Women won the right to vote in Queensland in 1905, but had to wait until 1915 and the election of the first Labor government to govern in its own right before they became eligible to stand for Parliament. Prior to 1989, women were only occasionally and randomly elected to the Queensland Parliament and until that year, only 11 women had sat in Parliament, and there were long gaps separating their representation
SUMMARY The number of women parliamentarians in Australia is gradually increasing; almost onethird ...
The stated vision of The University of Queensland was that it would be a university for all Queensla...
Like many liberal democracies, there is a gender gap in the Australian Parliament. While there has b...
Although the Election Act of 1915 enabled non-Indigenous women as well as men to stand as candidates...
Although Australia was one of the first countries to grant women the right to vote, it was not until...
This paper provides details on women elected to Australian parliaments since 1921, in chronological ...
Generations of South Australians have proudly said that ours was the first Australian legislature to...
Introduction: This publication updates work published by David Black in 1996 under the title Women p...
tag=1 data=Seating arrangements. by Felicity Lewis tag=2 data=Lewis, Felicity tag=3 data=Arena, t...
There has been a growing international literature on the substantive representation of women and how...
My Dear Dorothy,— In spite of the fact that we are well into the middle of April, that we are having...
On 18 December, 1894, the Constitution Amendment Act was passed in South Australian parliament makin...
This thesis focuses on the political representation of women. It is concerned with the extent to whi...
© 1996 Rhonda Lea CumberlandRecent reforms to local government in Victoria, Australia may have a ran...
Deborah Jordan delves into the records of the Women's Christian Temperance Union and discovers how t...
SUMMARY The number of women parliamentarians in Australia is gradually increasing; almost onethird ...
The stated vision of The University of Queensland was that it would be a university for all Queensla...
Like many liberal democracies, there is a gender gap in the Australian Parliament. While there has b...
Although the Election Act of 1915 enabled non-Indigenous women as well as men to stand as candidates...
Although Australia was one of the first countries to grant women the right to vote, it was not until...
This paper provides details on women elected to Australian parliaments since 1921, in chronological ...
Generations of South Australians have proudly said that ours was the first Australian legislature to...
Introduction: This publication updates work published by David Black in 1996 under the title Women p...
tag=1 data=Seating arrangements. by Felicity Lewis tag=2 data=Lewis, Felicity tag=3 data=Arena, t...
There has been a growing international literature on the substantive representation of women and how...
My Dear Dorothy,— In spite of the fact that we are well into the middle of April, that we are having...
On 18 December, 1894, the Constitution Amendment Act was passed in South Australian parliament makin...
This thesis focuses on the political representation of women. It is concerned with the extent to whi...
© 1996 Rhonda Lea CumberlandRecent reforms to local government in Victoria, Australia may have a ran...
Deborah Jordan delves into the records of the Women's Christian Temperance Union and discovers how t...
SUMMARY The number of women parliamentarians in Australia is gradually increasing; almost onethird ...
The stated vision of The University of Queensland was that it would be a university for all Queensla...
Like many liberal democracies, there is a gender gap in the Australian Parliament. While there has b...