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Notes on Contributors





Michael Barry teaches industrial relations at Griffith University. He is currently researching changing patterns of unionisation in New Zealand. <m.barry@griffith.edu.au>



Danny Blackman is a long-term trade union activist, and is a member of the Executive Committee of the Sydney Branch of the ASSLH. A former librarian with archives training, she currently works on women's employment and training policy. Her labour history research interests include the One Big Union Movement, women in the labour movement and the history of communism in Australia. <danny.blackman@women.nsw.gov.au>



Michael Clifford is Secretary, Queensland Branch, Finance Sector Union of Australia where he has worked since 1994 apart from a 12 month spell at AMWU in 1996. He was active in the campaign to save the Erskineville Parks (now Green Ban Parks) in the early 1990's. <michael.clifford@fsunion.org.au>



Drew Cottle teaches politics at the University of Western Sydney and has a continuing interest in worker militancy and radical politics. <d.cottle@uws.edu.au>



Robert Crawford is an Honorary Research Associate in the School of Historical Studies at Monash University. His PhD thesis, Selling a Nation, examined the images of Australian national identity contained in press advertisements between 1900 and 1969. His articles exploring advertising and its social and political impact in Australia have appeared in the Journal of Australian Studies and War & Society. <racrawford@ozemail.com.au>



John Dargavel is a Visiting Fellow jointly in the School of Society, Resources and Environment, and the Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies of the Australian National University. He has worked in government, industry and academe. He is the author of Fashioning Australia's Forests (1995). He is the President of the Australian Forest History Society. <John.Dargavel@anu.edu.au>



Erik Eklund is a senior lecturer in the School of Liberal Arts at the University of Newcastle. His most recent books include Steel Town: the Making and Breaking of Port Kembla (2003) and, with Martin Crotty, Australia to 1901: Selected Readings in the Making of a Nation (2003). He is currently undertaking research on the co-operative movement in Australia and the UK. <Erik.Eklund@newcastle.edu.au>



Peter Love, President of the Melbourne Branch of the ASSLH, teaches politics at Swinburne University of technology and is interested in almost anything to do with the Australian labour movement. <plove@swin.edu.au>



Melanie Nolan teaches courses in labour history, history and theory, and crime in fiction and social history at Victoria University of Wellington. Her recent publications include Breadwinning: New Zealand Women and the State (2000). She is currently writing a collective biography of a working class family. She has been a member of the Trade Union History Project since 1991. <Melanie.Nolan@vuw.ac.nz>



Melanie Oppenheimer is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Western Sydney. Since 1998, she has been teaching a unit 'Australian Labour History'. <m.oppenheimer@uws.edu.au>



Beris Penrose is an independent researcher with a PhD in history. She has published several articles relating to her area of particular interest, the history of occupational health and safety, and is currently working on the history of silicosis in Australia in the early twentieth century. <berispenrose@hotmail.com>



Jonathon Rees is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Southern Colorado where he is teaching nineteenth century American history and historiography. His research interests have focused on many aspects of industrial relations and business policy in the American Steel Mill industry and he is currently the Vice President and Historical Advisor for the Bessemer Historical Society. <reesj@uscolo.edu>



Shaun Ryan is a PhD candidate in Work and Organisational Studies at the University of Sydney. His thesis investigates employment relations, workplace culture and the management of perception in the New South Wales contract cleaning industry. He has previously worked as an oral historian for the Trade Union History Project in New Zealand.



Bruce Scates teaches history at the University of New South Wales. Amongst his current projects are a biography of Dr Mary Booth (founder of the Anzac Fellowship of Women) and a history of Australian pilgrimages to the cemeteries of the Great War from 1915 to today. <b.scates@unsw.edu.au>



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