Abstract
Reflecting on his memories of growing up, Roger Bradbury wonders whether approaches to policy have changed much at all. In the 1950s, Southport – where I grew up – was just a small Queensland coastal town subsisting on fishing, agriculture, forestry, and a bit of tourism. The town had not yet merged with its smaller neighbouring villages to form the Gold Coast. Life was quiet, provincial, and pleasant. I attended Southport State School and accidentally learned some valuable lessons in policy, politics, and power there. I say accidental because any education in that school was a side effect of a system designed to produce a barely literate, compliant proletariat. But still, the insights I gained there stayed with me, and helped me understand how people use power and policy.
Original language | English |
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Specialist publication | Policy Forum - Asia and the Pacific Policy Society |
Publication status | Published - 2020 |