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Notes on Contributors





Hugh Anderson has been writing and publishing books and articles since the early 1950s in most genres, except fiction. He is the author or editor of over 70 titles, and as managing editor of the Red Rooster Press, has co-published some 30 or so books with his partner Dawn Anderson. <rrpress@tpg.com.au>



Sarah Brown is an archivist at the University of Melbourne Archives and Librarian for the Victorian Trades Hall Council.



Tom Dunning
is Senior Lecturer in the School of History and Classics at the University of Tasmania. His research interests include the History of North America in International and Comparative Perspectives as well as the History of Borderlands. <tdunning@utas.edu.au>



Bradon Ellem
teaches industrial relations in Work and Organisational Studies at the University of Sydney. He is currently writing about union renewal in the Pilbara, editing a book on peak unions with Ray Markey and John Shields, and co-editing a special issue of the journal Labour & Industry which examines the dialogue between industrial relations and human geography. His major historical research at present is his work with John Shields on a history of the social relations of work in Broken Hill. <b.ellem@econ.usyd.edu.au>



Elizabeth Faue
teaches labour and women's history at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, USA. She is the author of Writing the Wrongs: Eva Valesh and the Rise of Labor Journalism (2002), Community of Suffering and Struggle: Men, Women and the Labor Movement in Minneapolis, 1915-1945 (1991), and a work-in-progress, Citizens and Clients: the United States Welfare State in the Twentieth Century. Since 1991, Liz has been the coordinator of the North American Labor History Conference. <EFaue@aol.com>



John Faulkner
is senator for NSW in the Federal Parliament and the leader of the Opposition in the Senate. A member of the Australian Labor Party, he is also long-time member of the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History. <senator.faulkner@aph.gov.au>



Mark Hannah
is a Research Scholar in the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University. His research interests focus primarily on the historical anthropology of indigene-coloniser relations in Australia. He is currently writing a monograph entitled Aboriginal Kinship and State Power in Queensland, 1897-1935. <Mark.Hannah@anu.edu.au>



Harry Knowles
teaches in Work and Organisational Studies, University of Sydney. His current research interest is the role of biographical method in labour history writing. <h.knowles@econ.usyd.edu.au>



Peter Love
teaches politics at Swinburne University of Technology and is President of the Melbourne Branch of the Austrlian Society for the Study of Labour History. <plove@swin.edu.au>



Hamish Maxwell-Stewart
is a lecturer in the School of History and Classics at the University of Tasmania. His recent works include Frost and Maxwell-Stewart (eds), Chain Letters: Narrating Convict Lives (2001) and Pybus and Maxwell-Stewart, American Citizens, British Slaves: Yankee Political Prisoners in an Australian Penal Colony 1839-1850 (2002). <Hamish.MaxwellStewart@utas.edu.au>



John McLaren
is Emeritus Professor in Australian and Pacific Studies at Victoria University, Melbourne. His most recent publications are Writing in Hope and Fear (1966) and States of Imagination (2001). He is completing a study of postwar Melbourne radicals. His research interests are in nationalism and literature. <John.McLaren@vu.edu.au>



Andrew Moore
is an Associate Professor of history in the School of Humanities at the University of Western Sydney. His research interests include labour biography, the social history of sport, Irish-Australian history and right-wing politics in Australia. <a.moore@uws.edu.au>



Melanie Oppenheimer
teaches at the University of Western Syndey. She edited the thematic section on 'Voluntary Work and Labour History' in Labour History, no. 81, 2001, and is the author of, All Work No Pay: Australian Civilian Volunteers in War (2002). <m.oppenheimer@uws.edu.au>



Greg Patmore
teaches in Work and Organisational Studies, School of Business, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Sydney. He is editor of Labour History. He is currently undertaking a comparative study of the steel industry in Lithgow, Pueblo (Colorado) and Sydney (Nova Scotia) for the period 1899-1932. <g.patmore@econ.usyd.edu.au>



Shirleene Robinson
is a PhD candiate in the History Department of the University of Queensland where she is in the last stages of producing a thesis entitled 'Something like slavery': the exploitation of Aboriginal child labour in Queensland from 1842-1945. <shirleen@hotmail.com>



Judith Smart
teaches history and politics in the School of Social Science and Planning at RMIT University. She is currently engaged on writing a monograph on Melbourne during the Great War. Her other major research interest is the history of the two major mass women's organisations in Australia. She has published on women's political organisations, venereal disease, Billy Graham, Miss Australia and the social impact of World War I. <judith.smart@rmit.edu.au>



Bruce Smith
is a lecturer in archives and records management in the School of Business Information Technology, RMIT University. During 2001 he was seconded as part-time Project Manger of the Austrlian Trade Union Archives Project. <bruces@rmit.edu.au>



Lucy Taksa
is an associate professor with the School of Industrial Relations and Organisational Behavior and Director of the Industrial Relations Research Centre at the University of NSW. She is an Associate Editor of Labour History. She has published on scientific management, labour culture, community, oral history, the Eveleigh railway workshops and industrial heritage. Since 1998 she has been working on two Australian Research Council funded projects dealing with the Eveleigh railway workshops. She is also completing a Labour Heritage Register with Terry Irving. <l.taksa@unsw.edu.au>



Christopher Wright
is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Industrial Relations & Organisational Behavior at the University of New South Wales. He has published extensively on the history of management practice and is the author of The Management of Labour: A History of Australian Employers (1995). His current research interests include the diffusion of management knowledge, labour management strategy, professional service firms, work reorganisation and technological change. <c.wright@unsw.edu.au>



Huntley Wright
is an analyst for the New Zealand Defence Force. He is the author of 'Economic or Political Development: The Evolution of "Native" Local Government Policy in the Territory of Papua and New Guinea, 1945-1963', Australian Journal of Politics and History (2002) and 'A Liberal "Respect for Small Property": Paul Hasluck and the "Landless Proletariat" in the Territory of Papua and New Guinea, 1951-63', Australian Historical Studies (2002). <huntley.wright@defence.govt.nz>


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