Category Archives: Political theory

375 published posts in this category.

Sortition? Hmmm...

I am about to break my indication that I am unlikely to post again until after Jen's death. I am bored to death in this Regis joint filled with old codgers with assorted disabilities. How many I will write is another question. I have been thinking about Nicholas Gruen's sortit...

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Posted in Political theory, Democracy

The ABC (ombudsman) stopped talking to me

There was an ostensible “news” article on the ABC news site about Trump’s executive order (EO) titled “DEFENDING WOMEN FROM GENDER IDEOLOGY EXTREMISM AND RESTORING BIOLOGICAL TRUTH TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.” The capitalisation is not mine; it is in the executive order FFS! Th...

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Posted in Science, Gender, Media, Political theory, Social

The US Election and the End of the Media Monoculture

There’s a strong gerontocratic tinge to US politics of late — the youngest of Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, Bernie Sanders, Donald Trump, Elizabeth Warren and Mitch McConnel is Chuck at 73. Many a theory has been propounded to explain this phenomenon, but a simple on...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Alasdair MacIntyre on how ethically lost we are

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="507"] A young Mondrian in 1908 channels an old Monet but is really thinking “I wonder if a bunch of rectangles on canvas would sell? If it did it could solve a lot of problems, perhaps not for everyone, but certainly for me.”[/caption] O...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Ethics

Escape from planet sensible: Stunning listening

Adolf never had much time for planet sensible. Here he is after the Reichstag fire with fellow traveller Sefton Delmer who was Berlin correspondent for the "Daily Express" from 1928 to 1933, To the left of Hitler: August Wilhelm of Prussia. In the middle of the picture, half h...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, History, Media, Political theory

The world of bullshit we’ve built: Reflections on a scene from Utopia

https://youtube.com/shorts/_XXLgZ8rYew?si=i8EWpLRcHJ3-rpjF I recently took my son to the stage play of Yes, Prime Minister. … The decades have made a huge difference in the sensibility of the new production … . The series ran through most of the 1980s, a period that contained...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Political theory

From repressive tolerance to repressive diversity

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="506"] A brilliant illustration of the broad terrain of both concepts. It’s telling (and sad for a left leaning centrist like me) that this comes from the very right wing Claremont Institute . (Though their artist may have got it from som...

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Posted in Political theory

The off-ramp from reality

This post began as an ad for an artist with traditional and AI graphic design skills. If you want to apply, please be my guest. But the post also presents a nice simplification of a way of thinking. Right now I'm wondering how to illustrate what I call "the off-ramp from reali...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Understanding the present by listening to the past: Walter Lippmann's "The Public Philosophy"

One way to get beneath the surface of what's going on is to read people who were writing about issues, as they emerged rather than in more modern times when they’d become the norm and become infused in our commonsense. I was browsing in one of the few remaining second-hand boo...

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Posted in Politics - international, History, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries, War and military

How did the Chilean left crash their referendum?

I’ve been looking for an explainer of what’s been going on in Chile and, thanks to Brad Delong for pointing it out . Of particular interest was the way a government won 55 percent of the vote and then held a referendum on a new constitution that crashed— as in really CRASHED!...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Fighting political polarisation

From this week's Substack of mine. Thomas B. Edsall has an important writeup of research into reducing political polarisation. But to me it seems to be heading in an unhelpfully scientistic direction. Virtually all the researchers quoted examine the causal pathways leading to...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

What kind of Character is Sam Bankman-Fried

A friend sent me this article documenting Sam Bankman-Fried's now well known text exchange with Vox journalist Kelsey Piper. I couldn't help but think of Alasdair MacIntyre's characters. As MacIntyre put it in After Virtue: What is specific to each culture is in large and cent...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Polarisation and the Case for Citizens’ Juries

Cross posted from Quillette from 16 Feb 2019, but now behind a paywall. When a conversation is not a conversation: party political discourse in the early 21st century I It looks like liberal democracy is falling apart. The chaos of Donald Trump was unimaginable just a decade a...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory, Web and Government 2.0, Ethics, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

The David Solomon Lecture: Government 2.0 a couple of years on . . .

https://youtu.be/ftssK9b8WFI Finding a formatting mess when I looked this up on Troppo , I've reposted it here for the record. I'm a bit embarrassed by my wooden speaking style. Here’s the David Solomon Lecture I’ll be giving at the Brisbane Museum of Modern Art in an hour’s t...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Web and Government 2.0, Innovation, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Journalism as a system of domination: Peter Dutton edition

https://twitter.com/abc730/status/1557673265493344259 Peter Dutton is a human being. That’s not a moral point I’m making — I’m just talking about the task of making sense of others — particularly since, if we can’t kill them, we have to live with them. (And trying to kill some...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Philosophy, Media, Political theory, Democracy

Should Liz Cheney be your hero?

Like me, Leslie Cannold is deeply grateful for Liz Chaney right now — you know, the way she’s speaking truth to fruitcakery. Liz Cheney is my hero. On positions of policy, I disagree with her almost 100% of the time, but I see her as one of the first moral heroes of this mille...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Political theory, Democracy

Economic Ideas and Policy Outcomes: Ross Garnaut's Gruen Lecture

[caption id="attachment_36333" align="alignleft" width="1024"] Austro-Hungarian Economists[/caption] Below is Ross Garnaut's lecture in honour of my Dad. Economic Ideas and Policy Outcomes: Applications to Climate and Energy Fred Gruen signed up as Professor of Economics in th...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Libertarian Musings, Political theory, Social Policy

An Alt-left?

https://youtu.be/gYKPWkvTRIg I What is it with James Burnham? I associate him — via Curtis Yarvin — with the alt-right. And Burnham is the founding text of what I call the Alt-centre (of which I am the founder and which I'm hoping to parlay into world domination if only I can...

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Posted in History, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Gruen: detox democracy through representation by random selection

I use Troppo to make various notes for file as it were for reference in future. And on wanting to record something I found that I hadn't reproduced this post — which was originally at The Mandarin — here. So here it is, with some notes to file below. Part one. Part two is here...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Fast foodification: what is it, what's driving it, how do we stop it?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n43vCEju5Ck In this discussion, Peyton Bowman and I discuss my term ‘fast-foodification’. I coined the word trying to describe modern politics. The techniques used by politicians and their professional enablers are optimised to attract votes in...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Ethics, Cultural Critique, Democracy

Why AI isn’t coming for us any time soon

As some of you may know, I am now publishing a weekly substack of articles I've found interesting on the net and in some cases offering some summary commentary. In an unprecedented move, the kind of once in a 1,000 year event that could never have been predicted, I'm now publi...

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Posted in Philosophy, Society, Political theory, Social, Cultural Critique

Australia enters the post-party phase of Western democracy

Originally published on The Interpreter . Two federal elections ago, in 2016, the primary vote for the Labor Party and the Liberal-Nationals coalition reached record lows, while the number of voters who put an independent or minor party first on their ballot paper reached new...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory, Democracy

If we tolerate this, our children will be next … Guest post by Dennis Glover

Question: Given that history repeats, what year is this? Fifteen months ago, when Donald Trump’s rag-tag militias stormed the Capitol building in Washington D.C., I thought for a moment we might be living in 1923, witnessing the rebirth of western fascism. Such were the simila...

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Posted in Politics - international, History, Terror, Political theory, Democracy

Theorisation: Reinventing Orwell and smothering him in verbiage

I've spoken about what I call "strategisation" before . This involves dressing something up as particularly strategically apposite. The example I gave is this assertion: Services will continue to make a growing contribution to economic activity in Australia. It is therefore im...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Will you join me in the alt-centre?

It’s a funny thing with names. Names given in jest and contempt are adopted by their targets. After over a decade of marketing consulting services as “Lateral Economics”, I decided it wasn’t so much a brand as a method and have given some talks to that effect. Anyway a new rec...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy

Practical steps towards Ivan Illich’s world

[caption id="attachment_35644" align="alignleft" width="1163"] For anyone who’s interested I recommend David Cayley’s series of CBC radio documentaries on Illich. (He’s the best broadcaster I’ve come across). The first series of five programs focuses on Illich’s social thought...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Education, Economics and public policy, Health, Political theory, Innovation, Ethics, Cultural Critique, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Gladys' "unerring, Dunning-Kruger infused, self-belief and self-regard"

Here's a (lightly edited) exchange between me and a friend who, I'm going to assume would prefer to remain nameless. If they want to change this, they will let me know and I will change it. The exchange should be read downwards — with the first email you encounter below being...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory, Cultural Critique

The Great Covid Panic: now out!

It's here, the booklet I am sure you have all been waiting for. The one which Gigi Foster and Michael Baker slaved over for 10 months . It is also on Kindle . It is dedicated to all the victims of the Panic, in poor countries and rich countries. They include our children, the...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Life, Philosophy, Print media, History, Humour, Education, Literature, Society, Religion, Theatre, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Terror, Science, Journalism, Media, Libertarian Musings, Health, Political theory, Law, Dance, Review, Bargains, Travel, WOW! - Amazing, Social, Parenting, Ethics, Medical, Public and Private Goods, Death and taxes, Inequality, Social Policy, Democracy, Employment, Sortition and citizens’ juries, Isegoria, Coronavirus crisis

Lockdowns and liberty

This short post grew out of a response to Paul Frijters on another thread. Naturally enough, those who don't want to lockdown are telling us about our precious liberties. You know those we fought for at Gallipoli, and Iraq and Afghanistan. In any event, I strongly agree with t...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy, Coronavirus crisis

Citizen-jury appointments?

Dear Troppodillians, lend me your critical eye. I ask you to consider the system of citizen-jury appointments I have in mind, and tell me how the vested interests would try to game it, ie why it would not work and whether the system can be improved. Bear with me as I describe...

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Posted in Politics - national, History, Society, Theatre, Libertarian Musings, Political theory, Law, Business, Social, Cultural Critique, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Book Launch of the Handbook for Wellbeing Policy-Making July 1st

Wellbeing & Policy Making Book Launch Event on 1st July 5-6.30pm London Time. Attending the Launch is Free, the book is not! [blurb from Nancy Hey, director of the WW Centre for Wellbeing]: The What Works Centre for Wellbeing , and our commissioning partners at the ESRC: Econo...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Life, Philosophy, History, Society, Theatre, Economics and public policy, Science, Health, Political theory, Social, Public and Private Goods, Death and taxes, Social Policy, Democracy

Confessions of a Traitor to the Cause: Some reflections looking back from John Burnheim

As I struggle with my ninety-fifth year, I would like to beg forgiveness from the true believers in sortition. Near forty years ago, in 1985, I published a book Is Democracy Possible? with the subtitle The Alternative to Parliamentary Democracy. The sortitionists believed that...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

The greatest music of all time: from Nicholas Gruen (Cultural Icon)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0NCNUoY0UJA&t=20s A few weeks back I was rather taken aback to receive an email which I took to be a hoax: Hi Nicholas We would like to invite you on the Greatest Music of All Time podcast. The episodes are a good opportunity to promote upcoming...

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Posted in Music, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Surveillance capitalism is helping the disadvantaged: who knew?

Here's some claims about recent research on fintech and AI. Berg, Burg, Gombovic, and Puri (2018) suggest that digital footprints can help boost financial inclusion, allowing unbanked consumers to have better access to finance. Similarly, Frost et al. (2019) show that fintech...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Gender, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Pyramids of lies: Some more from Stefan Zweig

I continue listening to Stefan Zweig's description of the disasters of the twentieth century a passage of which I'll reproduce below. My big essay on the Productivity Commission's Draft Indigenous Evaluation Strategy represented a bit of intellectual progress for me. As I wrot...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Political theory, Democracy

The more things change … Stefan Zweig on the difference in mood attending the outbreak the two World Wars

I've been listening to The World of Yesterday , the memoirs Stefan Zweig. Zweig was probably the best-known author in 1930s Europe and produced a mountain of material. Essays, fiction, history, poetry, translations, you name it. Today few know of him, though that may be differ...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Political theory, Democracy

Founding brothers: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson

Writing about sortition, equality and merit, I spent a good part of today reading the last chapter of a book I read a decade or so ago on the relationship John Adams and Thomas Jefferson had in their dotage – including jumping in and out of references and checking up for insta...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Political theory, Democracy

Uncertainty, Part 1: McGurk

As one the best illustrations of the way our minds deal with uncertainty, consider the following video. Please listen and watch at least 30 seconds so you can experience the three sequences of spoken words. [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PWGeUztTkRA[/embed] Pretty much...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Theatre, Economics and public policy, Science, Media, Political theory, Social

Two more interesting articles on covid mass hysteria

Guess which crackpot started his article on covid in that notorious right-wing publication 'The Guardian' with the sentence "The virus has been used as a pretext in many countries to crush dissent, criminalise freedoms and silence reporting"? It's that obvious conspiracy-nutte...

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Posted in Politics - international, History, Science, Health, Political theory, Inequality, Social Policy, Democracy, Coronavirus crisis

The rise of moral bubbles?

We may be headed for a world of endless moral bubbles, where targets for outrage can be identified and turned into bogeymen in record time, with record audiences. It would be QAnon, but for anything you can think of and some stuff you can't. Author's note: What follows is spec...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy

The sound and the fury signifying nothing: some observations on the new politics

Back in the day, (which is to say for most of the 20th century until things began changing in the 1980s, each of the major political parties had a few percentage points of the population as members. In addition to the intrinsic rewards of being part of one’s country’s social a...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

History is repeating: Dennis Glover on the Capitol Hill riot

If something can happen once, it can happen again. This is the oft-ignored first lesson of history. The second lesson is that humans usually forget lesson number one. Watching the attempted coup unfold at the Capitol building, those two lessons kept working through my mind. Ne...

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Posted in Politics - international, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Democracy

Historical analogies for the covid-mania

“men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses more slowly, and one by one.” MacKay, 1841. Right now, London and much of Europe are in peak covid-mania, entering another two months of lockdowns on to...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Politics - international, History, Economics and public policy, Science, Libertarian Musings, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Death and taxes, Social Policy, Employment, Coronavirus crisis

Long-Term Effects of Equal Sharing: Evidence from Inheritance Rules for Land

Filed under "Studies that confirm my priors". Long-Term Effects of Equal Sharing: Evidence from Inheritance Rules for Land Charlotte Bartels, Simon Jäger, and Natalie Obergruber #28230 Abstract: What are the long-term economic effects of a more equal distribution of wealth? We...

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Posted in History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Rescuing humanity from Neo-liberalism: by John Burnheim

[caption id="attachment_34478" align="aligncenter" width="509"] Quite a cool mural that popped up when I searched Google Images for 'neoliberalism'.[/caption] In his powerful critique of Neo-liberalism, Nicholas Gruen draws heavily on the work of Michael Polanyi. The following...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Democracy

From Trump to eternity: The fate of the political arts in the modern world

Published in and edited form in The Conversation . Martin Wolf has a crisp face-to-camera opinion piece in which he points out that populism in government hasn’t lined up neatly against relative success in keeping populations safe from COVID. Thus in the Anglosphere, Donald’s...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Orwell that ends well: Can evaluation save us from ourselves?

[caption id="attachment_34242" align="aligncenter" width="2304"] I really love this design by Casey Finley, who was kind enough to allow me to publish it here. He has a very distinctive style which is really coming into its own as he works on it. For instance, see here and her...

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Posted in Politics - national, History, Politics - Northern Territory, Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory, Innovation, Ethics, Cultural Critique

How change has changed: changemaking then and now

Below is a piece I published on the NESTA website in early 2016 which they took down in a web revamp. It's still available on archive.org , but I thought I'd also publish it here for the record. [caption id="attachment_34195" align="alignright" width="404"] Quick Troppo Quiz:...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy

The competition delusion: the presentation

https://youtu.be/w5WsRmgqe_M Early this year I published an essay in the Griffith Review critiquing what I called the competition delusion. I was passing by more common critiques of competition, which for instance argue that competition isn't necessarily a great idea in numero...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Ethics, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

The Road to Political Reform Based on Sortition: Guest Post by John Burnheim

Scrap attempts to reforming politics as a whole. From a practical point of view attempts to do so by legal constitutional change have no possibility of succeeding from a theoretical point of view, it is folly to assume that if we agree broadly about principle and are motivated...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

What works: getting to the land of ‘how’: Complete essay

https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=fEHYX3J8Jm4 Note, this essay was published in three parts in the Mandarin and is published in consolidated form (complete with its footnotes) here. It is impossible to remember, until one gets in the country … that they care about th...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Science, Political theory, Cultural Critique

What works: getting to the land of ‘how’: Part Two

Cross-posted from The Mandarin In this second instalment of his three-part series, economist and forward thinker Nicholas Gruen explains more of why it is so important to understand the 'how' of getting things done. From the commanding heights to everyday routines The big publ...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Markets as 'causal spread': How the early neoliberals anticipated embodied cognition: Fragment one – Hayek

My essay on the Ghost of Descartes was written by cannibalising a longer, not quite finished essay entitled "Cartesian vices, Copernican moments". In writing something else, I find myself wanting to refer to another part of it, so I'm hastily topping and tailing the relevant s...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Altruism comes from a model – the virtues from life

Models, windows, reductionism and pluralism We’re familiar with the idea that thought creates ‘models’ of reality. So it’s easy to slip into thinking that our task is then to just make our models better and better, i.e. more accurate representations of reality. This leaves out...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Ethics, Cultural Critique

6 post-Corona Institutional questions

The mass hysteria of the corona crisis is raging, with the resulting self-isolation of whole economies and populations. The loss seems greater with every new forecast on the economic collapse than I initially though t, and the benefit of imprisoning and terrorizing the populat...

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Posted in Politics - international, Life, History, Society, Religion, Economics and public policy, Terror, Science, regulation, Health, Climate Change, Political theory, Business, Social, Cultural Critique, Public and Private Goods

Conservative, liberal, social democrat 2.0

Hats off to Joseph Walker who's podcasting up a storm at The Jolly Swagman (Yes, the title gave me the wrong idea too.) Anyway, I often find long-form podcasts rather tedious (except where I'm being interviewed in which case I find them endlessly fascinating, but others probab...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Public and Private Goods, Democracy

Intellectual authoritarianism: The Golden Age of Female Philosophy Edition

[caption id="attachment_35624" align="aligncenter" width="500"] If you put the golden age of female philosophy into Google Images you get this. It has accordingly been selected as the picture for this post by the Troppo Robot Barry.[/caption] I do think that in normal times a...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Education, Economics and public policy, Gender, Political theory

Trust and the competition delusion: A new frontier for political and economic reform

The Griffith Review has just published a substantial essay of mine that I've been working on for some time. I reproduce the introductory section below after which you'll have to hightail it to their website to finish. But it would be good to see you back here for comments whic...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Are drugs the Achilles heel of stagnant inequality?

[off the cuff research idea memo] There is an uncanny analogy between China in the 19th century and the US this very moment: in both cases a large part of the general population could not be persuaded away from drugs by morality or prison. Opium in China then, opioids in the U...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, History, Society, Geeky Musings, Health, Political theory, Race and indigenous, Death and taxes

Corporate Social Policy Responsibility

[caption id="attachment_33337" align="alignright" width="344"] I was after one of the sillier charts to illustrate CSR. It was a tough choice, but this one hit all its KPIs. Originally worked up from the map which guided the bombing of Hamburg, all Troppodillians will join wit...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Churchill’s children: the rise of the privileged Marketeers in Anglo-Land

For almost a century the royal road to becoming a top politician in Anglo-Land was to study law and/or a bit of economics. In Australia that was the ticket for Keating, Hawke, Gillard, Howard, and Turnbull. In the US, that mold fit Obama (law), Clinton (law), and both GHW and...

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Posted in Politics - international, Life, History, Society, Journalism, Geeky Musings, Political theory, Law, Social Policy

The framing wars: Have the elites gone off on frolics of their own unsupported by the community?

Are you pro-choice or pro-life? Language like this shows us how fundamental framing has become to political combat. Political debate isn’t just ‘dumbed down’ or simplified. There’s a geography to the ground on which it’s fought and those with an eye to victory head for the hig...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Is it the social scientists job (or anyone else's) to make models of reality? (Hint: no).

There is still, I think, not enough recognition by teachers of the fact that the desire to think – which is fundamentally a moral problem – must be induced before the power is developed. Most people, whether men or women, wish above all else to be comfortable, and thought is a...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Methodology

RIP Bob Hawke: a repost from 2008

I worked for the early Hawke government in 1983 and 1984 when I worked for Senator John Button. Hawke barely knew me then or later, but in 2003, I attended a dinner at Moonee Valley Racecourse in honour of the 20th anniversary of his election. Anyway, I happened to be at his t...

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Democracy

Guest Post by Peter Dempster: A novel voting strategy for centrists

Peter Dempster asked me to post this follow-up post to an earlier one of his . Nicholas A novel voting strategy for centrists Vote 1 for your preferred party but then do something very unusual – Vote 2 for the opposing party, symbolically joining the major parties on your ball...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory

Burnheim on Gray on Hayek

[caption id="attachment_32731" align="alignleft" width="640"] Friedrich Hayek was notoriously less savvy with photoshoots than some of his relatives.[1. Someone has since disabused me of the idea I picked up somewhere that Salma Hayek is distantly related to Friedrich.][/capti...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Democracy

The Public Goods of the 21st Century

For those of you in Melbourne, I thought I'd let you know of a public lecture I'm giving on Thursday night this coming week details below. If you'd like to come, make your free reservation on this page . Thought Leadership Series Lecture | The Public Goods of the 21st Century...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Art and Architecture, Political theory

What economic reform thinking might have looked like – if we’d bothered to do it. Me and Martin Wolf

https://youtu.be/S_SWo3Cj8Yc I have posted this talk previously , but can now post the transcript, worked up from a YouTube transcript with thanks to Shruti Sekar for editing it. You can download the slides to which I was speaking from this link . There's also a written paper...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Best From Elsewhere, Public and Private Goods

How Social Science could be taught. A vision for the future.

[note to self] Economics, sociology, anthropology, history, psychology, and the other social sciences are currently taught in an unorganised manner. The undergraduate degree in any of these disciplines consists of about 20 separate courses that each differ markedly from the ot...

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Posted in History, Education, Society, Religion, Economics and public policy, Science, Political theory, Social

Why I'm not reading Steven Pinker's latest

I'm afraid this post won't live up to the title above. It has its genesis in a long email I wrote someone who told me I just had to read Jeremy Lend's critique of 'Enlightenment Now' . I've mainly just topped and tailed it and stuck it up here – very much FWIW. I’ll pass I’m a...

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Posted in Climate Change, Political theory, Cultural Critique

The Future of Politics: by John Burnheim

Politics is about constructing those public goods that are necessary for communities, are a minimum to deal with problems that threaten life itself. In our present situation, the most serious problems are all posed on a global scale, as a result of the scale of our management...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

My presentation in London

https://youtu.be/S_SWo3Cj8Yc Herewith my presentation in London "Economic reform thinking as if we'd bothered to do it" and Martin Wolf's commentary on it beginning at around the 40 minute mark. Judging from audience comments, a good time was had by all. You can download the s...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Methodology, Innovation

Authoritarianism: GUEST POST by John Burnheim

Arguing with an American ex-Australian now resident in Canada, I contested his view that, of the three countries, America is the least and Australia the most, authoritarian. In part it was a verbal difference. I was taking “authoritarian” in the established pejorative meaning:...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy

The first page test: Hannah Arendt edition

There's an amazing amount of dreck about – masquerading as the latest thinking. It's not that there isn't a lot to think about, so it's easy to think you should read this or that. How to choose? One of my filters is the first page test, or even the first paragraph test. Does t...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

The people's voice: as rage and as healing

There's a spectre haunting Europe … and the rest of the Western world. We have elaborate 'diversity' programs in good upper-middle-class places to prevent discrimination against all manner of minorities (and majorities like women). It's a fine thing. But there's a diversity ch...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Centrist strategic voting

[caption id="attachment_32263" align="aligncenter" width="638"] This image was picked from a bunch of images on Google Image. This post is not about Canada. If you're interested in Canada, it's unlikely you'll get ANYTHING out of this post. Canada is just incidental to this po...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory, Democracy

The Rise of China and dealing with American grief.

Like the world today, Europe in the 19 th century witnessed major shifts in the balance of power, with new technologies changing how life was lived. Otto von Bismarck, a Prussian, saw opportunities in that chaos. He unified the warring German principalities in 1870 via an unex...

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Posted in Politics - international, Life, History, Society, Economics and public policy, Geeky Musings, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Social Policy, Democracy

PETER DEMPSTER: A strategic voting proposal in defence of centrism

[caption id="attachment_32251" align="aligncenter" width="1280"] Who is that man in the corner, and why is he watching you?[/caption] Well folks, as you know, Club Troppo is the only website east of the whole damn Murray Darling system that has the reputation to attract the ki...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Media, Political theory, Democracy

My letter to the Financial Times: All finance requires is an upgrade for the internet age

All finance requires is an upgrade for the internet age From Nicholas Gruen, VIC, Australia Given the resounding “No” from the Swiss in the Vollgeld or “sovereign money” referendum , and despite Bob Sleeper’s relief ( Letters , June 12), Martin Wolf’s central question remains...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Innovation

The final chapter of John Gray's Seven Types of Atheism

The God of monotheism did not die, it only left the scene for a while in order to reappear as humanity – the human species dressed up as a collective agent, pursuing its self-realization in history. But, like the God of monotheism, humanity is a work of the imagination. The on...

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Posted in Philosophy, Religion, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Jordan Peterson: another take

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LqZdkkBDas

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Posted in Philosophy, Gender, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Citizens’ juries as activism: holding political elites to their constitutional role

For some time now we've been 'proving up' citizens’ juries as a means of consulting the people, but generally within the context of governments being in charge. As a result they've been mostly relatively innocuous. For instance the first two in South Australia were focused on...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Sam Harris, idolater of reason, outs himself

Too much wit outwits itself Folk saying quoted by Hegel [1. Quoted from memory.] I stumbled upon this extraordinary exchange between Sam Harris and Ezra Klein, late the night before last and though, I was supposed to be going to sleep, I couldn't stop till I'd finished it. I'd...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Brexit Scenarios and some Advice for Brexiteers

Brexit is the main political issue in the UK, competing with sex for the attention of the public. It is a daily gamble whether the news headline is about some politician fondling a knee 55 years ago or a row over Brexit. For the last 18 months, the debate in London has been su...

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Posted in Politics - international, Humour, Society, Geeky Musings, Political theory, bubble, Social, Cultural Critique, Democracy

Our countries need us.

Humanity is at a high point. What our ancestors dreamed of is slowly becoming a reality: a world without hunger in which the vast majority of mankind live peaceful and long lives. We are not there yet, but in Europe, East Asia, Latin America, and even in Africa (our cradle), m...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Life, Philosophy, History, Education, Literature, Society, Religion, Economics and public policy, Science, Political theory, Information, Ethics, Cultural Critique, Inequality, Social Policy, Democracy

How to tax the platform economy?

In the engine room of nation states, ie the tax departments, the coming battle with platform providers is taking shape. Uber, airbnb, facebook, linkedin, ebay, jobseek, and a myriad of specialised platform providers facilitate micro-trades that are largely untaxed by the autho...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory, Law, Information, Intellectual Monopoly Privileges, Innovation, Social, Intellectual Property, Public and Private Goods, Death and taxes, Employment

Getting the right decision democratically – by John Burnheim

In many areas of policy, particularly where relatively homogeneous communities deliberate about matters within their everyday experience, the informal processes of discussion in the community can, and often do, lead to changes in public opinion that in turn lead to effective p...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Democracy

The poverty of voting

A post by John Burnheim. About ten months ago, John Burnheim wrote to me in terms I've reproduced on this blog previously. John was one of the early movers in academia exploring the limitations of electoral democracy with his book Is Democracy Possible published in 1985 and th...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Information, Democracy

Evidence-based policy: why is progress so slow and what can be done about it

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRrlkEqWpZA&t=12s Here's a presentation I gave at the anniversary of Australian Policy Online which has been cunningly rebranded under its old acronym as Analysis and Policy Observatory. I gave a similar one at Kings College London a few weeks p...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Bullshit

Could more "plebisurveys" restore public confidence in Australian democracy?

The extraordinary outpouring of national happiness following the passage of the same sex marriage legislation on Thursday unavoidably gives rise to the question of whether some similar community consultation/plebiscite/survey mechanism (perhaps a well-designed and secure onlin...

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Is the end of Brexit nigh?

The EU and the UK government have just agreed to muddle on in their negotiations. Nothing is truly decided until everything is decided, but they have adopted a position document (see here ) that details what they want the next steps to look like and what they will do in case o...

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Posted in Politics - international, History, Society, Economics and public policy, Political theory, bubble, Democracy

Why Blockchain has no economic future.

[expanded from the post on JohnMenadue] When Bitcoin went public in 2009 it introduced to the world of finance and economics the technology of blockchain. Even the many who thought Bitcoin would never make it as a major currency were intrigued by the BlockChain technology and...

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Posted in Politics - national, History, IT and Internet, Science, Climate Change, Political theory, Business, Information, bubble, Innovation, Social Policy

Let’s have another World War!

Sometimes, it feels like 1910 all over again. Then, a confident Germany was the up-and-coming industrial power house, fearing an even more up-and-coming Russia, with the UK and France desperately holding on to their colonial empires. Now, a confident China is the up-and-coming...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Philosophy, Environment, History, Miscellaneous, Humour, Society, Religion, Sport-general, Theatre, Music, Economics and public policy, Science, regulation, Gender, Journalism, Media, Geeky Musings, Climate Change, Political theory, Business, Travel, Immigration and refugees, Information, Intellectual Monopoly Privileges, Innovation, Social, Race and indigenous, Ethics, Cultural Critique, Public and Private Goods, Death and taxes, Inequality, Social Policy, Democracy, Bullshit, Indigenous, Employment

Public organisations and political advocacy

Various people like Margaret Court are stroppy that private companies like Qantas are supporting same sex marriage. I'm not too sure I can see a problem. This is largely self-interested behaviour from our corporates and the pursuit of that self-interest – sociopathic or otherw...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory, Cultural Critique

George Lakoff's hate speech argument vs Karl Popper's Paradox of Tolerance and other arguments

There seem to be more and more claims that "hate speech" should not be entitled to the normal privileges of free speech. To my surprise, one of them is George Lakoff - famed cognitive scientist, philosopher and metaphor expert. Here’s the admirably clear Lakoff writing a blog...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Taking competitive neutrality seriously: My challenge to the PC

[caption id="attachment_31407" align="aligncenter" width="1035"] It's pretty obvious why this picture came up forth in a Google Image Search of the expression "competitive neutrality" but if you can't figure it out for yourself frankly the Troppo collective are disgusted. We'r...

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Posted in Politics - national, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Innovation, Best From Elsewhere, Cultural Critique

Operation Christmas 1914: Selection by lot and international relations

[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="562"] These soldiers are at war. The Western Front, Christmas day, 1914.[/caption] Selection by lot is a simple idea, so it's not surprising that it can be useful in many situations. Whenever I see institutional dysfunction or idiocy,...

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Posted in Politics - international, History, Political theory

Down with Presidentialism: Guest post by Mike Pepperday

People disappointed with democratic outcomes often call for better education of the citizenry. But the democracies began, and flourished, in the nineteenth century, when people were quite poorly educated. They proved resilient and backsliding only seems to occur where democrac...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Political theory

Some Game of Thrones Season 8 speculation

Let me indulge, purely for entertainment value, in some fan-speculation on what we will see on-screen after the Long Night is over and the final 6 episodes Of Game of Thrones are run in 2019. Let me first talk about the end-game aspects I think the books and the tv-series seem...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Uncategorised, Politics - international, Life, Philosophy, Print media, Environment, History, Miscellaneous, Humour, Education, Literature, Society, Religion, Films and TV, Sport-general, Theatre, Music, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Food, Terror, Science, Art and Architecture, regulation, Gender, Journalism, Media, Libertarian Musings, Geeky Musings, Health, Climate Change, Political theory, Metablogging, Law, Dance, Space, Review, Startup, Products, Travel, Immigration and refugees, Information, bubble, WOW! - Amazing, Social, Parenting, Race and indigenous, Ethics, Cultural Critique, Medical, Public and Private Goods, Death and taxes, Inequality, Personal, Social Policy, Democracy, Bullshit, Indigenous, Employment

The last man in Europe: waiting to be read in a bookstore near you!

I've known Dennis Glover since we were both staffers in Parliament during the Hawke-Keating years (I was there in 1981, 83-4 and 1991-3 until just after the 'sweetest victory of all' in 1993 which with hindsight I wish John Hewson had won as it would have kept in-tact Australi...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Literature, Political theory, Bargains, Best From Elsewhere

You get what you pay for: MP's edition

Does It Matter How and How Much Politicians are Paid? by Duha T. Altindag, Elif S. Filiz, Erdal Tekin - #23613 (LS POL) Abstract: An important question in representative democracies is how to ensure that politicians behave in the best interest of citizens rather than their own...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

An exchange on deliberative democracy

Below is a spirited exchange between me and Barry Jones on deliberative democracy which I reproduce with his permission. He won't be participating in any online debate because as he puts it I … confess to being a total abstainer where social media is concerned. I don’t want to...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory, Democracy, Sortition and citizens’ juries

Hoisted from comments: Copyright, the Google Settlement and torching the second library of Alexandria

One of the privileges of access to what we cool kids call the "back end" of Troppo is that when I write a long, long comment , in an old thread that has taken a new direction, I can make it the start of a new thread. As I'm doing here. Note that the comment originally arose fr...

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Posted in IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Geeky Musings, Political theory, Intellectual Monopoly Privileges, Intellectual Property, Cultural Critique

Upmarket Agitprop: Clive James on John Howard on Bob Menzies

An essay prompted by a friend recommending James' essay I think largely for its defence of Menzies as worthy of more respect he's been given by the left - which is a fair point. Cross posted from The Mandarin , which, to my surprise was interested in picking it up. In my view...

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Posted in Politics - national, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Government for the people, of the people, by people who are pretending

Choosing a Public-Spirited Leader. An experimental investigation of political selection By: Thomas Markussen (epartment of Economics, University of Copenhagen) ; Jean-Robert Tyran (Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen) In this experiment, voters select a leader wh...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Australian politics and the Emperor's New Clothes

Hans Christian Andersen’s famous story The Emperor’s New Clothes epitomises the phenomenon of the truth hiding in plain sight as a result of collective delusion or selective vision. There is just such a collective public delusion at the heart of our current understanding of Au...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory

Can we attract good political leaders? Hint - yes

Can a democracy attract competent leaders, while attaining broad representation? Economic models suggest that free-riding incentives and lower opportunity costs give the less competent a comparative advantage at entering political life. Moreover, if elites have more human capi...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory

On the Origins and Consequences of Racism

We use a novel method to measure racism at both the individual and the country level. We show that our measure of racism has a strong negative and significant impact on economic development, quality of institutions and education. We then test different hypotheses concerning th...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Slow Democracy: how representation by random selection can rebalance our stricken democracy

I've outlined some of the pathologies of what I call 'vox pop' democracy in various posts from time to time. As Western democracy degrades before our very eyes (President Donald Trump wasn't really imaginable a decade or so ago and is still hard to fully comprehend) we need to...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy

Elections and development #NeverLetAGoodDeedGoUnpunished

Do anti-poverty programs sway voters? Experimental evidence from Uganda By: Blattman, Christopher ; Emeriau, Mathilde ; Fiala, Nathan A Ugandan government program allowed groups of young people to submit proposals to start skilled enterprises. Among 535 eligible proposals, the...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Best From Elsewhere, Democracy

Little platoons of the left and right

The intimidatingly well informed Brad Delong used the following quote from Rosa Luxemburg to bid "good riddance" to Fidel Castro. I don't know enough to agree or disagree, but as I read Luxemburg's words, I wasn't thinking of communism. I was thinking of managerialism. I'm not...

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Posted in History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Dispatch no. 2 from the epistemic swamp

I've just posted the first version of the introduction to this post on the first dispatch from the epistemic swamp, but I thought I'd open up the discussion again on a new thread. The tweet above surely highlights different ideas of truth and authenticity. Of course, Trump is...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Investor-State Dispute Settlement

I gave a talk at the Lowy Institute last Wednesday to which I initially gave a long-winded title "Intellectual Property- Economics, Diplomacy and Australia’s strategic interests" but managed to get more cut-through under the pressure of Twitters 140 character limit "DFAT goes...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Law, Intellectual Property

Care: the essay

This essay is the third of three starting with my essay on the Evaluator General in two parts followed by an essay responding to the Productivity Commission's inquiry into competition in human services. Part One A couple of days ago I came upon care ethics via Virginia Held's...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Innovation, Cultural Critique

Care

Part One Note: this post has been superseded by the full essay . A couple of days ago I came upon care ethics via Virginia Held's book The Ethics of Care (2006) with some excitement. The ethics of care grew out of feminism, but I think the issues it raises transcend feminism a...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Parenting, Cultural Critique, Public and Private Goods

Could sortition help against corruption, part II

In part 1, I looked at whether it made sense to have random individuals inserted into parliament, or to let policies be decided by juries full of randomly chosen individuals. Both were argued to be unworkable and likely to lead to more corruption, rather than less: policies th...

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Posted in Politics - national, Life, Philosophy, Print media, History, Miscellaneous, Education, Society, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, regulation, Journalism, Libertarian Musings, Political theory, Law, Web and Government 2.0, Information, Ethics, Cultural Critique, Social Policy, Democracy

Truth-telling in the epistemic quagmire of the politico-infotainment complex: Donald Trump Edition

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWci3a0-EKM Pilate said unto him, What is truth? And when he had said this, he went out again unto the Jews, and said unto them, I find in him no fault at all. The Gospel according to John 18:38 Picasso once famously opined on art and truth-tell...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Philosophy, Political theory, Democracy

Deliberative democracy: A sad story

[caption id="" align="alignright" width="447"] What do we want? Deliberative democracy! When do we want it? NOW!![/caption] This story from this larger study speaks for itself, but is illustrative of some of the themes of my previous post on deliberative democracy. In the spri...

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Posted in Politics - international, Climate Change, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy

Gay marriage: Some thoughts about the politics

I haven't read any columns on the gay marriage imbroglio so maybe people have already said all this but … it seems to me that the circumstances now provide the left of centre parties with an opportunity to humiliate their opponents. There's no bigger kill in politics than to b...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Northern Territory - a tale of systemic dysfunctional governance

Like quite a few other despairing commentators, I have on occasions referred to the Northern Territory as a "failed state", most recently here : Until now, although holding grave fears about the quality of Northern Territory political governance under both the previous Labor g...

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Posted in Politics - Northern Territory, Political theory

Why is our faith in democratic politics collapsing?

[caption id="attachment_29384" align="alignleft" width="754"] Q: How satisfied are you with the way democracy works in Australia?[/caption] I With democracy now serving the interests of the 1%, the public are disenchanted and finally sending the elites packing - courtesy of th...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Democracy

Ian Marsh: Australia’s gridlocked Parliament

A friend of mine Ian Marsh sent me this op ed which one of the papers said it would publish last week. Personally, I'm not surprised that they didn't. They're waiting for it to be validated by being put through its paces here at the Troppo Grinder first. No change there. Over...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory, Best From Elsewhere

IMF Researchers on Inequality on Social Capital

Growing Apart, Losing Trust? The Impact of Inequality on Social Capital There is a widespread perception that trust and social capital have declined in United States as well as other advanced economies, while income inequality has tended to increase. While previous research ha...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Social, Social Policy

Markets, supply chains, brains and human services

Below is an essay by me and Chris Vanstone (Chief Innovation Officer of The Australian Centre for Social Innovation (TACSI) published in two parts by The Mandarin. Devoutly confessing that you do not know is better than prematurely claiming that you do Augustine “Mark well tha...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Information, Cultural Critique, Social Policy

Choice, competition, markets and human services: Some thoughts

The PC has a two-stage reference on increasing the application of competition, contestability and informed user choice in the provision of human services. The first stage will identify the most prospective areas for the application of such principles whilst the second will tel...

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Posted in Philosophy, Society, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Public and Private Goods, Inequality

Yes Minister: hilarious, truthful, too good to be true.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gmOvEwtDycs] Here at Troppo we have referred to the 'Yes Minister series' many times because of its brilliant commentary on the timeless issues of government, exemplified in the skit above. I have gone through three phases with the serie...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Humour, Society, Economics and public policy, Journalism, Libertarian Musings, Geeky Musings, Political theory, Review, Ethics, Cultural Critique, Democracy

Power, understanding and knowledge

I'm wondering why the facts and ideas generated in the abstract below aren't higher up the order of proceedings in such things as teaching the economics of industrial organisation, the economics of information. What Hayekian has focused on this? Pathetic that I've not seen thi...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Information, Cultural Critique, Democracy

Elite tribalism and the new ruling class

Via this great column of Ross Douthat, I came upon this really fine essay on The New Ruling Class . On Googling the author it turned out she is an American who lives in Sydney and works for the CIS. The interview of the articles: [audio mp3="http://clubtroppo.ozblogistan.com.a...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Vox pop democracy and the division of cognitive labour

In the last post ,Paul Frijters dismissed my proposal that deliberative democracy mechanisms should have had some role in the Brexit decision. I don’t think sortition makes any sense in the case of something like Brexit. The notion that a jury of randomly chosen citizens would...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory, Democracy

Effects of the Minimum Wage on Infant Health

Effects of the Minimum Wage on Infant Health The minimum wage has increased in multiple states over the past three decades. Research has focused on effects on labor supply, but very little is known about how the minimum wage affects health, including children's health. We addr...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Ethics, Cultural Critique

Wanted: Ground rules for referendums

There's a reason that the UK's vote on EU departure seems so strange, and it applies regardless of whether you like Brexit or not. It's this: the UK has made what might be a very substantial change to its own nature based on a simple majority vote – and such changes should be...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Self-interest, altruism and shared intentionality: a quick note and stake in the ground

To a substantial extent the 'left/right' divide is characterised by a common way of seeing the world in which there's self-interest and its opposite - altruism. But I think that impoverishes the debate. I think there's a third category far more important than 'altruism'. To ge...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique, Public and Private Goods

Brexit and deliberative democracy

I fantasise about the day when the people who fancy themselves the champions of liberal capitalist democracy - you know the Business Class set - will realise that they are munching through the landscape and, as Schumpeter argued - following Marx - that they were undermining th...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

War and social cooperation

Can War Foster Cooperation? by Michal Bauer, Christopher Blattman, Julie Chytilova, Joseph Henrich, Edward Miguel, Tamar Mitts - #22312 (DEV PE POL) Abstract: In the past decade, nearly 20 studies have found a strong, persistent pattern in surveys and behavioral experiments fr...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, History, Political theory

Would sortition help against corruption?

Political parties and institutions in Australia and the US are increasingly dominated by interest groups representing the few, leading to a large policy-induced increase in inequality in recent decades and a long raft of new policies favouring the few by giving them the tax re...

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Posted in Politics - national, Life, Philosophy, History, Society, Economics and public policy, regulation, Libertarian Musings, Geeky Musings, Political theory, Law, Information, bubble, Ethics, Cultural Critique, Public and Private Goods, Social Policy

Representing a public interest organisation? The case of Gillian Triggs

[caption id="" align="alignleft" width="436"] I knew I could have responded and destroyed them – I could have said, “You’ve asked me a question that demonstrated you have not read our statute. How dare you question what I do?”[/caption] When I was on the Productivity Commissio...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Law, Cultural Critique

We’re All Free Riders. Get over It! The public goods of the twenty-first century (Part One)

Below is a link to my first article on a new alternative economics website - Evonomics - which has only been going fror a short period of time. It's pretty nicely set out and emerged out of the evolution institute . The guy who started it - Robert Kadar - is intellectually gre...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Neoliberal? Moi?

Though wildly tendentious, this piece by Monbiot is an excellent spray against neoliberalism, a subject with which your correspondent has a vexed relation. I used to describe myself as a neoliberal, but now I'm afraid due to a mixture of distaste at its excesses and the extent...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

I don't care who wins the federal election ...

For mainstream and social media partisans the current prolonged election campaign is an essential life or death struggle for premiership victory by one's chosen team. But to my way of thinking it doesn't really matter very much which team wins. The two major parties are Tweedl...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Politics - national, Political theory

Evidence-based policy making - Part One: The problems

[caption id="" align="alignright" width="400"] A stupid diagram - the kind of thing we can't get enough of here at ClubTroppo. And remember "Reflect, revise and Improve". That's RRI - capiche?. In short, you can't get enough RRI. In fact you should be doing it now! Reflect, Re...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Innovation

No-pain-no-gain: High-road-low-road

This post began as a comment on Paul's last comment on my "Mainstream Radical Centrists: Where are they? " column. Paul boiled down his response to this: If you want to have a serious debate about reforms, go to countries that are hurting and that see the need for it. Like the...

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Posted in Philosophy, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Innovation, Cultural Critique, Inequality

What I'm reading: Things about the Parthenon YOU WON'T BELIEVE!!

What is the meaning of the relief sculpture above? I recall when I was last on the Athenian Acropolis just over a year ago marvelling at the Parthenon, not just its emphatic and sublime beauty but also its strangeness . It's so big and so magnificent. What the hell did this ci...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Religion, Art and Architecture, Political theory, Cultural Critique

The Secret River: The Play ★★★

I went to see The Secret River last night - and returned from the experience underwhelmed. It tries to be a truthful depiction of one aspect of the 'frontier wars' and so it presents a bunch of Europeans setting up shop in an area that the local indigenes (surprise, surprise)...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Literature, Films and TV, Political theory

Decentralised preferences and centralised prejudice: the case of racial sorting

Racial Sorting and the Emergence of Segregation in American Cities by Allison Shertzer, Randall P. Walsh - #22077 (DAE LE) Abstract: Residential segregation by race grew sharply in the United States as black migrants from the South arrived in northern cities during the early t...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Race and indigenous, Ethics

Running the micro-parties out of town

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDZadLhTMoc I recall when working as a staffer for the Hawke/Keating government, how Labor staffers wore their disdain - bordering on contempt - for the Democrats with the same kind of pride that economic rationalists had for their own disdain f...

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Turkish government handsomely rewarded for realpolitik

I visited Turkey in April last year, traveling through the country, witnessing the troubles of the leadership of the ruling AKP party: it had just lost a general election that left it without a workable majority in parliament and only 40% of the popular vote; it was sucked int...

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Posted in Politics - international, Print media, History, Miscellaneous, Society, Economics and public policy, Terror, Journalism, Political theory, Immigration and refugees, Ethics, Cultural Critique

The NDIS: there, but for the grace of God, go us all

I don't stay on top of many of the latest issues. After all, they're complicated, time is limited, so I'll just satisfy myself with starting, largely ideological reactions (and of course not opine too strongly given my state of ignorance) about any number of public issues. Is...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Is change we can't theorise, change we can believe in? Part One

There's a world of difference between (let's call it) youthful social change seeking in the sixties and immediate post-sixties social and political movements and much social change seeking today. Then the focus was largely on political activism. And 'theory' played a central r...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Surprises of the Internet

With the Internet being a regular feature of our lives for about 20 years now, what have been the related developments that were hard to pick at the outset? What are the lessons? Five thoughts: Communication and personal expression is the main business of the Internet. That wa...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Miscellaneous, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Science, Libertarian Musings, Geeky Musings, Political theory, Business, Information, Innovation, Best From Elsewhere, Cultural Critique, Public and Private Goods

Taste

The great thing in all education is to make our nervous system our ally instead of our enemy . . . A 'character,' as J.S. Mill says, "is a completely fashioned will". William James, The Laws of Habit "Taste" is a word and an idea that comes from another time. But I think it's...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Opening our doors to more refugees

Henry Ergas offers let's say a bracing perspective on our increased refugee intake which is to say that we should profile refugees to try to screen out those with odious views - many of whom will be Muslims. It's quite compelling. Then again doing so opens a Pandora's box of c...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Hayek - left right and centre

My friend Martin Stewart-Weeks points me to this piece by Simon Griffiths which argues that "an engagement with Hayek does not mean a capitulation to the market". Quite. Indeed it's always struck me that it's a pity that Hayek pursued his ideas in such a tendentious way. He ha...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Magna Carta and ‘vox pop’ democracy

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="620"] Intriguingly there are two substantial permanent monuments to Magna Carta at Runnymede. Both are American. This one was erected by the US Bar Association in 1957.[/caption] I was recently asked to participate in a panel discussion...

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Syriza: the latest disaster for the left

I don't have much time to offer anything very considered but want to just say how bemused I am at the carryings on of Syriza. The whole sorry business has been horrible to watch with creditors showing no interest in their own self-interest let alone a little enlightenment in t...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

The generative commons of generalised social capital

Paul Krugman has an interesting blog post on the extent to which there might be contagion from one area of social capital (or lack thereof) to another. He's responding to the claim CEOs made to him that they only started arcing up their pay demands when they saw sportspeople d...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Politics in the Courtroom: Political Ideology and Jury Decision Making

by Shamena Anwar, Patrick Bayer, Randi Hjalmarsson. Publication is available here . This paper uses data from the Gothenburg District Court in Sweden and a research design that exploits the random assignment of politically appointed jurors (termed naemndemaen) to make three co...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Law, Ethics

Overton Window - Overton Juggernaut: Part Two

Continued from Part One yesterday. [caption id="attachment_22531" align="alignright" width="404"] Well folks, when I put "Overton Window - Overton Juggernaut" into Google and looked for an image, this came up naturally enough. If the cap fits . . .[/caption] Over the last few...

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Posted in History, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Overton Window - Overton Juggernaut: Part One

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OVAmGArS0tU The Overton Window is a quite well known expression describing the demarcation between political/policy discussion that is and is not acceptable in mainstream discussion. Sometimes what removes your idea from the window is that, what...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Innovation

Professionalism as tyranny: a liberationist fantasy

Adam Smith put it memorably above. I'll be forever grateful for my time at the Australian Centre for Social Innovation because it has shown me the generality of that statement. Whether Smith intended it or not, it applies not just to business people of the same trade, but to p...

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Posted in Philosophy, Literature, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Some stimulating debate on the sensitive subject of gender differences in specific cognitive abilities

https://youtu.be/n3AeM3Q9mU4 On a difficult subject, let's throw the conversation over to some people who know nothing about it, but who have flawless makeup on and vigorously assert mutually inconsistent propositions. If you think the first 90% of the video is exemplary, wait...

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Posted in Political theory, Chess

Neoclassical economics: what is it good for?

I sent the passage below to my friend Alex Coram noting "I like this post from Brad Delong - though you may not". Alex, you see, has a deeper understanding than me of these things. I was right - he wasn't that impressed - but for reasons that I also agreed with and might have...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

A film and a couple of poems in the lead-up to Anzac Day

https://youtu.be/e3e2nNNJ7-4 Regular readers will know of my enthusiasm for the recent movie adaptation of Vera Brittain's Testament of Youth about the disaster that was WWI and how it blighted the lives of a generation. It's opening in Australia today - read my review on the...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Our ABC: some great Radio National listening

I drove for the best part of 11 hours over the last few days giving a Do Lecture (would you believe?) which was fun. In any event I listened to some seriously great radio. Inside the drug court I was riveted by three 50 minute docos on the NSW Drug Court. It really is a traged...

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Posted in Music, Economics and public policy, Health, Political theory, Innovation, Parenting, Cultural Critique

Insiders, faux insiders, efficiency and equity in the stockmarket: with a thought experiment and an abstract

We've gone from the assumption that there's a necessary tradeoff between efficiency and equity to a state in which it's almost de rigueur to point out the ways in which inequity can harm efficiency with quite some speed. Why even the OECD, while it hands homilies about how 're...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Fair trade coffee: so much more (or less) than it seems, depending on your point of view

From the latest Journal of Economic Perspectives Fair trade coffee is a cup half full, according to Raluca Dragusanu, Daniele Giovannucci, and Nathan Nunn in “The Economics of Fair Trade” (Summer 2014, vol. 28, no. 3, pp. 217–36). We are not persuaded. The authors barely menti...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Bargains, Ethics

On Democracy: Against elections

Some readers of this blog with know my preoccupation with the shortcomings of Vox Pop Democracy . Here are some aphorisms from David Van Reybrouck who's book Against elections does not appear to have been translated out of Dutch at this stage. They offer some interesting ways...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Daniel Ellsberg on life and groupthink

HT Paul Monk who cites this as one of his favourite passages. It's now one of mine. And a nice explanation of how easy it is - whether within an organisation or the caverns of one's own riotous psyche - to slip into the pathologies of groupthink and self-deception. Somehow thi...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Journalism as a system of domination: Syriza edition

https://youtu.be/Zw3XfwyWU14 (If this video doesn't work try this one ) When the French and Russian Revolutions occurred, the existing order asserted itself through the intervention of foreign nations. Recognising this, and decrying it is not to endorse either revolution, but...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Shock! Good government improves wellbeing

Actually the magnitude of the effect is a bit of an eye-opener . Empirical Linkages between Good Government and National Well-being by John F. Helliwell, Haifang Huang, Shawn Grover, Shun Wang Abstract: This paper first reviews existing studies of the links between good govern...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Paul Krugman the academic, Martin Wolf the economic journalist: Bottom line - read Wolf's great new book

I'm a big, though not uncritical admirer of Paul Krugman - of his straightforwardness and his aggression in what is almost always a worthy cause. And yet, reading Martin Wolf's magnificent book rather inauspiciously titled The Shifts and the Shocks: What We've Learned-and Have...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Managers wresting control from owners: it's nothing new …

Contractual Freedom and the Evolution of Corporate Control in Britain, 1862 to 1929 by Timothy W. Guinnane, Ron Harris, Naomi R. Lamoreaux - #20481 (DAE) Abstract: British general incorporation law granted companies an extraordinary degree of contractual freedom to craft their...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

The middleware of democracy. Or from knowledge to wisdom: or at least knowledge 2.0

Simon Heffer's High Minds presents us with a portrait of the mid-Victorians in which they consciously set about building the world which became ours. A liberal democratic world. To do so they recognised the need for all sorts of public goods. Those of education and health sure...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Methodology, Innovation, Cultural Critique, Public and Private Goods

Nietzschean evolutionary psychology

[video width="480" height="360" mp4="http://clubtroppo.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/yt1s.com-Christopher-Hitchens-Why-Women-Still-Arent-Funny_360p.mp4"][/video] I have a strange habit of looking for bargain books. Why is this a strange habit? Because it looks awfully like...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Art and Architecture, Ask Troppo's Love Gods, Political theory, Parenting, Best From Elsewhere, Cultural Critique

All that was implicit was made explicit

Wendy_Bacon Talk about clamping down on Pub Servants' social media reminds me of how as journos we used to interview them before access to info stopped 10/04/2014 10:09 am This tweet reminds me of something I've pondered for some time. The modern craze for making the implicit...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Operation 2770: TACSI's Family by Family expands to Mt Druitt

https://vimeo.com/90297488 (For the full 27 minute video from which this 6 minute video has been extracted, click here .) Family by Family about which you've heard before is spreading its wings. We've started in Mt Druitt where we've scoped the program investigating how it sho...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Gender, Media, Health, Political theory, Parenting, Cultural Critique

What's wrong with TED talks - hint: quite a lot

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Yo5cKRmJaf0 I have almost certainly fulminated in various asides against TED talks on this blog, and even one full on cri de coeur against retail profundification . (I promised one on business class profundification but I...

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Posted in Philosophy, Education, Literature, Economics and public policy, Media, Political theory, Cultural Critique

How green was my valley: how professional were my parents?

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Parenting

PPPs 2.0: the presentation

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kz1XBcWI6LM Above is my presentation to the Berkman Centre for Internet and Society - the background blurb of which is here . You'll find the first half of the presentation on the fractal ecology of public and private goods is effectively the sa...

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Posted in Philosophy, Society, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Web and Government 2.0

Ethics Committees

T he excesses of ethics committees are a pet hate of mine, but I'd always thought that for instance the Stanley Milgram experiment was an example of the kind of experiment where genuine ethical issues arose that might justify not going ahead. But now I read on Wikipedia that:...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Ethics

Jeff Sachs' ego to the rescue: or maybe not . . .

"as much as I don’t understand it, Jeffrey Sachs really, really, really doesn’t understand it." Nina Monk, author of The Idealist "I don’t want to argue with you Jeff, because I don’t want to be called ignorant or unprofessional. I have worked in Africa for 30 years. My collea...

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Posted in Society, Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory

Estimating Habit Formation in Voting. Thomas Fujiwara, Kyle C. Meng, Tom Vogl

Abstract: We estimate habit formation in voting--the effect of past on current turnout--by exploiting transitory voting cost shocks. Using county-level data on U.S. presidential elections from 1952-2012, we find that precipitation on current and past election days reduces vote...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory

Red Tape, Political Correctness and Edicts from On High

In the middle of this year a friend who had decamped to CSIRO from government wrote to me and asked me to participate in an interview exploring the economic impact of next generation broadband in Australia. Towards the end of his email he wrote. If you are willing to take part...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Quentin's replacement should be a robot

The most interesting aspect of the reaction to the governor-general's last Boyer lecture , with its last-sentence support for abolishing the monarchy, is the thinness of the opposition from the left to her expression of her political views. As the events of the past few days h...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory

Perverse Consequences of Well Intentioned Regulation: Evidence from India's Child Labor Ban

by Prashant Bharadwaj, Leah K. Lakdawala, Nicholas Li - #19602 (CH DEV) Abstract: While bans against child labor are a common policy tool, there is very little empirical evidence validating their effectiveness. In this paper, we examine the consequences of India's landmark leg...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Parenting

Tiptoeing through the taboos of vox pop democracy

Schumpeter's two chapters on democracy in his great book Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy provide the best framework I know of articulating the things that trouble me about the current state of democracy. The chapters assert the following propositions: Rousseau's idea of th...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Kludge and how think tanks and policy wonks make it worse

Think tank scholars and policy wonks strive to be both practical and clever. Being practical means proposing policies that have a good chance of getting taken up by government in the short term. And being clever means policies that generate big benefits at little or no cost. B...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

XKCD on US governance

From the ever-wonderful XKCD , seeming to comment on current US governance: [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="381"] XKCD: world's sharpest comic?[/caption]

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Posted in Humour, Society, Political theory

Righteous masculine anger

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QaqpoeVgr8U One of the numerous downsides of the rise of feminism is the demise of righteous masculine anger. For the record I'm strongly supportive of the great achievements of first and second wave feminism. But just as with other great changes...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Political theory, Law, Ethics

Institutions and public goods - institutions ARE public goods: The graphic

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=03l8VcSvyBU A nice visual illustration of the idea of institutions as public goods. Note the word 'institution' is here used to mean more than formal organisations. The Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy provides this...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Protest before the 'me' generation

I recall about twenty years ago now, I was taking a law tute in Legal Theory. The lecturer was pretty awful and spent huge amounts of time in his lectures explaining why his side of a particular debate - with H.L.A Hart the opponent as I recall - was the right side of the deba...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Political theory, Best From Elsewhere

From the campaign

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory

A neoconservative welfare state?

Nearly "every problem with the Republican Party today could be cured by a neocon revival", says David Brooks . Brooks isn't talking about the hawkish approach to foriegn policy that urged US military involvement in the middle east, he's talking about the domestic policy ideas...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Universities as Royal Courts

The journal 'Agenda', the policy journal of the College of Business and Economics at The Australian National University just released a piece of mine called ' Universities as Royal Courts'. One can download it free of charge (just click on the link). It continues my long-runni...

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Posted in History, Humour, Education, Society, Political theory

On Mr Rudds multitude of policy positions, or syntax without semantics.

“ they exert every variety of talent on a lower ground…and may be said to live and act in a submind”...... VS Naipaul “The Air Conditioned Bubble" Writing in 1984 about the republican convention of 1984 (the triumphant beginning of Ronald Regans second term), V S Naipaul wrote...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Politics - national, Education, Literature, Society, Political theory

Articles I'd like to have time to read: Issue # 43

Cooperation under Democracy and Authoritarian Norms By: Björn Vollan, Yexin Zhou, Andreas Landmann, Biliang Hu, Carsten Herrmann-Pillath There is ample evidence for a “democracy premium”. Laws that have been implemented via election lead to a more cooperative behavior compared...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Blacks to the back of the bus: Part Two. Guest Post by Mike Pepperday

Iwrote a report, much as set out in Part 1 , and sent it to the WA Equal Opportunity Commission and other people at the end of January, 1990. The Human Rights Commission in Sydney phoned in February to say they were very concerned and would be interested to see what the WA EO...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory, Race and indigenous

Blacks to the back of the bus: Part one: guest post by Mike Pepperday

There have been some recent racism incidents and the awkwardness of speaking up about it. I am way ahead of them. This was written in 1991. “X” and “Y” have been substituted here for bus company names. Blacks to the Back of the Bus, Part One It is after midnight. The coach is...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Tendentiousness 101: or being wrong while using the body language of being right (copyright edition)

Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) is one of our more rapacious copyright maximalist organisations. It is a nice illustration of why things that sound like nice ideas don't always work out. CAL was dreamt up when it was thought that photocopiers might damage incentives to publish,...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory, Intellectual Property

Path dependence and cumulative causation in institutions and the people inhabiting them

Institutional Quality, Culture, and Norms of Cooperation : Evidence from a Behavioral Field Experiment, Alessandra Cassar (University of San Francisco), Giovanna d'Adda (University opf Birmingham), Pauline Grosjean (School of Economics, the University of New South Wales). We d...

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Posted in Philosophy, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Doing well by doing good: the column

I wrote a good while ago about the economics of doing well by doing good on the internet and when I received a curious email from someone with whom I was conducting a correspondence I decided to write the column below. I've just tried to find it on Google, and it seems I didn'...

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Posted in Education, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Innovation, Intellectual Property, Ethics, Democracy

Just deserts, Justice or Equity?

I have just completed a lengthy answer to a very thoughtful comment on my previous post on climate change . And because the raises lots of Very Big issues about how one talks and reasons about ethics, I thought I'd exercise my prerogative and turn the exchange into a post for...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Climate Change, Political theory

The Persistence of de Facto Power: Elites and Economic Development in the US South, 1840-1960

By: Philipp Ager (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hes:wpaper:0038&r=his Wealthy elites may end up retarding economic development for their own interests. This paper examines how the historical planter elite of the Southern US affected economic devel...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

The Corporatist Manifesto I

A Spectre is Haunting Australia: the spectre of Corporatism. Since March this year the Centre for Independent Studies has been promoting its new manifesto ' TARGET30 - towards smaller government and future prosperity '. TARGET30's stated goal is to get Australia's total govern...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Politics - national, Society, Political theory

Missing in action: Nick Cater and the failure of Australia's conservative intellectuals

Australia needs intellectuals, says Nick Cater. In his new book The Lucky Culture he writes: A nation is entitled to look to its intellectuals to articulate its common purpose, to pull together loose strands and write a narrative that says where it has come from and where it i...

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Posted in Politics - national, Society, Political theory

The revolt against the elites

It's always been hard to pin down who 'the elites' are why we are supposed reject them as un-Australian. A new book review by Tony Abbott offers some clues. It also hints at why attacks on 'the elites' are likely to backfire for conservatives. In the Spectator Australia , Abbo...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Society, Political theory

A fable of Eunuchs, Praetorians, and University funding cuts.

Imagine yourself to be in the mythical Land of Beyond where you need minions to do a dirty job that men with honour would refuse to do. A classic trick in this situation is to pick people despised by the rest of society who are thus dependent on protection and will simply do w...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Life, Philosophy, History, Humour, Education, Society, Economics and public policy, Libertarian Musings, Geeky Musings, Political theory, Business

Putting the ism in Thatcherism

During the mid 1970s Thatcher was listening to a member of the Conservative Research Department staff explain why the party should take a pragmatic 'middle way ' between left and right. But before he could finish Thatcher reached into her briefcase and pulled out a copy of Fri...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Does radical welfare reform require cultural change?

"Hostility towards benefit claimants is founded upon a moral instinct", says Chris Dillow . The instinct is the norm of reciprocity. According to this norm, people are entitled to the community's help when they need it, but must also contribute in return. According to Dillow,...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Dennis Glover on Labor's Bonfire of the Inanities

Here's Dennis Glover's go at articulating his dismay at the kinds of things I expressed dismay about here . I've always been amazed at the extent of antagonism that Labor holds towards the Greens. It seems so obvious that the right relationship between them is as occasionally...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Society, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Rights against appellate double jeopardy

The prisoner's dilemma is a simple and famous illustration of a problem that's very common. One of the areas in which it is common is the arms race where two parties competing with each other each invest to outdo the other. This is visible in lots of situations. In some areas...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory, Law

"Values based management"

https://twitter.com/NGruen1/status/1529689205420720129 Herewith today's column in the Age and SMH . George Orwell was a stickler for plain and simple English in public discourse. He argued that one could escape some of “the worst follies of orthodoxy” by simplifying one’s lang...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Philosophy, Literature, Political theory

Ideas or interests?

It's an old debate with a nice Keynes quote routinely trotted out: The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed, the world is ruled by little else. Practical men, who...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Matt Bruenig and the illusion of conservative unity

American blogger Matt Bruenig sparked an interesting debate recently with his claim that conservatives are better organised and less ideologically diverse than those on the left . This is a response. To those on the left, the American conservative movement appears as a leviath...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Generosity and Political Preferences

Authors: Dawes, Christopher T. (Department of Politics) Johannesson, Magnus (Stockholm School of Economics), Lindqvist, Erik (Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN)), Loewen, Peter (Department of Political Science), Östling, Robert (Institute for International Econom...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Governance

When a tennis player decides if and when to use their rights to 'video review' of points they are trying to solve cognitive and tactical problems. When a cricket captain decides to review an umpire's decision there's an additional problem. Challenges have been rationed by desi...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Macaulay, Acemoglu and Robinson's Why Nations Fail

I held off reviewing Acemoglu and Robinson's (AR) Why Nations Fail for a long time. Despite the material's relevance to my old research interests, my love of universal history and the popularity of the book, I just couldn't face the task. Yet, because it is now appearing in so...

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Posted in Uncategorized, History, Political theory

Public goods, private goods: the interview

Normally I tuck mp3 files of radio interviews which are loosely on columns of mine at the end of the column where it's reproduced on Troppo. However here's my last interview for the year on the ecology of public and private goods and public and private motives - which relates...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Where equity and efficiency thrive together: Can you propose some more examples?

Economists love tradeoffs. Indeed, their basic model of the world breaks down where such tradeoffs don't occur. Lucky for them since the world really is full of tradeoffs. If you want more carrots, you'll have to do with fewer of something else. Here they're substitutes. But,...

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Posted in Education, Society, Economics and public policy, Health, Blegs, Political theory

Great essay on the Iron Curtain countries

Here's a great review essay by Louis Menand on Anne Applebaum’s “Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe”. Below the fold are a few snippets of what were highlights for me, but read the whole thing if you have time - it's full of remarkable facts about the the end of WWII...

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Posted in Politics - international, History, Political theory

Will the second coming arrive in Missouri?

http://youtu.be/TxMD02zU9SE Apparently not. In any event, I found this an engaging conversation - even if it's about cult beliefs. I wouldn't have expected it, but I found Mitt Romney arguing for his cult more engaging than most of the rest of Mitt's campaigning. Pity he walke...

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Posted in Religion, Political theory

Public and private goods: Part One

Both economic pedagogy and broad political discussion are based on what I've come to think of as anorectic understanding of public and private goods - which boils down to the idea that for things to go on well (let's say in an economy) you need a mix of public and private good...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Innovation

Ideas that might not matter II : Societal Collapse

As in part one of this series, I'm thinking about an idea that seems very possible, extremely interesting and well accepted, but which has little going for it in terms of observed evidence. The idea today is societal collapse. The premise is simple. Human societies are very co...

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Posted in Geeky Musings, Political theory

Things that are hard to measure but easy to observe

Is the real genius of economics our ability to see things that are impossible to objectively measure? The examples I have in mind are incentives, market failures, groups, power, and corruption. Below, I will point out just how impossible these things are to objectively measure...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Society, Economics and public policy, Geeky Musings, Political theory

A mystery

One of the most puzzling features of the world in the aftermath of the financial crisis is that so far, populism has taken primarily a right-wing form, not a left- wing one. In the United States, for example, although the Tea Party is anti-elitist in its rhetoric, its members...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

What is income support for?

Debates over income support are never ending. And part of the reason is that people have different ideas about what they want the income support system to achieve. When it comes to income support payments for people below retirement age who are capable of paid work, there are...

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Posted in Politics - national, Society, Political theory

The long shadow of human capital destruction

Hard to Forget: Long-lasting Effects of Social Capital Accumulation Shocks By: Amodio, Francesco (Associazione Italiana per la Cultura della Cooperazione e del Non Profit) Very few contributions have dealt with the analysis of specific determinants of social capital accumulati...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Dani Rodrik on Convergence

Dani Rodrik is one of the most interesting and fruitful economists of trade and development around. He's just put out a new paper on convergence in manufacturing. Not so long ago most people imagined that poor countries would converge towards the wealth of rich countries. In f...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

What is equality of opportunity?

Almost everyone is in favour of equality of opportunity; even free market activists from the Institute of Public Affairs . But whenever a large number of people agree on a form of words, it's a safe bet they interpret those words differently. How else could party members agree...

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Posted in Philosophy, Society, Libertarian Musings, Political theory

Neoliberalism stole my teleporter, says Graeber

The 21st was supposed to be the age of flying cars, teleporters and affordable space travel, says David Graeber . But now here we are in the future still arguing about overcrowded trains and the price of petrol. David Graeber feels cheated: Where ... are the flying cars? Where...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Literature, Geeky Musings, Political theory

Why do libertarians support conservative parties?

In a piece for the Sunday Age , Chris Berg says progressives think conservatives are heartless because they "don't realise the right has a different and legitimate moral framework." Perhaps so, but what about libertarians ? Berg draws on Jonathan Haidt 's moral foundations res...

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Posted in Libertarian Musings, Political theory

Social justice is about more than redistribution

In a recent book on social justice , former Labor politician Gary Johns argues for "a major reconsideration of social justice as a rationale for the welfare state". In his essay 'When too much social justice is never enough' Johns suggests that social justice is primarily abou...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Giving to the wealthy

I'm not much of a fan of giving to wealthy causes. Like private schools for the well healed. I was asked to attend an interview to see if I'd go on the Council of my daughter's private school - which I said I would. I was then asked if I was Jewish (it's an Anglican School) an...

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Posted in Religion, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Bargains

Beyond Vox Pop Democracy: Deepening democracy in the internet age

Herewith the text of my talk on Ockham's Razor this morning . It is from a longer essay which you can find here , boiled down so that it could be read in the 12 minutes or so one gets on Ockham's Razor. I. Shortly after Barack Obama became the first US president to build his c...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Political theory

Herding Part Two: Superstars

This wasn't supposed to be the theme of part two (Part One is here ) but Jessica Irvine's recent and timely column on superstardom and One Direction prompted me to add my two cents' worth - well someone else's two cents' worth but at least inserted by me. First; highlights fro...

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Posted in Philosophy, Music, Economics and public policy, Media, Political theory

Fair trade and inefficient do-gooding: what's good about it?

Here's an extract from a book on fair trade that I had occasion to look up. In what circumstances is fair trade a good thing? If we dig into our pockets to buy something at a higher price than necessary in order to engage in 'fair trade', then we know a few things. The sacrifi...

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Posted in Environment, Economics and public policy, Political theory

You pay peanuts . . .

Troppo's patron saint Adam Smith put it thus (note the generous assumption about human nature): The liberal reward of labor, as it encourages the propagation, so it increases the industry of the common people . . .. Where wages are high, accordingly, we shall always ?nd the wo...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Kantian Optimisation

No time to read the paper right now, but it looks great. Kantian Optimization, Social Ethos, and Pareto Efficiency Date: 2012-03 By: John E. Roemer (Dept. of Political Science, Yale University) Although evidence accrues in biology, anthropology and experimental economics that...

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Posted in Philosophy, Religion, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Herding: Part One

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1nHNtZ148I A few weeks ago I attended the latest F.H. Gruen lecture at ANU by the terrific English economist Andrew Oswald.* He's one of those economists who, in addition to being formidable in his (many) fields within the profession, is also a...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Secrecy by default: How 'performing government' is trumping transparency

A few months ago, Sam Roggeveen from the Lowy Institute asked me to talk at a function the Institute was holding on secrecy. I said I wasn't particularly well qualified to talk directly on secrecy regarding national security and foreign affairs, but I was happy to speak about...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Web and Government 2.0

The global conspiracy to miss the point

I see there's a US nationwide campaign against private for-profit prisons. Maybe the campaigners are right. It's certainly easy to imagine ways in which the profit motive would work against the interests of prison inmates and the public interest in lower recidivism rates and s...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Democracy and the art of motorcycle maintenance

A tough-talking, motorcycle-riding Texan, sociologist C Wright Mills is about as far from today's stereotype of the latte-sipping left-wing intellectual as you're likely to find. But even though he's been dead for 50 years, you can still see his influence in the intellectual l...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Complexity, context dependency and the (difficult) ascent of man

I read an article with an attractive title recently. " Complexity and Context-Dependency ". It's not very good, but it raises an important point that is important to what I call the psycho-pathology of disciplines and it puts me in mind of something I've thought for a long tim...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Thomas Paine

Thomas Paine was a remarkable fellow who lived at a time of, and helped bring about two great revolutions of the modern age - the American and French ones. His time discovered political pamphleteering in a way that's quite similar to blogging today. People wrote pamphlets and...

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Posted in History, Political theory

Sen, social inclusion & Treasury's wellbeing framework

Treasury's mission is broad -- to improve the wellbeing of the Australian people. And according to Peter Martin its wellbeing framework empowers it "to fight homelessness just as much as it empowers it to fight inflation". As Martin explained back in 2008 the framework goes we...

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Posted in Political theory

Why is there no liberal party?

At the Economist's Democracy in America blog, Erica Grieder suspects that "the biggest untapped constituency is people who are fiscally conservative and socially moderate or liberal." Grieder links to a post by former Cato research fellow Will Wilkinson where he explains why h...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory

A justification for greed

George Monbiot bells the "libertarian" cat: Freedom: who could object? Yet this word is now used to justify a thousand forms of exploitation. Throughout the rightwing press and blogosphere, among thinktanks and governments, the word excuses every assault on the lives of the po...

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Posted in Political theory

Designing better lives: An economist’s appreciation of design

Herewith a paper about my encounter with design, on taking up the Chairmanship of the Australian Centre for Social Innovation and encountering the Family by Family program. The site where it's been published has no comments facility, so I'm opening up discussion here should an...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Web and Government 2.0

The sins of the fathers: Political pathologies of inequality

I posted a while back about my pet theory that the South of the US was a psychotic society, which psychosis was brought about by the politics which arose in a slave society. Anyway, I just came upon this article which looks interesting, and in the same vein. Slaves as capital...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

The Elephant Hunters - Roosevelt, Obama and Osawatomie

As Theodore Roosevelt finished his address to the people of Osawatomie his speechwriter leaped up and cried : "Citizens of Kansas, you have just listened to one of the greatest pronouncements made by any man. Its effect will be felt in the nation and the world for years to com...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

The Herald/Age Lateral Economics Index of Wellbeing

Herewith my op ed from the Herald and Age today. What is the good life and are we living it? Assessing and measuring wellbeing has vexed us since ancient times. But a funny thing happened on the modern world’s way to the answer. The metric that economists used to dampen down t...

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Posted in Philosophy, Environment, Education, Economics and public policy, Health, Political theory

The inevitability of blog tribalism?

Apparently some US journalism academic named Tanni Haas has written a book called Making it in the Political Blogosphere: The World's Top Political Bloggers Share the Secrets to Success . I'm not interested in the subject per se , because I long ago concluded that the recipe w...

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Posted in Political theory, Metablogging

The theory of deceptive sentiments

The latest psychology bestseller The Folly of Fools is on the triumph of deceit. It looks quite interesting. Anyway, it looked a bit too focused on the bestseller formula - which is often the book of the article formula for me to want to read it all. But I've downloaded my Kin...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

This book kills fascists?

Cathy Wilkerson was ironing bed sheets when the floor collapsed under her feet. A bomb had detonated in the subbasement of her parent's Greenwich Village townhouse . Cathy and another woman walked away but their friends Teddy Gold , Terry Robbins and Diane Oughton were dead. I...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

An idle thought experiment

On the suggestion, some time ago, of Ian Marsh, I finally caught up with the New Democracy Foundation a few weeks ago. Not surprisingly we got on well. I've always been keen on things like consensus conferences - which bring the deliberation of a jury to wider social and polit...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Meme Weaver

Yesterday I followed this mellifluously titled article on why the author hadn't been able to write a best selling 'ideas book'. This is what I had to do. First, I needed to have a platform. A platform is something you stand on. It makes you taller than you are. In trade publis...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Literature, Economics and public policy, Political theory

What if Oz is partially occupied already?

A few months ago there was a blog debate about the tensions between a movement left and a wonkish left in pursuing political change, summarised neatly here by Matt Cowgill . A domestic sequel has arisen in Australia. In the United States the wonkish left, from Riksbank laureat...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Free speech, hate speech and human dignity

I muse at CDU Law and Business Online about the broader implications of Eatock v Bolt in light of last night's Austin Asche Oration in Law and Governance by Federal Court Chief Justice Pat Keane. Discussion is solicited, there rather than here by preference.

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Posted in Politics - national, Media, Political theory, Law

The Anarchic Society and the Global Commons

In light of Paul Frijter's sketpticism about the possibility of co-ordinated international action on carbon emissions and his recent offer of a wager on the outcome of international action, I thought I'd try to put the economic problem into some of the language of Internationa...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Climate Change, Political theory

Are you tough minded enough to be with us? Or are you against us?

Someone familiar with Russian totalitarianism once asked how George Orwell understood it so well without ever having experienced it. It was pointed out that Orwell had been to Eton. Paul Krugman asks how could the guardians of economic orthodoxy all suddenly come out in favour...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Now more than ever . . .

I've been struggling to articulate my objection to little strategic set pieces which appear before policy proposals. They typically take the salient challenges from conventional wisdom - for instance right now that we're facing potential environmental catastrophe, sovereign de...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Sympathy for the devil

The devil in the title is our oldest enemy . Not the hoofed and horned one, but rent. Rent is gains in excess of what is required to mobilize a factor of production. The term comes from land as gains accrue to ownership with no relation to the merit or exertion of the owner. F...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Hayek and democracy

Will Wilkinson is unhappy about a recent article in Salon where Michael Lind denounces libertarians as enemies of democracy. One of Lind's targets is the classical liberal, Friedrich Hayek who he says preferred libertarian dictatorships to welfare state democracies. Wilkinson...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Political theory

Imagine

The left needs utopia, says John Quiggin ; "a transformative vision to offer hope of a better life". Last year he wrote : After decades of defensive struggle, we on the left no longer know how to talk about anything bigger than the local fights in which we may hope to defend t...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

The ABC's Australian Story about David Hicks and he-said she-said journalism

The ABC has made a documentary about David Hicks and screened it in an double episode of Australian Story. It's still on iView and I suggest you go check it out if you've not seen it. It went to some lengths to be 'balanced' but somehow the balance seems to me to tilt too far...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory, Law

Weighting criteria bleg

Steven Jobs is perhaps the best CEO of the last hundred years. This may reflect my ignorance of other CEOs - which is bordering on the comprehensive - but my reasoning goes like this this: In identifying extraordinary talent, one has to guard against luck. How do we decide bet...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Blegs, Political theory

Winston Churchill and the welfare state

In the American Scholar, George Watson writes about the forgotten Churchill -- the Liberal who helped lay the foundations for Britain's welfare state. Churchill was president of the Board of Trade in the Asquith government -- a Liberal government that favoured free trade, a mo...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Five Neoliberalisms

The recent debate over Matt Yglesias' 'left neoliberalism' reminded me what an ambiguous term neoliberalism is. There are at least five political movements or schools of thought that are called neoliberal. While they are distinguishable, they are not entirely separate. Accordi...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Political theory

A speech in England

HT: Skeptic Lawyer http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SHKhvVjLIc&feature=player_embedded

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, History, Political theory

Matt Yglesias' left neoliberalism

On the other side of the Pacific, bloggers are arguing over something called 'left neoliberalism'. What began as a dispute over monetary policy between Yglesias and Doug Henwood quickly widened into a debate over political philosophy and strategies to rebuild the American left...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Do women behave more reciprocally than men? (Hint: yes)

Do women behave more reciprocally than men? Gender differences in real effort dictator games Heinz, Matthias, Rau, Holger A., and Juranek, Steffen Abstract: We analyze dictator allocation decisions in an experiment where the recipients have to earn the pot to be divided with a...

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Posted in Gender, Political theory

Fair trade or no trade? Economic illiteracy alive and well in our think tanks

The right wing think tanks have been having a ball denouncing dreadful things like fiscal stimuli which saved a good hundred thousand odd jobs in Australia. Meanwhile New Matilda carries a story about life in Ladakh: Sun-drenched images of rural life in Ladakh in the 1970s whe...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Scandinavia: where they do things differently

If it had happened in the US it is inconceivable that a great deal of the emphasis would not have been on Justice for the Killer. "We'll hunt him down . . . " Well no hunting down required in this case but you get my drift. I can't recall what we said about it in Bali, but we'...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Law

Tim Harford hams it up for TED

Which isn't to complain. He gives a great speech. [ted id=1190]

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

A new Big Idea for China

Disclaimer: This ended up roughly 4500 words longer than I expected when I sat down. A while ago, following the start of the Arab Spring, John Quiggin wrote a post declaring " Fukuyama, F*** Yeah ". Apart from showcasing an appreciation of both late 20th century political thou...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Politics - international, Philosophy, Geeky Musings, Political theory

Inequality => Despair => Social and economic misery

I love finding links between equity and efficiency - there are lots around. Here's another . . . . (it seems). Early Non-marital Childbearing and the "Culture of Despair" by Melissa Schettini Kearney, Phillip B. Levine This paper borrows from the tradition of other social scie...

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Posted in Philosophy, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory

What working class?

In the first of series of posts on Marxism , John Quiggin goes in search of the revolutionary working class. It takes Professor Q an entire paragraph to establish that no such class exists and that the revolution is off. Most Marxists (and recovering Marxists) seem to have com...

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Posted in Political theory

Was Hayek a closet Rawlsian?

There's a disconnect between Friedrich Hayek's principles and his practical policy positions, according to Canadian scholar Andrew Lister . In a working paper for the Centre for the Study of Social Justice at Oxford Lister argues that Hayek is a closet Rawlsian -- an egalitari...

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Posted in Political theory

Traditional Culture and Aboriginal Wellbeing

Traditional Culture and the Wellbeing of Indigenous Australians: An analysis of the 2008 NATSISS (pdf) Dr A.M. Dockery Centre for Labour Market Research, Curtin University Research based on data from the 2002 National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey found e...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - Northern Territory, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Making sure we remain ignorant about whether our experts know their arses from their elbows

In a very recent post I commented on the absence of the one signal in the public market for expertise that might really improve the market for expertise - from the perspective of the public and private interest in efficiency - and that was some surveillance of the extent to wh...

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Posted in Philosophy, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Announcing the People's Northern Territory Constitutional Convention wiki

I have distinctly ambivalent views about Statehood for the Northern Territory, as long-time readers will have noted. I even mused not so long ago about whether the existing grant of self-government should be revoked and other governance models explored instead. More recently I...

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Posted in Politics - Northern Territory, Political theory, Law

We're all Fabians now: The long debate over conditional welfare

While she admired Winston Churchill, his resistance to conditional welfare was exasperating. For years Beatrice Webb had been arguing with Churchill and other Liberals about social insurance and she was getting nowhere. She insisted that: "Doling out weekly allowances, and wit...

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Posted in Society, Political theory

The rhetoric of bureaucracy

Everyone's talking about evidence-based policy. And since gathering evidence is their job, you might think this would give academic researchers a more important role in the policy process. But as Peter Shergold writes in the Australian Literary Review , academics have little i...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory

Corey Robin on the politics of freedom

Freedom is a keyword in American politics, writes Corey Robin in the Nation . It lies at the centre of every successful political movement from the abolition of slavery, to civil rights and feminism. The secret of conservatism's success is that it identifies freedom with marke...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Human clay: As seen from space, and our choices

n.b I did the hokey pokey on this post, putting it in and taking in out because I figured it was fairly pointless. Now I'm putting it in again (and shaking it all about). The other day I was idling away some spare time by looking at roads on Google Maps. I looked at roads and...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Libertarianism, classical liberalism, and gambling restrictions

Andrew Norton has some interesting posts distinguishing between classical liberalism (to which he regards himself as an adherent) and libertarianism (to which he doesn't). His explanation of the distinction - at least skimming his posts again quickly - is that libertarianism i...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

When too much theory is barely enough . . .

It's funny. I think academia is too theoretical, and politics isn't theoretical enough. In this post I'll defend the second proposition on politics, and if I manage it, a subsequent post will defend the first. I'm also thinking particularly about the ALP. In a sense my proposi...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Who wrote this . . .

OK - so I just read it from a link on a Krugman blog post , but it's worth repeating. An example of fad economics occurred in 1980, when a small group fo economists advised presidential candidate Ronald Reagan that an across-the-board cut in income tax rates would raise tax re...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Drawing the line on judicial expression of partisan views

Of all the right wing shock jocks, I find Andrew Bolt by far the best read. If you ignore the coat trailing and name calling - like calling 'Liberty Victoria' 'far left' (declaration of interest - I'm not sure if I'm a full paying member right now but I join it when asked) and...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Law

Me and Wen Jiabao

Well blow me down! In early 2009 I was invited to Beijing to participate in a 'dialogue' on 'the knowledge society' which was being run between various academic institutions in Australia and Peking University. The 'dialogue' was quite formal and diplomatic - I recognised the g...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Web and Government 2.0

"It is good sense to appoint individual people to jobs on their merit. It is the opposite when those who are judged to have merit of a particular kind harden into a new social class without room in it for others"

Having just watched Q&A on the republic (looking for my daughter who'd got herself into the audience!), I was intrigued by the post I've replicated below. I am the most luke warm republican around and have almost certainly put Chris Dillow's first argument below somewhere on T...

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Posted in Politics - national, Education, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Law

Is Julia Gillard channeling Ayn Rand?

When John Quiggin accused Julia Gillard of embracing neoliberalism one of his readers suggested the PM was taking advantage of Ayn Rand's renewed popularity to chase the libertarian vote. Rand seems to be everywhere these days. With the release of movie based on her 1957 novel...

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Posted in Political theory

Vilifying anti-vilification laws

Author and Fairfax columnist John Birmingham posts a truly delightful splenetic prescription for appropriate responses to the odious Andrew Bolt, in the context of current racial vilification proceedings against him by a polyglot assortment of prominent Aboriginal activists: T...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Politics - national, Politics - international, Political theory, Law

China takes on the mantle of a great power

I liked this brief piece from Peter Drysdale introducing a recent East Asia Forum Weekly Digest and asked if I could reproduce it here and he agreed. 'Be not afraid of greatness,' wrote William Shakespeare in Twelfth Night. 'Some men are born great, some achieve greatness and...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

To price but not to tax

In one episode of Yes Minister Hacker says something like "It seems the civil service just prevents governments from implementing the sovereign promises the government has made to the people" to which Bernard says "Well somebody has to". I'm a bit of a promises guy - I think i...

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Posted in Politics - national, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Keynes, Smith and the positivists (Benthamites) and hyper-positivists (Neoclassicals)

Here's a cut and pasted Amazon review of The Macrodynamics of Capitalism: Elements for a Synthesis of Marx, Keynes and Schumpeter . It's a bit heavy and I've ignored the maths so can't vouch for it. I'm basically slapping it up here for my own future reference, but Troppodilli...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Useable knowledge in the army: The best comment I've read in ages

Foreword: I discovered this post - which I'd entirely forgotten about - the other day. It's a cracker, and because I wrote a comment on it, it's received some further comments on account of turning up in the 'recently commented on threads' list. So I'm sticking it on the front...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory

Meanwhile while we're minding our own business here on planet earth . . .

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PMe5dOgbu40&feature=player_embedded Christopher Monckton feels we could benefit from a few thoughts of his . . .

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Climate Change, Political theory

Tolerance, acceptance and civility in the immigration debate

The ABC's Chris Uhlmann is undoubtedly correct in detecting in the actions of Tony Abbott and Scott Morrison a clear intent on the part of the Coalition to play the race/immigration/asylum card against Labor. It's a recurrent gambit in Australian politics, played successfully...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory

Who's responsible for keeping speech free?

At Menzies House , Tim Andrews argues that "we should have public debate free from fear of attack, and free from fear of retaliation." According to Andrews, it's not acceptable for activists to try to influence a media outlet's editorial policy by targeting its advertisers. An...

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Posted in Political theory, Metablogging

Cultural pluralism

HT 3 Quarks: Perhaps rather apposite in view of some recent controversies and debates. Bhikhu Parekh in The Philosopher's Magazine: Western thought has long been dominated by the view that while error is plural, truth is singular. We can be wrong in many different ways but can...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

'Neoliberalism' - The ideology of pragmatism

At Larvatus Prodeo, Kim writes about The great American neoliberal liberal blog kerfuffle where blogger Freddie deBoer claims that "almost anything resembling an actual left wing has been systematically written out of the conversation within the political blogosphere". Accordi...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Welfare: A subtle destroyer of the human spirit?

Albert Hirschman called it the perversity thesis -- the claim that an " attempt to push society in a certain direction will result in its moving all right, but in the opposite direction ". The best example of thesis is in arguments against cash-transfer programs for the non-wo...

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Posted in Political theory

Pulling teeth and assisting R&D

Methodology and what in disciplines other than economics is called 'theory' has always interested me - so long as it remains at the level that can be understood by my tiny brain and does not waft off into structuralism, deconstruction, critical theory or other strange activiti...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Do poor people cause poverty?

If only we could persuade poor people to adopt the values and behaviours of their rich neighbours we could end poverty in a generation. Or at least that's the impression you'd get from reading the never ending stream of books and articles about the culture of poverty, the unde...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

The Joye of Inequality

Christopher Joye is relaxed about income inequality. In a recent article for the Drum Unleashed he writes: I don’t think there is anything wrong at all with a rise in income inequality if one assumes that: (a) we have equality of opportunity; (b) we are committed to combating...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Must watch viewing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVDla_Ax40k&feature=player_embedded

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Political theory

Krugman gets heavy

I’ve had a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach ever since the final stages of the 2008 campaign. I remembered the upsurge in political hatred after Bill Clinton’s election in 1992 — an upsurge that culminated in the Oklahoma City bombing. And you could see, just by watching...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Groupthink: the enemy within

As I sometimes do I was tapping away on a blog post and then thought I'd like to give it greater exposure. So I didn't press 'publish' and then pitched it to the Age who liked the idea. So I worked away to convert the post into a column - they're fairly different things (for m...

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory

A modest proposal: Affirmative action or reverse discrimination for those who've broken their careers to care

I was talking to my wife today about an alternative form of reverse discrimination and came home to find something else I'd said about it linked to by Richard Green . To introduce the issue, here was my comment. I’ve always thought that the absence of women in politics is in f...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Serving your political constituents by serving your own political interests

As readers may have noticed, I'm much of a one for the panto morality in which political leaders are urged to be 'leaders' at the expense of their own political viability. Yes, acts of political heroism occur. Some of them are even worthwhile, though they're mostly of little c...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

What is government for? -- Paul Ryan's unanswered question

It was billed as a debate over the size of government . But within the first few minutes Congressman Paul Ryan had changed the subject. Focusing "just on size entirely misses the point", he said, "We should not be asking how big should our government be, we should be asking wh...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Political theory

Letter from a Birmingham Jail: Martin Luther King contra the dark dungeons of complacency

I was browsing in borders and came upon American Essays of the Century (ie the last one) edited by Joyce Carol Oates. Which was very tempting. I would have bought it if it wasn't $45 too. But I read the essay below - full as it is of what are now cliches of the civil rights mo...

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Posted in Politics - international, Life, History, Literature, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Law

Web 2.0, Gov 2.0 and elites

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UfFMIhMEyYY&feature=player_profilepage I was pleased to be asked to speak at the Queensland's Right Information Day. In my speech I wanted to speak a little against the grain. The language used by Web 2.0, Gov 2.0 aficionados has a particular qua...

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Posted in IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Web and Government 2.0

Where did the populist left go? #4

From Troppo's guest blogger Neal Lawson (OK I nicked his post and reproduced it here). It is so depressingly inevitable. Obama, like Clinton, Blair and Brown before him, like in Rudd in Australia, like the Swedish social democrats, like every example of centre-left government...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Philosophy, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Charles Murray: Champion of elitism, enemy of the elites

"A degree from Harvard or Yale is not a pre-requisite for president", says talk show host Glenn Beck while Christine O'Donnell begins a campaign ad by disclosing " I didn't go to Yale ". If there's one thing tea party champions agree on, it's that a new elite has taken over Am...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Politics - international, Philosophy, Political theory

Government 2.0 as cultural labour and participatory government

Previously on this blog I've outlined a couple of themes of mine about Government 2.0. In a comment on a draft APS Social Manifesto I elaborated on both things and so I thought I'd reproduce them here. I think what you’re trying to do is worthwhile. However culture change is a...

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Web and Government 2.0

The missing populism of the left: Post Three

I've posted on this a couple of times before - arguing that the populism of the left has gone missing and wondering why. This argues the same point in a different - shall we say 'genre'. I agree with most of the first half of it, but thought it got a little complacent about it...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Hegel and Wall St

I'm afraid I don't have time to explain this in any detail. But Hegel is perhaps my favourite philosopher. I worked out I'd like to know more about Hegel when so many of the people who interested me seemed to somehow go back to Hegel. R.G. Collingwood is a good example, but lo...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Strategic planning, strategic diagrams and complete nonsense

I recently attended the David Solomon Lecture in Brisbane as part of Right to Information Day. David Solomon designed the freedom of information architecture of Qld and Anna Bligh asked him to do it and more or less implemented what he recommended. So good on her. He is a Good...

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Posted in Philosophy, Humour, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Commitment and other fantasies

When I hear that anything is 'committed' to something I reach for my gun. It's an almost certain signifier of insincerity. As a donor I receive bumph from the Brotherhood of St Laurence. The latest newsletter I got told me that "The Brotherhood is committed to ensuring that ev...

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Posted in Political theory

Thinking in Chinese vs. Thinking in English

By: Li King King (Strategic Interaction Group, Max Planck Institute of Economics, Jena) This paper investigates whether language priming activates different cultural identities and norms associated with the language communicated; bilingual subjects are given Chinese instructio...

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Posted in Life, Political theory

Sydney Uni book fair

Saturday 11 to Wed 15, 10 am to 5 in the Great Hall . My treasures: all in practically "as new" condition. Peter Medawar, Pluto's Republic (not a missprint). $3. Review . The editor of the Age Monthly Review would not let me write that the cover photo depicted Medwar demonstra...

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Posted in Politics - national, Education, Society, Economics and public policy, Science, Geeky Musings, Political theory

The revenge of the consultants

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jMxz7rzwee8 Paddy McGuinness once opined about the chasm between consultant and academic speak in the realm of economics. I think it was in the context of the battle between the mush served up by the consultants which became BCG in Australia in t...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Sarah Palin

"Oil and coal? Of course, it's a fungible commodity and they don't flag, you know, the molecules, where it's going and where it's not . . . So, I believe that what congress is going to do, also, is not to allow export bans to such a degree that it's Americans that get stuck to...

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Posted in Political theory

Another difference between US and Australian conservatives

Readers of this blog will know that I share Paul Krugman's view that the US Republicans are a crazy, scary bunch. And during the Howard years there were lots of people who argued that Howard was the same. Which is ridiculous. He was sympathetic to the Crazy Party of the United...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Strange bedfellows: dynamic tension

I don't have time to make the point I want to make at any length, but Chris Berg reminds us that dynamic tension can be a good thing in government and is, I think absolutely necessary to really good government. He is optimistic about Clegg and Cameron in the UK and in their ab...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Robert James Lee Gillard (here's hoping)

I wrote up my own views about the power of 'consensus politics' here . Specifically I suggested that three aspects of a leader's performance involve whether: unity or division is emphasised there is a cult of the strong leader as opposed to the leader being seen as an orchestr...

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory

The vortex of performance politics sucks in another victim . . .

Thoughts on reading this psychologist's write up of the Gulf of Mexico disaster: A long time ago I stopped calling my Mum a Labor supporter and called her a Labor barracker. She's disdainful of my interest in football - a thoroughly trivial activity which is arresting for thos...

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Posted in Politics - national, Life, Political theory

What became of the populist left?

In a memorable moment in the 1983 election Malcolm Fraser, suggested that if people got a Labor Government they’d have to keep their savings under their bed. Bob Hawke responded that the commies were already under the bed. Back then Hawke could tap into a collective consciousn...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory

Why governments should allow private businesses to discriminate on race

Courtesy of your local Republican candidate .

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

A General Theory of History – A bleg

Doctor Labyrinth, like most people who read a great deal and who have too much time on their hands, had become convinced that our civilization was going the way of Rome. He saw, I think , the same cracks forming that had sundered the ancient world, the world of Greece and Rome...

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Posted in History, Economics and public policy, Science, Geeky Musings, Political theory

The stupid party

During the Hawke years one conservative columnist used to bemoan the lack of professionalism of the right in Australian politics. I don't much read columns of professional columnists anymore, so I don't know if this theme has recurred but somehow he seemed to become more prote...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Amartya: I couldn't have put it better

Even if I would have choked on my Weeties that the New Statesman presumably thought this picture looks like Adam Smith. The economist manifesto, by Amartya Sen, Commentary, New Statesman : The 18th-century philosopher Adam Smith wasn’t the free-market fundamentalist he is thou...

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Posted in Politics - international, History, Economics and public policy, Political theory

The third way in the UK

What do you do if you’re a ‘third wayer’ and things don’t seem to be turning out all that flatteringly for your vision? You just keep talking in pretty much the same way, slap a coat of Web 2.0 paint on the vision and press on. Oh well, none of us that I know of are that cleve...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Obliquity . . .

We do have a few advantages, perhaps the greatest being that we don’t have a strategic plan Warren Buffett Obliquity . . . or indirectness of means is a subject to which it turns out I've given a lot of thought over the years going back at least to Charles Lindblom's attacks f...

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Posted in Politics - international, Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

John Kay - a marvellous economic journalist and commentator

Ever since I read his marvellous The Truth about Markets I've been a fan of John Kay - an economist who doesn't like to get too far away from reality. He's also not a zealot for any particular view of the world, except that pathetic kind of vagueness and pluralism to which I a...

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Posted in Life, Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory

The Atomic Peace of East and West

William Hardy Wilson is a fairly well regarded Australian architect of the 20th century and is such usually afforded a few paragraphs in biographical dictionaries and encyclopaedias. These will mention in passing a few well regarded buildings and pay brief mention to an unreal...

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Posted in History, Art and Architecture, Political theory

Paul Samuelson 1915-2009

How will Paul Samuelson be remembered? This is the positive side of the story, the glowing record of the Nobel Laureate and author of the most widely read textbook in modern times. History may be kind to Samuelson. He had the good fortune to surf three waves that carried all b...

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Posted in Uncategorised, History, Economics and public policy, Terror, Political theory

Soros on market fundamentalism

George Soros picked up the idea of the open society from Karl Popper at the London School of Economics and he spent a great deal of money promoting the idea through Open Society Institutes in Eastern Europe. Lately he has moved on to target market fundamantalism as the great t...

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Posted in Uncategorised, Politics - national, Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Libertarian Musings, Political theory

Robbins, economic science and political economy

I've never been much of a fan of Lionel Robbins 1932 Essay on the Nature and Significance of Economic Science. It smacks of what I'd call 'authoritarian methodology' which had its sterile apotheosis in Popper's efforts to demark 'science' and 'non-science'. To cut a long story...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Leszek Kolakowski RIP

A late call on the departure of the distinguished scholar Leszek Kolakowski. A short obituary . Starting off as an orthodox Marxist in postwar Poland, Kolakowski became progressively disenchanted and his calls for a more democratic version of socialism led him into conflicts w...

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Posted in Uncategorised, History, Political theory

Libertarianism -- An ideology for "socially retarded adolescent white guys"?

Peter Thiel is a super-smart, super-successful businessman and libertarian activist. He co-founded PayPal , invested in Facebook and has pledged three and half million dollars to a project searching for the key to human immortality . He also thinks it was a bad idea to give wo...

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Posted in Politics - international, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Economics and Positivism

I don't have time right now to read the essay which is abstracted below . But I'd love to. And I don't really have time to defend the propositions that I'll put before you here, nor to get them into a state that I would be confident I wouldn't have to revise once I'd posted th...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

"Defamation of religion" and liberal values

Richard Ackland has an enjoyable rant this week about an upcoming UN talkfest in Geneva known as Durban II. It's organised by the UN Human Rights Council, which in a delightful (but typical of the UN) irony is chaired by Libya. As Ackland points out: The Human Rights Council i...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Interview: Robert Latimer

If you go to this page on the BBC's website in the next few days, or if you arrive in the next month or so if you download this file (mp3), you will hear an extraordinary interview. It is with a softly spoken Canadian farmer. He euthanased his 12 year old daughter who suffered...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Political theory

What about classical liberalism?

Some interesting pieces in The Australian Literary Review , 3 Dec, the insert that comes in the paper on the first Wednesday of the month. Richard Lansdowne wrote on the courage of Alexander Solzhenitsyn which he suggests made him the greatest writer of the 20th century. I am...

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Posted in Uncategorised, Philosophy, History, Literature, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Hierarchy, altruism and gender

I wish I had more time to look at all this stuff, which is very suggestive of interesting things. I have a proposal for you, micro-economic reform has been basically right in trying to make markets more competitive, but it's done some serious damage along the way, and one way...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Political theory

Freedom's just another word for ... ?

When Hunter S. Thompson returned to Louisville in the early 1960s, he found a city proud of its progress on race relations . "Racial segregation has been abolished in nearly all white public places", he wrote. But even though many of the legal barriers to desegregation had bee...

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Posted in Political theory

Why the presidential interregnum?

As Krugman points out , the situation in the US is a pretty sad sight, with the lamest of lame duck presidents fiddling while the economy burns. This is a pretty ridiculous situation. Why not do what they do with buildings and start using them before they are officially opened...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Independent Fiscal Policy

Today's Financial Review column. Eminent economist Brad Delong despaired at news of George W Bush's second electoral victory four years ago: The American political system . . . appears incapable of setting out the central fiscal [or budgetary] policy issues in ways that give v...

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Posted in Politics - national, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Capitalism, down but not out!

These are difficult times for liberals. The mood around the world is turning against them. Politicians find it easier to blame crazy economists and greedy managers for financial turmoil than to understand and fix their own mistakes. Free-marketers still have the evidence of ec...

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Posted in Uncategorised, Politics - national, Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory

Bring on the class war!

Peter Beinart sees the rejection of Sarah Palin as the death knell of ratbag right-wing ideology as the Republicans' key to success in US politics. I hope he's right, and I'm going to propose a dialectical explanation for the demise of the Karl Rove Era. I was struck at the ti...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Rules and Orders: The dangers of ad hoc interventionism

In light of the massive interventionism that is being practiced by governments to handle the financial crisis, a warning needs to be repeated regarding two very different kinds of government action. The warning can be found in Chapter 17 of The Open Society and its Enemies , s...

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Posted in Uncategorised, Politics - national, Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory, Law

The Great Depression and the New Deal

There are important lessons to be learned from the Great Depression but I have the impression that the left emerged with the view that the New Deal was required to save the US from rampant capitalism. There is an alternative account . For an MP3 version of the story . The New...

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Posted in Uncategorised, History, Economics and public policy, regulation, Political theory, Business

Cranlana after a new CEO

The Myer Foundation's 'Cranlana' Program is named after Sidney Myer's magnificent Toorak home where the program holds a range of functions. I attended one of these when I was working at the BCA. I remember doing the reading for it before hand and thinking it was going to be aw...

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Posted in Life, Philosophy, Art and Architecture, Political theory

Moral Philosophy lives on line

People will recall that political economy started out as moral philosophy (a la Adam Smith, Professor of Moral Philosophy) then evolved into the study of national economies, then reverted to the narrower scope of economics, focussed on the idealised "economic actor". For those...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

John Gray, the gadfly of liberalism

This is one for Don Arthur, maybe you can help to work out where John Gray is coming from these days and what happened since the time he was a fan of Thatcherism and the New Right. Somewhere along the road he decided that he could no longer support liberalism because it provid...

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Posted in Uncategorised, Economics and public policy, Geeky Musings, Political theory

Zen and the art of entrepreneurial capitalism

Many years ago, Robert M. Pirsig's hippy cult novel Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance was one of my favourites. A few weeks ago I discovered he'd written a sequel in 1991 called Lila: An Inquiry into Morals . I've been reading it as a break from seemingly interminable...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Discrimination in the labour market: Should criminal records be public?

The following paragraph is an abstract of the paper "The Effect of Employer Access to Criminal History Data on the Labor Market Outcomes of Ex-Offenders and Non-Offenders" by Keith Finlay Since 1997, states have begun to make criminal history records publicly available over th...

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Posted in Philosophy, IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Political theory

Stupid rich people -- Ezra Klein on inequality

The super-rich aren't super-smart says Ezra Klein . While it might be comforting to believe that that income differences represent differences in knowledge and skill, it's just not true: The massive gains in wealth in this country are apportioning to a small slice of rich peop...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

How much is enough?

"If everyone had enough, it would be of no moral consequence whether some had more than others", says Harry Frankfurt . Skepticlawyer agrees. In a recent post on 'progressive fusionism' she suggests combining Frankfurt's 'doctrine of sufficiency' with Amartya Sen's capabilitie...

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Posted in Philosophy, Political theory

Zimbabwe and Burma - international salvation?

I've been puzzling about international humanitarian interventions lately, in part because my daughter Bec is in the middle of a uni assignment on the subject, but mostly because as I write this Robert Mugabe continues to terrorise and impoverish his own people in Zimbabwe whil...

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory, Law

Charting a charter of rights (part 2)

Previous tatooed breasts scales of justice deep-sixed to avoid bad taste distraction from a post intended to provoke serious discussion ... John Greenfield is a conservative blog commenter who occasionally fulfils a useful function, rather like a canary in a coal mine. He can...

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Posted in Politics - national, Political theory, Law

Inequality -- How much is too much?

What shape is the income distribution of Andrew Leigh's dreams? Even he doesn't know. "I don’t have a strong sense of what the right level of inequality is", he writes . "Indeed, I'm not even sure I have the right intellectual framework for answering the question." The questio...

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Posted in Uncategorised, Libertarian Musings, Political theory

The coming realignment?

Under John Howard, the Liberal Party embraced a form of big-spending conservative social democracy, says Andrew Norton . The most formidable opponents of limited government are conservatives. In a comment on Andrew's blog , Winton Bates wonders whether this might lead to a rea...

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Posted in Political theory

Obama on race

If you haven't seen or read Obama's speech on the Reverend White, you should. Or if you're stretched for time, Clive Crook edits it down to the best bits - which are still pretty extensive. He really isn't just a pretty face.

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Posted in Politics - international, Political theory

Libertarian algebra

There's been something of a libertarian theme at Club Troppo this week, what with Fred Argy's rather unlikely characterisation of Kevin Rudd as a libertarian on any topic other than shameless self-promotion, and my snarky comment about libertarians' self-confessed lack of attr...

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Posted in Political theory

Slagging the dead

I want to return, hopefully with whatever wider perspective a few weeks brings, to Paul Keating's inflammatory remarks about the late right wing pundit Paddy McGuinness. We should keep in mind for a start, as Peter "Mumble" Brent implicitly noted at the time, that McGuinness h...

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Posted in Politics - national, Journalism, Political theory

The 2020 summit who should go?

I've just been asked by the Department of PM&C to nominate someone to go to the 202o Summit. Who should I nominate - and why? This post will be moderated strictly. Suggestions should be serious and I hope you'll provide good reasons. Of course there will be people who want to...

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Posted in Politics - national, Politics - international, Life, Philosophy, Environment, History, Education, Society, Religion, Economics and public policy, Science, Gender, Journalism, Health, Climate Change, Political theory, Law

Are conservatives more morally balanced?

Only marginally related to the post, but a great image just the same - from turtblu on Flickr Readers with prodigious memories may recall a post I wrote a couple of years ago about the work of psychologist Jonathan Haidt on the cognitive basis for human morality. Haidt has dev...

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Posted in Philosophy, Science, Political theory

Anyone for cat blogging?

Photo by Ohmann Alianne on Flickr Anyone familiar with the findings of political scientists like Philip Converse , about the spectacular combination of profound ignorance and political disinterest of most voters, will be unsurprised by this story on Yahoo! News: LONDON (AFP) -...

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Posted in Political theory

The Theory of Primate Sentiments: Part Two

The story so far. Robin Dunbar is arguing that language developed amongst apes as something that could replace grooming in facilitating larger social groups than could be supported by grooming. Adam Smith is lurking in the background with the promise made that there are errie...

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Posted in Philosophy, History, Political theory, Ethics, Cultural Critique

Peter Singer's Animal Liberation

Spiked Online has run quite a lot of articles about animal welfare lately. I remember how disappointed I was thirty odd years ago when I bought Peter Singer's book Animal Liberation . The case for considering animal suffering and for doing what we could to alleviate it seemed...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory

A conservative liberal social democrat

The central conservative truth is that it is culture, not politics, that determines the success of a society. The central liberal truth is that politics can change a culture and save it from itself. Daniel Patrick Moynihan In one of my favourite quotes for me a kind of credo R...

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics and public policy, Political theory, Cultural Critique

Why is John Clarke so funny? And why now?

Last night my kids were watching the swimming championships on the tele and the National Bank ad came on. "You said you wanted us to listen. So we listened. You said you wanted better service: We've given you better service". Or whatever it says. Then we switched to John Clark...

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Posted in Philosophy, Journalism, Political theory