01176nam0 22002891i 450 UON0050825220231205105445.523978-95-323-0082-620220406d2008 |0itac50 baitaHR|||| 1||||Osvaldo Ramousil giornalismo, l'impegno culturale e criticoatti del convegno Fiume, 26 maggio 2007a cura di Gianna Mazzieri SankovićFiumeComunità degli italiani di Fiume2008157 p.24 cmvalore stimatoIT-UONSI ITAII/2839Ramous, OsvaldoUONC099316FIRijekaUONL003748850.9Letteratura italiana, 1900-21Mazzieri SankovićGiannaUONV286906Comunità degli italiani di FiumeUONV286913650ITSOL20250228RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00508252SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI ITA II 2839 SI 38673 5 2839 valore stimatoOsvaldo Ramous2813899UNIOR03055nam 2200457z 450 991097023680332120240509011018.097805228600300522860036(CKB)4100000007759095(MiAaPQ)EBC5718381(MiAaPQ)EBC31903776(Au-PeEL)EBL31903776(OCoLC)1493614613(Perlego)1881454(EXLCZ)99410000000775909520190317d2009 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierConfusion the making of the Australian two-party system /editors, Paul Strangio, Nick Dyrenfurth1st ed.MelbourneMUP Academic Digital20091 online resource (320 pages)Cover; Title; Contents; Contributors; Introduction; Part I: Parties; 1 'the fortunes of my own little band':; 2 'for the sake of a straight out fight':; 3 'Vote down the conspiracy':; Part II: Other Perspectives; 4 'so manifestly unreal and irrelevant':; 5 'an intensity of feeling such as I had never before witnessed':; 6 'politics among the people':; 7 'My heart bleeds':; Part III: Legacies; 8 Whatever Happened to Deakinite Liberalism?; 9 Whatever Happened to Free Trade Liberalism?; 10 'from a purely working class standpoint':; Index; CopyrightIn Confusion, some of Australia's foremost political historians including Judith Brett and Stuart Macintyre revisit the seminal moment when liberals threw in their lot with the conservatives. In May 1909, Alfred Deakin, the radical liberal doyen, struck an agreement for a controversial 'fusion' with the anti-Labor factions, with the new grouping later adopting the name 'Liberal Party'. After a heated campaign, Labor won the 1910 election, forming the first majority government in the history of the Commonwealth. The Australian party system—as we still largely know it one hundred years on—had crystallised. How had this occurred? For most of the previous decade Labor and Deakin had been allies. Was the anti-Labor alliance the inevitable outcome of middle-class men rallying against the growing electoral might of the workers' party? What were the long-term consequences for both sides of politics? With Labor in power federally and in all but one state, the non-Labor side of politics has been plunged into a period of introspection about its coalition arrangements, and about the legitimate traditions of Australian liberalism. Can the current Liberals learn from the events of a century ago? Political partiesAustraliaHistoryAustraliaPolitics and governmentPolitical partiesHistory.324.29407Strangio Paul1593141Dyrenfurth Nick1786917MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910970236803321Confusion4319430UNINA