- Title
- Liberal imperialism in Australian political thought, 1902-14
- Creator
- Moore, Tod
- Relation
- Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History Vol. 43, Issue 1, p. 58-79
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03086534.2014.941167
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2015
- Description
- British politics immediately following the Boer War featured a group of politicians and intellectuals known as the Liberal Imperialists and this account explores the political thought of their Australian counterparts. Australian liberal intellectuals of particular relevance for this study were located in Melbourne, which was at that time the federal capital, and they were loosely clustered around the key political figure of the period, Alfred Deakin. The extended circle of Alfred Deakin provides scholars with a useful group of active intellectuals from whom it is possible to derive an idea of the Australian inflection given to Liberal Imperialist thought, concentrating on the intersection of notions of imperial unity and progressive social reform agendas which flourished in both Australia and Britain during the Edwardian era. The group of politicians and public intellectuals, comprising an overlapping membership including the Imperial Federation League, friends and associates of Alfred Deakin and the Boobooks Club, would subsequently evolve into the main Australian branch of the Round Table organisation. This article is concerned with discovering the outlines of the Australian version of Liberal Imperialist thought and especially the nature of the Australian inflection superimposed on this British set of ideas, as found in a variety of contemporary pamphlets, printed books and Boobooks minutes. The Australians were less pessimistic than Richard Jebb about the possibilities of a supranational imperial organisation but also insisted that such an organisation must respect the sovereignty of dominions. They differed from most of their British counterparts in supporting the widespread use of tariffs to nurture industry and they also supported the restrictive immigration position enshrined in the infamous White Australia policy, yet they were much in favour of the notion of a strong British navy.
- Subject
- Australian politics; Australian liberalism; British politics; Liberal Imperialists; Alfred Deakin
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1332070
- Identifier
- uon:26771
- Identifier
- ISSN:0308-6534
- Language
- eng
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