At its peak, Gunns Ltd had a market value of one billion, was listed on the ASX 200, was the largest employer in the state of Tasmania and its largest private landowner. Most of its profits came from woodchipping, mainly from clear-felled old-growth forests. A pulp mill was central to its expansion plans. Its collapse in 2012 was a major national news story, as was the arrest of its CEO for insider trading. Quentin Beresford illuminates for the first time the dark corners of the Gunns empire. He shows it was built on close relationships with state and federal governments, political donations and use of the law to intimidate and silence its critics. Gunns may have been single-minded in its pursuit of a pulp mill in Tasmania\u27s Tamar Valley...
This study seeks to discover why public opinion on such environmental issues as the logging of old g...
Major developments have the potential to generate significant economic benefit and substantial envir...
In the first decade of the century, Australia struck it lucky. A voracious global appetite fo...
The demise of Gunns in the spring of 2012 was as much a psychological shock to Tasmanians as it was ...
When Gunns announced its intention to build a pulp mill at Bell Bay in Northern Tasmania in mid-200...
This is a case study of the company, Gunns Ltd, which proposed a pulp mill in the state of Tasmania,...
Between 2010 and 2015 the Liberal Party of Australia and the Queensland Liberal National Party accep...
In November 2004, the Tasmanian Government requested the state’s planning body, the Resource Plannin...
The declining years of a gold-mining town are fraught with the tensions and bitterness of unfulfille...
Many Australian foresters remain unaware of the McLibel case, a 15-year public relations disaster th...
For almost eight decades, between 1914 and 1983, a single focused and cohesive government strategy ...
In June 2007, twenty years after the Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke announced the Decade of Lan...
A storm of protest was unleashed on 29 April 1997 when BHP announced that the firm would close its s...
The Cloncurry region is likely to have the same impression on a modern visitor as it had on the inve...
Mining in the Tui portion of the Te Aroha field was revived in 1948 by Benjamin John Dunsheath, a sm...
This study seeks to discover why public opinion on such environmental issues as the logging of old g...
Major developments have the potential to generate significant economic benefit and substantial envir...
In the first decade of the century, Australia struck it lucky. A voracious global appetite fo...
The demise of Gunns in the spring of 2012 was as much a psychological shock to Tasmanians as it was ...
When Gunns announced its intention to build a pulp mill at Bell Bay in Northern Tasmania in mid-200...
This is a case study of the company, Gunns Ltd, which proposed a pulp mill in the state of Tasmania,...
Between 2010 and 2015 the Liberal Party of Australia and the Queensland Liberal National Party accep...
In November 2004, the Tasmanian Government requested the state’s planning body, the Resource Plannin...
The declining years of a gold-mining town are fraught with the tensions and bitterness of unfulfille...
Many Australian foresters remain unaware of the McLibel case, a 15-year public relations disaster th...
For almost eight decades, between 1914 and 1983, a single focused and cohesive government strategy ...
In June 2007, twenty years after the Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke announced the Decade of Lan...
A storm of protest was unleashed on 29 April 1997 when BHP announced that the firm would close its s...
The Cloncurry region is likely to have the same impression on a modern visitor as it had on the inve...
Mining in the Tui portion of the Te Aroha field was revived in 1948 by Benjamin John Dunsheath, a sm...
This study seeks to discover why public opinion on such environmental issues as the logging of old g...
Major developments have the potential to generate significant economic benefit and substantial envir...
In the first decade of the century, Australia struck it lucky. A voracious global appetite fo...