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Contents
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NUMBER 88
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May 2005
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Australia/UK Comparative Labour History
Other Articles
Commentary
Conference Report
Book Reviews
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| Andrew Gill, Convict Assignment in Western Australia: the Parkhurst 'Apprentices', 1842–1851 (W.M. Robbins) |
245 |
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| John Newsinger, Rebel City: Larkin, Connolly and the Dublin Labour Movement (Andrew Moore) |
246 |
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| Jimmy Elaine Wilkinson Meyer, Any Friend of the Movement: Networking for Birth Control, 1920–1940 (Kerreen Reiger) |
248 |
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| Itzhak Gust, Such Was Life: a Jumping Narrative from Radom to Melbourne (Phillip Deery) |
249 |
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| Ann Curthoys, Freedom Ride: a Freedom Rider Remembers (Hall Greenland) |
250 |
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| Anna Green and Megan Hutching (eds), Remembering: Writing Oral History (Kate Darian-Smith) |
252 |
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Jeff Sparrow and Jill Sparrow, Radical Melbourne 2: the Enemy Within;
Raymond Evans and Carole Ferrier (eds), Radical Brisbane: an Unruly History (Cathy Brigden) |
254 |
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| Bradon Ellem, Hard Ground: Unions in the Pilbara (David Peetz) |
256 |
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| Bobbie Oliver, Unity is Strength: a History of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899–1999 (Raymond Markey) |
257 |
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| Joe Isaac and Stuart Macintyre (eds), The New Province for Law and Order: 100 Years of Australian Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration (Greg Harrison) |
259 |
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| Michael Hogan, Local Labor: a History of the Labor Party in Glebe, 1891–2003 (Alice Murphy) |
260 |
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| Marian Sawer and Barry Hindess, Us and Them: Anti-Elitism in Australia (Michael Cathcart) |
262 |
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| Joan Eveline, Ivory Basement Leadership: Power and Invisibility in the Changing University (Carolyn Allport) |
263 |
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| Nathan Hollier (ed.), Ruling Australia: the Power, Privilege and Politics of the New Ruling Class (Marian Sawer) |
265 |
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| Jenny Hocking, Terror Laws: ASIO, Counter-Terrorism and the Threat to Australian Democracy (Laurence W. Maher) |
266 |
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| Paul Blackledge, Perry Anderson, Marxism and the New Left (Anthony Ashbolt) |
268 |
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Sidney Hook, Towards the Understanding of Karl Marx: a Revolutionary Interpretation;
Ian H. Birchall, Sartre Against Stalinism (J.W. Shaw) |
270 |
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Laksiri Jayasuriya, David Walker and Jan Gothard (eds), Legacies of White Australia: Race, Culture and Nation;
David Goldsworthy (ed.), Facing North: a Century of Australian Engagement with Asia, Volume 1, 1901 to the 1970s (David Ayres) |
272 |
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Donna Gabaccia and Franca Iacovetta (eds), Women, Gender and Transnational Lives: Italian Workers of the World;
Marlene Epp, Franca Iacovetta, and Frances Swyripa (eds), Sisters or Strangers? Immigrant, Ethnic and Racialised Women in Canadian History (Dimitria Groutsis) |
275 |
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| NOTICEBOARD |
279 |
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| LABOUR HISTORY PRIZE |
282 |
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| LABOUR HISTORY REFEREES |
282 |
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| THE GOLLAN PRIZE FOR AUSTRALIAN LABOUR HISTORY |
283 |
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| NATIONAL LABOUR HISTORY CONFERENCE |
284 |
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| NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS |
285 |
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| ASSLH DIRECTORY |
289 |
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| INFORMATION FOR CONTRIBUTORS AND SUBSCRIBERS |
290 |
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| EDITORIAL POLICY (revised February 2004) |
inside back cover |
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Cover illustration
Banner of the Stovemakers Union of NSW, Edgar Whitbread, 1920s.
Source: Noel Butlin Archives Centre, The Australian National University, Canberra, item no E245/212
By permission of the Australian Manufacturing Workers' Union.
This banner was made by Edgar Whitbread, Sydney's best-known banner painter of the period. It follows British union design traditions, presenting scenes of the work undertaken by members of the union. The upper scene presents an up-to-date urban image of products made by stovemakers, while the two lower images link the pre-industrial past in Britain to the experience of Australian bush workers. The banner, like many others of the period, is decorated with waratahs and flannel flowers, the floral emblems of New South Wales. |
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