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- Title
PROTECTING THE NATIONAL INTEREST: THE LABOR GOVERNMENT AND THE REFORM OF AUSTRALIA'S COLONIAL POLICY, 1942-45.
- Authors
Wright, Huntley
- Abstract
With the Japanese invasion of New Guinea and Papua during World War II, the Labor governments of John Curtin and Ben Chifley found it difficult to disentangle colonial from strategic interests. Investigated here is the extent to which these events led to an unwillingness to break with attitudes of the past or provided the basis for colonial reform. Prior to the Japanese occupation of New Guinea and Papua, Australia's strategic aspirations centered on the simple act of possession. After 1942, however, shocked by the lack of resistance to the Japanese advance in Southeast Asia and the Pacific, possession was no longer held as the sole criterion for security. The view of the Labor government was that regional security could not be guaranteed unless it had "an adequate basis in economic justice." What marked the defensive concerns of the Curtin and Chifley governments was precisely the degree to which Australian economic-strategic interests became entangled in a policy of colonial reform.
- Publication
Labour History, 2002, Issue 82, p65
- ISSN
0023-6942
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2307/27516842