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The three metre long red wooden pole is an instrument of humiliation for convicted criminals that is chillingly reminiscent of the Chinese Red Army. It has made its appearance, not under Maoist inspiration, but because of the absence of a functioning state legal system.
Jane Mayo Carolan confronts poverty in Australia.
Terms of endearment. Smashing idea. Back in the saddle.
Juliette Hughes interviews Fr Joseph Nguyen Cong Doan SJ.
Michael Furtado on public money and private schools.
Reviews of the films Monster, The Cat in the Hat, The Barbarian Invasions, and Capturing the Friedmans.
Despite some gains, no one can really question that, as a group, women have been and still are discriminated against by the mere fact of being women.
Madeleine Byrne finds Getting Away with Genocide? Elusive Justice and the Khmer Rouge Tribunal, by Tom Fawthrop and Helen Jarvis, vivid and timely.
Don Gazzard visits the national libraries of France and Britain.
Peter Yule’s Carlton: A History reviewed by Philip Harvey.
The legacy of the Felton Bequest
Kate Cherry reviews Creating frames: Contemporary Indigenous Theatre by Maryrose Casey.
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