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'Culture, writes David Throsby, refers to beliefs and values that bind us together. And if we know what our culture is, why would we need a cultural policy? ... A cultural policy would be a powerful tool with which to show what we really value about being Australian. A national debate, to define and assert our common values could well alleviate the fears at present dividing us.' (Publisher's blurb.)
Notes
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Launched on 8 February at Wharf 2, Sydney, by Cate Blanchett and David Throsby.
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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y
Art, Politics, Money : Revisiting Australia's Cultural Policy
Strawberry Hills
:
Currency Press
,
2018
13850489
2018
single work
criticism
'In 2006 I wrote one of the early Platform Papers (No. 7) under the title Does Australia Need a Cultural Policy? I was prompted to ask this question because it was then twelve years since the appearance of Australia’s first (and only) cultural policy, the document Creative Nation: Commonwealth Cultural Policy (October 1994) produced by the Keating Government. In the interim, following the Labor Party’s defeat at the 1996 election, we experienced ten years of John Howard’s prime ministership. Howard led a conservative administration that effectively buried Creative Nation when it came into office and subsequently showed no interest in formulating a cultural policy of its own.' (Publication summary)
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Culture Needs Cultivating
2006
single work
column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 18-19 February 2006; (p. 28) -
Policy-Free Zone, Please
2006
single work
review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 11-12 February 2006; (p. 40)
— Review of Does Australia Need a Cultural Policy? 2006 single work criticism
-
Policy-Free Zone, Please
2006
single work
review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 11-12 February 2006; (p. 40)
— Review of Does Australia Need a Cultural Policy? 2006 single work criticism -
Culture Needs Cultivating
2006
single work
column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 18-19 February 2006; (p. 28) -
y
Art, Politics, Money : Revisiting Australia's Cultural Policy
Strawberry Hills
:
Currency Press
,
2018
13850489
2018
single work
criticism
'In 2006 I wrote one of the early Platform Papers (No. 7) under the title Does Australia Need a Cultural Policy? I was prompted to ask this question because it was then twelve years since the appearance of Australia’s first (and only) cultural policy, the document Creative Nation: Commonwealth Cultural Policy (October 1994) produced by the Keating Government. In the interim, following the Labor Party’s defeat at the 1996 election, we experienced ten years of John Howard’s prime ministership. Howard led a conservative administration that effectively buried Creative Nation when it came into office and subsequently showed no interest in formulating a cultural policy of its own.' (Publication summary)