The establishment of post-war full employment (2 per cent unemployment) in Australia was a deliberate policy by the Curtin and Chifley ALP governments of 1941-1949, anticipated in speeches in opposition and at the 1942 Constitutional Convention. Even during 23 years in opposition, throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the ALP kept the Coalition government true to its 1949 pledge of maintaining full employment. From the mid 1970s, despite claiming to uphold the values of Curtin and Chifley, the ALP has preserved labour underutilisation to cower working people and drive productivity. This is precisely what Labor’s 1940s leadership most categorically opposed
Post-war affluence for a time appeared to threaten Labour's future as a party of government in Brita...
This year marks the twentieth anniversary of the Australian Labor Party's accession to power as the ...
The establishment of mass trade unions in the 19th Century made the working class a force to be reck...
Tim Rowse takes up two arguments which have been made about the political conditions of sustained fu...
In the Post World War 2 period up until the mid-1970s, everybody who wanted to earn an income was ab...
The years immediately after the Second World War witnessed over-full employment in the Australian ec...
Considers the nature of the Australian Labor Party and Labor governments in the course of a critique...
The Hawke Labor government was elected for its third term of office in 1987. It owes much of this s...
In October 2004 John Howard’s Liberal–National government won a surprising victory over the Labor Pa...
In April 1899, 28 men met in Coolgardie on the Eastern Goldfields to hold Western Australia's first ...
The economic 'reforms' associated with the broader neoliberal agenda first found expression in Austr...
During the postwar period, internal tensions plagued the Australian labour movement. Central to thes...
The year 2007 may well be remembered as one being short on major industrial disputation, yet one whe...
Once widely regarded as the workers greatest hope for a better world, the ALP today would rather pro...
The oldest continuing political party in Australia, the Australian Labor Party (ALP) emerged from a ...
Post-war affluence for a time appeared to threaten Labour's future as a party of government in Brita...
This year marks the twentieth anniversary of the Australian Labor Party's accession to power as the ...
The establishment of mass trade unions in the 19th Century made the working class a force to be reck...
Tim Rowse takes up two arguments which have been made about the political conditions of sustained fu...
In the Post World War 2 period up until the mid-1970s, everybody who wanted to earn an income was ab...
The years immediately after the Second World War witnessed over-full employment in the Australian ec...
Considers the nature of the Australian Labor Party and Labor governments in the course of a critique...
The Hawke Labor government was elected for its third term of office in 1987. It owes much of this s...
In October 2004 John Howard’s Liberal–National government won a surprising victory over the Labor Pa...
In April 1899, 28 men met in Coolgardie on the Eastern Goldfields to hold Western Australia's first ...
The economic 'reforms' associated with the broader neoliberal agenda first found expression in Austr...
During the postwar period, internal tensions plagued the Australian labour movement. Central to thes...
The year 2007 may well be remembered as one being short on major industrial disputation, yet one whe...
Once widely regarded as the workers greatest hope for a better world, the ALP today would rather pro...
The oldest continuing political party in Australia, the Australian Labor Party (ALP) emerged from a ...
Post-war affluence for a time appeared to threaten Labour's future as a party of government in Brita...
This year marks the twentieth anniversary of the Australian Labor Party's accession to power as the ...
The establishment of mass trade unions in the 19th Century made the working class a force to be reck...