In early 2010, more than 15,000 people gathered on Bourke Street in front of Victoria’s Parliament building to register their protest against an unpopular government decision.1 The colourful crowd chanted and marched, sported placards and banners, and listened to speeches by local identities.What were they protesting about? Climate change? Refugees? The war in Afghanistan?No, they were protesting about a decision by Liquor Licensing Victoria to enforce onerous security requirements on live music venues in Melbourne. The new regulations had led to the closure of one of Melbourne’s best-loved rock venues, a Collingwood pub named The Tote. Many other venues were threatened with the same fate.This was a protest about cultural ...
These observations are the starting point for this chapter which examines the ways in which key aspe...
A manifestation of the anti-colonialist sentiment in Malaya and Singapore during the post-war period...
This article analyses the evolution of police \u27move-on\u27 (dispersal) powers in Australia, with ...
This chapter from More than luck argues that it is time Australia revised its cultural policy and qu...
Culture and the arts have not featured prominently in this year’s election campaign. That’s a shame,...
Mass protest serves either to pressure the government to change policy or to heighten awareness of t...
In recent years, numerous Australian local councils have made headlines by deciding to cease or move...
Cultural policy in Australia is about bureaucratic fashion, and history, and tradition -- but not ev...
Conflicts rooted in questions of morality and values—so-called “culture wars”—pose difficult questio...
Australian federal cultural policy has been shaped by the political party in government in ways that...
When the Howard government came to office, Australia was flush with two decades of significant polic...
The live music pub and club scene has historically been regarded as the source of a distinctively Au...
Copyright permission has been sought but has not been received. Therefore this material will remain ...
Peaceful acts of protest are relatively common in popular Australian sports and entertainment. Tradi...
While local governments have traditionally been thought relatively powerless and unpolitical, this h...
These observations are the starting point for this chapter which examines the ways in which key aspe...
A manifestation of the anti-colonialist sentiment in Malaya and Singapore during the post-war period...
This article analyses the evolution of police \u27move-on\u27 (dispersal) powers in Australia, with ...
This chapter from More than luck argues that it is time Australia revised its cultural policy and qu...
Culture and the arts have not featured prominently in this year’s election campaign. That’s a shame,...
Mass protest serves either to pressure the government to change policy or to heighten awareness of t...
In recent years, numerous Australian local councils have made headlines by deciding to cease or move...
Cultural policy in Australia is about bureaucratic fashion, and history, and tradition -- but not ev...
Conflicts rooted in questions of morality and values—so-called “culture wars”—pose difficult questio...
Australian federal cultural policy has been shaped by the political party in government in ways that...
When the Howard government came to office, Australia was flush with two decades of significant polic...
The live music pub and club scene has historically been regarded as the source of a distinctively Au...
Copyright permission has been sought but has not been received. Therefore this material will remain ...
Peaceful acts of protest are relatively common in popular Australian sports and entertainment. Tradi...
While local governments have traditionally been thought relatively powerless and unpolitical, this h...
These observations are the starting point for this chapter which examines the ways in which key aspe...
A manifestation of the anti-colonialist sentiment in Malaya and Singapore during the post-war period...
This article analyses the evolution of police \u27move-on\u27 (dispersal) powers in Australia, with ...