Scholars have explored the history of attitudes toward northern Australia primarily in the context of the White Australia policy and its implications for the troubling human diversity of the north. This article argues that alongside this history is another story, in which the problem of northern Australia was not so much about managing humanity, as managing nature. This article explores the way in which conceptions of northern Australia, and ambitions for its development from the late nineteenth century, were shaped by two intellectual traditions that find their origins in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century British imperialism: political economy, and a Protestant theology of mankind’s proper relationship with the earth
Alec Chisholm (1890–1977) inspired generations of Australians to see nature anew. A prolific writer ...
Northern Australia has a population of 1.2 million people across nearly half the continental landmas...
This article examines theoretical as well as methodological issues provoked by different responses t...
For seventy years after federation, Australians fretted over the "empty north" of their continent. T...
Northern Australia has a population of 1.2 million people across nearly half the continental landmas...
My title paraphrases that of Marilyn Lake and Henry Reynolds's recent book, Drawing the Global Colou...
As a result of negative net immigration during the 1890s depression, Australians at the time of Fede...
The Payne-Fletcher Report of 1937 offers an intriguing array of commentary on the environmental attr...
A number of major policy documents and academic research have informed a renewed push in recent year...
Over time, the Immigration Restriction Act of 1901 and its later amendments were remarkably successf...
The history of a nation is partly the history of its borders - borders which include and which exclu...
Within Australia almost since colonisation, there have been debates about whether water supply would...
This account sets itself against the binarism of physical versus cultural determinism that drives po...
This article considers three different historical events from the point of view of their connections...
This is a study of the ideas behind natural resource use in North Queensland. I argue that settlers ...
Alec Chisholm (1890–1977) inspired generations of Australians to see nature anew. A prolific writer ...
Northern Australia has a population of 1.2 million people across nearly half the continental landmas...
This article examines theoretical as well as methodological issues provoked by different responses t...
For seventy years after federation, Australians fretted over the "empty north" of their continent. T...
Northern Australia has a population of 1.2 million people across nearly half the continental landmas...
My title paraphrases that of Marilyn Lake and Henry Reynolds's recent book, Drawing the Global Colou...
As a result of negative net immigration during the 1890s depression, Australians at the time of Fede...
The Payne-Fletcher Report of 1937 offers an intriguing array of commentary on the environmental attr...
A number of major policy documents and academic research have informed a renewed push in recent year...
Over time, the Immigration Restriction Act of 1901 and its later amendments were remarkably successf...
The history of a nation is partly the history of its borders - borders which include and which exclu...
Within Australia almost since colonisation, there have been debates about whether water supply would...
This account sets itself against the binarism of physical versus cultural determinism that drives po...
This article considers three different historical events from the point of view of their connections...
This is a study of the ideas behind natural resource use in North Queensland. I argue that settlers ...
Alec Chisholm (1890–1977) inspired generations of Australians to see nature anew. A prolific writer ...
Northern Australia has a population of 1.2 million people across nearly half the continental landmas...
This article examines theoretical as well as methodological issues provoked by different responses t...