Bültmann & Gerriets
Maurice Blackburn
champion of the people
von David Day
Verlag: Scribe Publications Pty Ltd
E-Book / EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


Speicherplatz: 0 MB
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ISBN: 978-1-925938-06-7
Erschienen am 19.11.2019
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 352 Seiten

Preis: 34,99 €

34,99 €
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Klappentext

[Maurice Blackburn] brought into public life a rare character, complete indifference to personal consequences, an uncommon scholarship, great zeal for humanity, and a firm belief, which I am happy to share, that men are immeasurably more important than laws. -Robert Menzies[Maurice Blackburn] served the people who suffered injustice He pleaded their cause, and he engaged in the study of how best he could serve them He would allow nothing to turn him from what he considered to be the right, and however unpopular he might become, however discomforting his attitude might be to his colleagues, the divine monitor within him impelled him to stand for what in his soul he believed. - John CurtinAfter his father died when Maurice Blackburn was a child, he was brought up by a mother who was descended from Melbourne's gentry and was determined to raise him as a gentleman who would achieve greatness as a judge or a prime minister. However, Blackburn had humbler aims. With the support of his wife, he wanted instead 'to make life better for the ordinary men and women of the country'. He went on to do so, defending the rights of working people as a leading barrister in the courts and as a politician in the parliaments of Melbourne and Canberra, and became much loved and admired across the political spectrum.A socialist and internationalist all his life, who was twice expelled from the Labor Party for his principles, Blackburn became a leading opponent of conscription in both world wars, a supporter of rights for women, an advocate for peace, and a tireless campaigner for transforming Australia so that it served the interests of all its people.Part love story, part gripping political thriller, the poignant story of the much-lauded Maurice Blackburn exposes a time when influence-peddling was rife, when political possibilities seemed limitless, and when a man of principle could still make a big difference to the course of Australian politics.