Sir John Quick Lecture 2024. A Living Democracy: How Well Has Australian Democracy Responded to a Changing Society ?
Event status:
- Date:
- Thursday 17 October 2024 06:00 pm until Thursday 17 October 2024 07:00 pm (Add to calendar)
- Contact:
- Bendigo@latrobe.edu.au
+61354447239 - Presented by:
- Professor Frank Bongiorno AM
- Type of Event:
- Public Lecture
- Cost:
- FREE
Presented by : Professor Frank Bongiorno AM
This lecture will explore some aspects of the past and present of Australian democracy by examining its double-sidedness as a system designed by and for white British men that nonetheless provided openings for wider participation and influence by marginalised groups. While much has changed since Sir John Quick’s time, similar tensions and possibilities remain at the heart of our democracy – a system that ostensibly welcomes wide participation while still imposing formal and informal restrictions that undermine its quality.
Sir John Quick has an honoured place in the history of Australian democracy, arising from his key role in the design, in 1893, of a democratic pathway to the achievement of Federation. He was also co-author, with Robert Garran, of the foundational study of the federal movement and constitution. Yet Quick’s career also reminds us of the racially restrictive features of Australia’s emerging democracy in the nineteenth century. As a young politician in 1880, he had initiated a bill to restrict the voting rights of Chinese migrants in Victorian elections – ‘a vindictive proceeding’, said the Bendigo Advertiser.
Frank Bongiorno AM
Professor of History at the Australian National University where he was previously Head of the School of History. He is also a Distinguished Fellow of the Whitlam Institute at Western Sydney University, and formerly Senior Lecturer at King’s College London and Smuts Visiting Fellow in Commonwealth Studies at the University of Cambridge. His books include The People’s Party: Victorian Labor and the Radical Tradition 1875-1914 (1996), Dreamers and Schemers: A Political History of Australia (2022) and A Little History of the Australian Labor Party (co-authored with Nick Dyrenfurth: second edition, 2024). He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and Australian Academy of Humanities, and is President of the Council for the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences.
The Capital Theatre
50 View Street Bendigo 3550
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