The Machine
Labor Confronts the Future
Allen & Unwin (Publisher)
Published on 1. April 2000
Book
Paperback/Softback
400 pages
978-1-86448-721-3 (ISBN)
Description
The ALP is more than 100 years old and showing signs of age. It's time for a check-up. Where is the Labor Party now and where is it going? How successful will it be in the next 100 years? "The Machine" describes a party at risk. The Australian political context is changing; can Labor adapt? The collection of essays provides a detailed overview of the Party at national, state and territory levels; analyses Labor's structure to reveal a Party struggling with varying success to come to terms with policy and electoral problems; and describes how the Party's factional nature determines how controversial policy areas are dealt with. Who now votes Labor? Labor was once the "blue collar" Party, the Party of "the battlers". No longer? In the wake of defeat and the creation of new constituencies outside Labor's present grasp, the contributors to "The Machine" provide a detailed account of the Party as it confronts the rebuilding it must undertake if it is to continue to play a major role in Australian politics. Can Labor still boast a machine the envy of other parties, or is it yesterday's machine? Can Labor regain its lost supremacy?
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Sydney
Australia
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 215 mm
Width: 140 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-86448-721-3 (9781864487213)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
John Warhurst is Professor of Political Science in The Faculties at the Australian National University. Andrew Parkin is Professor of Politics in the School of Political and International Studies at The Flinders University of South Australia.
The contributors are Tim Battin, Clive Bean, Nick Economou, Marcus Haward, Graham Hudson, Dean Jaensch, James Jupp, Clem Lloyd, Haydon Manning, Marian Sawer, Anthony Sayers, Marian Simms, John Summers and John Wanna.
The contributors are Tim Battin, Clive Bean, Nick Economou, Marcus Haward, Graham Hudson, Dean Jaensch, James Jupp, Clem Lloyd, Haydon Manning, Marian Sawer, Anthony Sayers, Marian Simms, John Summers and John Wanna.
Content
List of contributorsList of figures and tablesList of abbreviationsPART ONE: OVERVIEW1 The future of the Labor Party - John Warhurst and Andrew Parkin2 The Labor Party: image, history and structure - Andrew Parkin and John Warhurst3 A quest for national rules - Clem Llyod4 Who now votes Labor? - Clive BeanPART TWO: STATE BRANCHES5 New South Wales: the microcosm of a nation - Marian Simms6 Victoria: factional battles, realignments and renewal - Graham Hudson7 Queensland: consociational factionalism or ignoble cabal? - John Wanna8 Western Australia: picking up the pieces - Anthony Sayers9 South Australia: declining fortunes and a 'new Machine' - John Summers and Andrew Parkin10 Tasmania: reform and rebuilding - Marcus Haward11 Australian Capital territory: diminished capital - John Warhurst12 Northern Territory: idiosyncratic politics - Dean JaenschPART THREE: POLICIES AND RELATIONSHIPS13 The ALP and the union movement beyond 2000 - Haydon Man