Australia: The State of Democracy
Australia: The State of Democracy
by Marian Sawer, Norman Abjorensen and Phil Larkin
Softcover 336 pgs.
Published: July 2009
ISBN-13: 9781862877252
$60.00

Australia: The State of Democracy

On many criteria, Australia has been a pioneering democracy. As one of the oldest continuing democracies, however, a health check has long been overdue. Since 2002 the Democratic Audit of Australia, a major democracy assessment project, has been applying an internationally tested set of indicators to Australian political institutions and practices.

The indicators derive from four basic principles—political equality, popular control of government, civil liberties and human rights and the quality of public deliberation. Comparative data are taken from Australia's nine jurisdictions, as well as from three comparator democracies, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, to identify strengths, weaknesses and opportunities for reform.

Some of the findings are disturbing. For example, Australia has fallen well behind in the regulation of private money in elections and in controlling the use of government or parliamentary resources for partisan benefit. Transparency and accountability have suffered from relatively weak FOI regimes and from executive dominance of parliaments.

For those studying democracy or wanting to reform Australian politics, The State of Democracy provides a wealth of evidence in a well-illustrated and highly accessible format. Internationally, it is an important contribution to the democracy assessment literature and pushes into new areas such as the intergovernmental decision-making of federalism.

Summary Table of Contents

Introduction

Political history
Basic political data
Basic socio-economic data

Part I - Citizenship, law and rights

Nationhood and citizenship
The Rule of Law and access to justice
Civil and political rights
Economic and social rights

Part II - Representative and accountable government

Free and fair elections
Democratic role of political parties
Government effectiveness and accountability
Civilian control of the military and the police
Minimising corruption

Part III - Civil society and popular participation

The media in a democratic society
Political participation
Government responsiveness
Decentralisation

Part IV - Democracy beyond the state and federalism

International dimensions of democracy
Federalism
Audit references 
Index 
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