Article
Feminist Review (1996) 52, 102–117. doi:10.1057/fr.1996.10
Negotiating the Politics of Inclusion: Women and Australian Labor Governments 1983 to 1995
Carol Johnson teaches in the Politics Department at the University of Adelaide. She is co-editor of All Her Labours (1984) Sydney: Hale & Iremonger, and author of The Labor Legacy (1989) Sydney: Allen & Unwin. She has published a number of articles on the construction of women in Australian political discourse.
Carol Johnson
Abstract
The Hawke and Keating Labor governments have tended to practise a politics of inclusion in which women, along with other social groups, are seen to have an important part to play in building the new, internationally competitive Australian economy of the twenty-first century. Australian politics have therefore had a very different nature from that of the more exclusionary politics practised by British Conservative governments. While the politics of inclusion have given feminists room for manoeuvre, and facilitated some positive developments in areas such as affirmative action and childcare policies, feminists have had little success in challenging the overall direction of the governments' right-wing economic policies. Furthermore, the 'economic' has functioned as a meta-category which dissolves difference and conflict. The Australian experience therefore has both practical and theoretical implications for British feminists who may be experiencing a Labour government themselves before too long.
Keywords:
Australian women, social democracy, feminist theory







