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Imperial Theory and Colonial Pragmatism: Charles Harper, Economic Development and Agricultural Co-operation in Australia: Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Thought

Autor David J. Gilchrist
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 sep 2017
This book considers the role played by co-operative agriculture as a critical economic model which, in Australia, helped build public capital, drive economic development and impact political arrangements. In the case of colonial Western Australia, the story of agricultural co-operation is inseparable from that of the story of Charles Harper. Harper was a self-starting, pioneering frontiersman who became a political, commercial and agricultural leader in the British Empire’s most isolated colony during the second half of the Victorian era. He was convinced of the successful economic future of Western Australia but also pragmatic enough to appreciate that the unique challenges facing the colony were only going to be resolved by the application of unorthodox thinking.
Using Harper’s life as a foil, this book examines Imperial economic thinking in relation to the co-operative form of economic organisation, the development of public capital, and socialism. It uses this discussion to demonstrate the transfer of socialistic ideas from the centre of the Empire to the farthest reaches of the Antipodes where they were used to provide a rhetorical crutch in support of purely pragmatic co-operative establishments.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783319623245
ISBN-10: 3319623249
Pagini: 298
Ilustrații: X, 267 p.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2017
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Thought

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1: The Long Stagnation.- Chapter 2: Visions of English Co-operation in the Victorian Age: Western Australia’s Intellectual Inheritance.- Chapter 3: Imperial Demands, Local Imperatives.- Chapter 4: Charles Harper: A Life.- Chapter 5: Bending Co-operation to the Western Australian Economic Problem.- Chapter 6: Australian Colonial Socialism in Word and Deed: The Socialisation of Economic Problems in Colonial Australia.- Chapter 7: A Step Too Far: Western Australian State Socialism (1918–1939).

Notă biografică

David Gilchrist is Professor at the UWA Business School, University of Western Australia, Australia. He researches in the areas of economic history, public policy and financial reporting, including in relation to public sector and Nonprofit sector reform. Gilchrist has held a number of senior roles in the not-for-profit, commercial and public sectors. He has taught accounting and finance at the London School of Economics and Portsmouth University in the UK, as well as at Curtin University and Edith Cowan University in Australia. He was Associate Dean of the School of Business, University of Notre Dame Australia and Adjunct Professor of Non-profit Leadership at that institution.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book considers the role played by co-operative agriculture as a critical economic model which, in Australia, helped build public capital, drive economic development and impact political arrangements. In the case of colonial Western Australia, the story of agricultural co-operation is inseparable from that of the story of Charles Harper. Harper was a self-starting, pioneering frontiersman who became a political, commercial and agricultural leader in the British Empire’s most isolated colony during the second half of the Victorian era. He was convinced of the successful economic future of Western Australia but also pragmatic enough to appreciate that the unique challenges facing the colony were only going to be resolved by the application of unorthodox thinking.
Using Harper’s life as a foil, this book examines Imperial economic thinking in relation to the co-operative form of economic organisation, the development of public capital, and socialism. It uses this discu
ssion to demonstrate the transfer of socialistic ideas from the centre of the Empire to the farthest reaches of the Antipodes where they were used to provide a rhetorical crutch in support of purely pragmatic co-operative establishments.


Caracteristici

Of interest to historians of economic thought, British Imperial history, Australian economic and political history, and comparative economic and agricultural history Highlights Harper’s significance in Western Australian parliamentary development, commerce, agriculture and journalism Reviews the transplantation of co-operative ideals to a distant shore through the agency of a conservative ‘capitalist’