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Mark Peel

Mark Peel reviews ‘Inequality in Australia’ by Alastair Greig, Fank Lewins and Kevin White, and ‘Australia’s Welfare Wars: The players, the politics and the ideologies’ by Philip Mendes

September 2003, no. 254 01 September 2003
These two new textbooks on welfare and in-equality admirably reflect the strengths of the Australian teaching and research tradition in these areas. Inequality in Australia bristles with discussions of evidence and empirical data, key points for discussion, boxes with further elaborations, and lists of suggested readings. It takes note of the most important debates about how people actually experi ... (read more)

Mark Peel reviews ‘Dirt Cheap: Life at the wrong end of the job market’ by Elisabeth Wynhausen

June–July 2005, no. 272 01 June 2005
In this important book, Elisabeth Wynhausen seeks to ‘animate the experience of a class of people who had remained invisible even as their numbers swelled’. That class is the ‘working poor’, the people who clean, cook, wait tables and deal with everyone else’s garbage. They are the so-called ‘losers’ from economic change: the men and especially the women who do the jobs the winners d ... (read more)

Mark Peel reviews ‘Ten Pound Poms: Australia’s invisible migrants’ by A. James Hammerton and Alistair Thomson

November 2005, no. 276 01 November 2005
Of late, there has been a welcome surge in the study of British migrants in Australia. James Jupp’s The English in Australia (2004) provided one of the first overviews since the 1960s. Andrew Hassam followed migrant Britons from the nineteenth into the twentieth century, and younger scholars such as Sara Wills, Carole Hamilton-Barwick and Lorraine Proctor have begun to explore the local intricac ... (read more)

Mark Peel reviews ‘Ordinary People’s Politics: Australians talk about life, politics, and the future of their country’ by Judith Brett and Anthony Moran

November 2006, no. 286 01 November 2006
Of late there has been a good deal of agitated conversation about the political attitudes of ordinary Australians. As Judith Brett and Anthony Moran point out in this compelling new book, this has often taken the form of a ‘war of words within the political élites’, with the right using its supposed empathy for everyday people as a weapon against intellectuals, and the left blaming the defici ... (read more)