Issue 60
August - September 2002

Editorial


Destroying the World to Save It
Guy Rundle

Descant for Dog Whistles
Guy Rundle

Against the Current

What is Owed to the Stranger
Jacques Derrida

An International Criminal Court?
Paul James

Does Plagiarism Really Matter?
John Hinkson

Mother of a Debate
Alexander Kirkham

Bad Neighbour Policy -- Australia, Kyoto, and the Pacific
Sarojini Krishnapillai

Left Without Leadership
Frank Barbaro

Sino Mining in Northern Tibet
Gabriel Lafitte

Consensus Conferences and the 'People's Enlightenment'
Sharon Beder

PETER JULL
On First Viewing Atanarjuat, the Fast Runner

 

 

 

 

Features


Can a Radically Human Project be Renewed in the Twenty-First Century

Guy Rundle

Blood From a Stone
Larissa Behrendt

Two Traditions of the Sea
Nonie Sharp

Where Can the Liberals Go?
Charles Richardson

Love of the Master's Game
Gideon Haigh

 

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Review

Progressive Reform: Boris Frankel's When the Boat Comes In
John Quiggan

Poetry: Jack Hibberd Ideology

Babies, Literary Tics and Ritalin
Kath Kenny

Ghost Films and Other Spookiness
Chris Hawkes

TEXTNOTES
Charles Glaspole on Jung and the New Age and Valerie Yule on Bank Behaving Badly

Letters and Debate

Jill Singer on Public Intellectual (A)Genders, John Carlson Responds to Alan Roberts on Depleted Uranium

Poetry Philip Harvey: South Coast Valley