Carmen Lawrence: Fear and Politics Print E-mail

 

Publisher: 
Date: June 2006
Category: AUST STUDIES

PAPERBACK BOOK, $22.00, Availabililty: In Stock 9781920769871

The survival of our democracies depends not on our capacity to hit back at the terrorists, but on our capacity to think for ourselves. ­ Dr Carmen Lawrence

To talk of Australians and fear in the one breath might seem a contradiction. A defining element of our vision of ourselves is of a resilient and fearless bunch of iconoclasts who could never be stampeded into frightened submission.

But Dr Carmen Lawrence argues that fear has been a crucial factor in shaping Australian public policy in recent years, and in Fear and Politics she charts its consequences on the Australian body politic. She discusses how xenophobia has shaped policies toward refugees, indigenous Australians and Islamic fundamentalists, and examines the effects of being constantly warned about the risk of terrorism. She also looks at the sustained campaigns on law and order, and the exaggerated anxieties people now have of the risks of assault, murder, child abuse, and robbery.

Dr Lawrence argues that fear can never provide a foundation of moral and political argument, and that the necessary antidote to the toxin of fear is a wholehearted embrace of the principles of freedom, equality, and co-operation. Human betterment must again be the prime focus of politics ­ for all of our sakes.

Carmen Lawrence became Australia’s first woman premier ­ of Western Australia ­ in 1990. She entered federal politics in 1994 and was appointed minister for Human Services and Health and minister assisting the prime minister for the Status of Women. In opposition, Dr Lawrence has held several shadow portfolios including the Environment; Industry, Innovation and Technology; Reconciliation, Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Affairs; the Arts; and Status of Women. Dr Lawrence became president of the Australian Labor Party in 2004. Dr Lawrence speaks and writes regularly about refugee policy and democratic reform.
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'Lawrence is an astute politician and one of the most articulate members of the Australian parliament. She eschews platitudes and speaks English … a timely message in a gutsy and thoughtful book.' ­ John Button, Sydney Morning Herald