This paper reflects upon the green political trajectory in Tasmania from the founding in 1972 of the world's first green party, the United Tasmania Group, to the recent 'electoral reform' that in effect disenfranchised most of the Tasmanian parliamentary greens (Crowley, 2000). It argues that green politics, whilst fundamentally transforming the island state of Tasmania in part through its nature conservation successes, has remained a politics at the periphery that is resisted by both the major parties. This peripheralisation is not entirely owed to the green's longstanding pursuit of wilderness preservation, however, but also to their preoccupation both with progressive politics and democratic accountability that has led them into state...
This thesis argues that the impact of the United Tasmania Group (UTG) on Tasmanian politics cannot ...
There has been much interest during recent years in the factors underpinning a rise in support for t...
The Greens have grown in strength as an electoral force in the last decade. Some of the discussion a...
This paper reflects upon the green political trajectory in Tasmania from the founding in 1972 of the...
This paper reflects upon the green political trajectory in Tasmania from the founding in 1972 of the...
Green politics in Tasmania is very much a politics of place, driven by struggles to save iconic natu...
Green politics in Tasmania is very much a politics of place, driven by struggles to save iconic natu...
In Tasmanian terms, the green political agenda founded in 1972 by the United Tasmania Group was a ra...
Australia’s relatively wild island state, Tasmania, was described two decades ago as a crucible of ...
This paper examines the Greens’ support of the conservative Liberal Rundle minority government in Ta...
This article takes Strom's and Moon's discussion of minority regimes and explores it in the Tasmania...
The natural environment features strongly in the ways that New Zealanders think about New Zealand. A...
This thesis is about the 'politics of meaning' in the context of environmental debate in Tasmania. ...
A strong showing for the Greens was the only bright note in the otherwise dismal Australian federal...
This thesis argues that the impact of the United Tasmania Group (UTG) on Tasmanian politics cannot ...
There has been much interest during recent years in the factors underpinning a rise in support for t...
The Greens have grown in strength as an electoral force in the last decade. Some of the discussion a...
This paper reflects upon the green political trajectory in Tasmania from the founding in 1972 of the...
This paper reflects upon the green political trajectory in Tasmania from the founding in 1972 of the...
Green politics in Tasmania is very much a politics of place, driven by struggles to save iconic natu...
Green politics in Tasmania is very much a politics of place, driven by struggles to save iconic natu...
In Tasmanian terms, the green political agenda founded in 1972 by the United Tasmania Group was a ra...
Australia’s relatively wild island state, Tasmania, was described two decades ago as a crucible of ...
This paper examines the Greens’ support of the conservative Liberal Rundle minority government in Ta...
This article takes Strom's and Moon's discussion of minority regimes and explores it in the Tasmania...
The natural environment features strongly in the ways that New Zealanders think about New Zealand. A...
This thesis is about the 'politics of meaning' in the context of environmental debate in Tasmania. ...
A strong showing for the Greens was the only bright note in the otherwise dismal Australian federal...
This thesis argues that the impact of the United Tasmania Group (UTG) on Tasmanian politics cannot ...
There has been much interest during recent years in the factors underpinning a rise in support for t...
The Greens have grown in strength as an electoral force in the last decade. Some of the discussion a...