Political Ideologies

The first section of this book focused on 'government'-that is, the institutional structure of Australia's liberal-democratic system, We turn now to look more at the 'politics' of that system: the organisations and ideas that compete for power and influence in Australian gov...

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Main Author: Fenna, Alan
Other Authors: Alan Fenna
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Pearson Australia 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11902
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author Fenna, Alan
author2 Alan Fenna
author_facet Alan Fenna
Fenna, Alan
author_sort Fenna, Alan
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description The first section of this book focused on 'government'-that is, the institutional structure of Australia's liberal-democratic system, We turn now to look more at the 'politics' of that system: the organisations and ideas that compete for power and influence in Australian government. This chapter looks specifically at the main clusters of ideas, known as 'ideologies', through which political debate is conducted both in Australia and overseas. Ideologies are the way we individually and collectively interpret the political world and think it should operate. Most importantly, ideologies are our vision of what government should do and how it should do it. They are the visions around which political parties have been constructed and through which political parties function and are perhaps most familiar in terms of the distinction between 'Left' and 'Right'. The dominant ideology in Western societies is liberalism. However, liberalism not only has important competitors but is also divided within itself. This chapter identifies the defining features of each of those main ideological tendencies and discusses the way in which the relationship between them has fluctuated over time.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-119022023-02-07T08:01:24Z Political Ideologies Fenna, Alan Alan Fenna Jane Robbins John Summers Political Ideologies The first section of this book focused on 'government'-that is, the institutional structure of Australia's liberal-democratic system, We turn now to look more at the 'politics' of that system: the organisations and ideas that compete for power and influence in Australian government. This chapter looks specifically at the main clusters of ideas, known as 'ideologies', through which political debate is conducted both in Australia and overseas. Ideologies are the way we individually and collectively interpret the political world and think it should operate. Most importantly, ideologies are our vision of what government should do and how it should do it. They are the visions around which political parties have been constructed and through which political parties function and are perhaps most familiar in terms of the distinction between 'Left' and 'Right'. The dominant ideology in Western societies is liberalism. However, liberalism not only has important competitors but is also divided within itself. This chapter identifies the defining features of each of those main ideological tendencies and discusses the way in which the relationship between them has fluctuated over time. 2013 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11902 Pearson Australia restricted
spellingShingle Political Ideologies
Fenna, Alan
Political Ideologies
title Political Ideologies
title_full Political Ideologies
title_fullStr Political Ideologies
title_full_unstemmed Political Ideologies
title_short Political Ideologies
title_sort political ideologies
topic Political Ideologies
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/11902