fine print doesn’t rise to the challenges facing the state
National Affairs
Simpler, fairer and easier to comply with: the tax option with bravery added
Tim Colebatch
31 March 2015
Can the Coalition – and Labor and the Greens – rise to the challenge of tax reform?
Tim Colebatch
assesses the government’s discussion paper
National Affairs
Back to base
Peter Brent | Mumble
16 March 2015
Are the self-appointed consciences of the Liberal Party helping the government?
Peter Brent
doesn’t think so
National Affairs
Small targets, small ambitions
Marija Taflaga
12 March 2015
Australia’s major parties have learned the wrong lessons from the failure of John Hewson’s 1993
Fightback!
campaign and the success of John Howard’s bid…
National Affairs
Two intergenerational reports for the price of one is no bargain
Tim Colebatch
5 March 2015
A serious message has been swamped by politics in this latest attempt to model the next forty years, argues
Tim Colebatch
in Canberra
National Affairs
How to stop the leadership turnstile
Peter Brent | Mumble
26 February 2015
John Howard had an enormous stroke of luck, writes
Peter Brent
. To realise that is to recognise that imitating him is counterproductive
National Affairs
Time to slay some sacred cows
Michael Gill
13 February 2015
Better ways of dealing with the federal budget deficit would also boost growth, argues
Michael Gill
Books & Arts
Revolutionary Sydney
Andrew Dodd
3 February 2015
Books
| Three men and a city in turmoil.
Andrew Dodd
reviews two new books about Sydney’s formative years
Essays & Reportage
Silence
Christine Kenneally
29 January 2015
Geoff Meyer’s quest to establish his family origins ran up against inadequate state government archives and obstructive officials, writes
Christine Kenneally
National Affairs
Fixing Australia’s democratic deficit
Geoff Heriot
17 October 2014
Australians buying a used car benefit from clear consumer safeguards, writes
Geoff Heriot
. Why not accord voters similar protection from the excesses of campaigning politicians?
Books & Arts
Labor’s persuasion problem
Frank Bongiorno
9 September 2014
Was the Gillard government more competent than its critics claimed?
Frank Bongiorno
reviews a new appraisal
Essays & Reportage
“We must be careful to avoid seeking intelligence simply for its own sake”
Alan Fewster
1 August 2014
Newly released documents reveal the intelligence community in the early 1970s through the eyes of a former senior bureaucrat, writes
Alan Fewster
Books & Arts
Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they aren’t after you
Emily Crawford
6 June 2014
Emily Crawford
reviews Glenn Greenwald’s account of the Snowden affair
National Affairs
The Abbott government’s war on transparency
Rodney Tiffen
5 June 2014
There’s a worrying thread running through decisionmaking in Canberra, writes
Rodney Tiffen
Essays & Reportage
The public interest in public broadcasting
Geoff Heriot
6 March 2014
The accountability of the ABC and SBS should be a two-way street, writes
Geoff Heriot
. A pattern of erratic government scrutiny fails the public-interest test
National Affairs
Is Australia’s welfare system unsustainable?
Peter Whiteford
10 February 2014
Figures from the past two decades challenge the view that the welfare budget is out of control, writes
Peter Whiteford
, and help us understand the likely impact of future…
Essays & Reportage
The Brandis agenda
Shipra Chordia & Andrew Lynch
4 December 2013
Armed with an ambitious political and legal agenda, the new attorney-general faces a testing time, write
Shipra Chordia
and
Andrew Lynch
National Affairs
Bob Carr and the ghost of Philip Ruddock
Peter Mares
2 July 2013
The foreign minister’s tough talking on asylum seekers doesn’t fit with the facts, writes
Peter Mares
Essays & Reportage
The lobby group that got more bang for its buck
James Panichi
1 July 2013
Targeting marginal seats is nothing new in politics, but the gambling industry has shown it can work for lobby groups too.
James Panichi
pieces together the story
National Affairs
Two Canberras, two Kevins
25 June 2013
They aren’t always right in the national capital, but they are this time, writes
Norman Abjorensen
National Affairs
The government’s media reforms: what 499 readers thought
Ken Haley and Andrew Dodd
17 June 2013
What we think about media regulation correlates strongly with what we read, write
Ken Haley
and
Andrew Dodd
Books & Arts
Simpler, and better
Richard Denniss
12 June 2013
A new book by Barack Obama’s former “regulatory czar” shows how government can harness the benefits of behavioural economics, writes
Richard Denniss
National Affairs
Who gets what? Who pays for it? The welfare state debate revisited
Peter Whiteford
4 June 2013
Contrary to what many commentators claim, Australia has the lowest level of middle-class welfare in the developed world, writes
Peter Whiteford
National Affairs
Yes, no… or none of the above?
30 May 2013
By failing to consult adequately about its referendum on local government, the government has increased the likelihood it will fail, argues
Gabrielle Appleby
Essays & Reportage
Extreme weather and the knowledge controversy
Jane Goodall
1 February 2013
Australia is lagging in its recognition that local views and information count, argues
Jane Goodall
National Affairs
Time for a referendum roadmap
9 November 2012
Constitutional reform has stalled, writes
Paul Kildea
. But that provides the opportunity to rethink how we go about achieving change
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