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Books > History > Australasian & Pacific history > General
Volume I of the Official History of Australian Peacekeeping,
Humanitarian and Post-Cold War Operations recounts the Australian
peacekeeping missions that began between 1947 and 1982, and follows
them through to 2006, which is the end point of this series. The
operations described in The Long Search for Peace - some long, some
short; some successful, some not - represent a long period of
learning and experimentation, and were a necessary apprenticeship
for all that was to follow. Australia contributed peacekeepers to
all major decolonisation efforts: for thirty-five years in Kashmir,
fifty-three years in Cyprus, and (as of writing) sixty-one years in
the Middle East, as well as shorter deployments in Indonesia, Korea
and Rhodesia. This volume also describes some smaller-scale
Australian missions in the Congo, West New Guinea, Yemen, Uganda
and Lebanon. It brings to life Australia's long-term contribution
not only to these operations but also to the very idea of
peacekeeping.
In 1902 when New South Wales women celebrated the granting of their
right to vote, suffragist Rose Scott told the male politicians
present that their names would be remembered "not only in the
history of Australia but in that of the world," while the names of
the women would be forgotten. Her words have held true for the best
part of this century, until the publication of this book. Woman
Suffrage in Australia tells the story of the struggle for female
enfranchisement from the first stirrings of the movement in 1880,
as it gained momentum and South Australian women were given the
vote in 1894, to the success of the suffragists' campaigns when the
vote was granted in 1902 by the Commonwealth. The author considers
the international ramifications of the victory of Australian women
in attaining the vote, comparing their struggle with that of the
suffragists in America and the United Kingdom, who did not succeed
in being granted the vote until 1918 and 1920 respectively.
This book examines the relationship of the Australian colonies with
Britain and Empire in the late nineteenth century, and looks at the
first murmurings of Australian nationalism. It is the first
detailed study of the formative period 1880-1900. The book argues
that many of the features of the British Empire at this time can be
seen in the British-Australian connection. Luke Trainor shows that
the interests of British imperialism were greatly advanced in
Australia in the 1880s because of the increased involvement of
British capital in Australia. And while British imperialism
tolerated some Australian nationalism, this nationalism was highly
masculine in character, was based on dispossession of the
Aborigines and encouraged sub-imperialism in the Pacific. As we
approach the centenary of the Australian Constitution and debate
about an Australian republic becomes more heated, this book is a
timely re-examination of the colonial character of Australia's
federation and Australia's incorporation into an imperial
framework.
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