Search results
Filter
25 results
Sort by:
Archives, anthologies and other source books†
In: Australian outlook: journal of the Australian Institute of International Affairs, Volume 32, Issue 1, p. 101-106
Australian foreign policy
In: Current notes on international affairs, Volume 39, p. 81-91
ISSN: 0011-3751
Australian foreign policy [its foundations]
In: Current notes on international affairs, Volume 38, p. 10-18
ISSN: 0011-3751
Australian foreign policy
In: Current notes on international affairs, Volume 37, p. 190-198
ISSN: 0011-3751
Australia and Southeast Asia
In: Foreign affairs: an American quarterly review, Volume 43, Issue 1, p. 51
ISSN: 2327-7793
Australia and Southeast Asia
In: Foreign affairs, Volume 43, p. 51-63
ISSN: 0015-7120
The economic development of Papua and New Guinea
In: Australian outlook: journal of the Australian Institute of International Affairs, Volume 16, Issue 1, p. 5-25
The economic development of Papua and New Guinea [can it be made a viable economy sustaining an independent community? address]
In: Australian outlook: journal of the Australian Institute of International Affairs, Volume 16, p. 5-25
ISSN: 0004-9913
James Hardy Vaux: The Memoirs of an English Rascal
In: Australian quarterly: AQ, Volume 10, Issue 1, p. 67
ISSN: 1837-1892
The chance of politics
After Paul Hasluck's death in 1993 his son Nicholas, himself a well-known writer, read the extraordinary manuscript on which The Chance of Politics is based. Drawn from Hasluck's private notebooks, it provides intimate portraits of people he knew in Canberra: among them Evatt, Casey, Barwick, Calwell, McEwen, McMahon, Whitlam and Fraser. There is also an enthralling account of events after the death of Harold Holt when John Gorton defeated Hasluck in a ballot to decide the new prime minister. Vivid, honest and wise, The Chance of Politics is more than a brilliant work of biography or an informal history of a fascinating era. In describing the struggles for power, the clashes of will and the trade-offs between leadership and expedience, Paul Hasluck takes us to the heart of politics and political character.
The Government and the People, 1942-1945
In: Military Affairs, Volume 35, Issue 3, p. 120