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Australian Politics and Policy - Senior, 2019a

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<strong>Australian</strong> <strong>Politics</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Policy</strong><br />

—— (2010b). Time of transition: the Queensl<strong>and</strong> parliament <strong>and</strong> electoral volatility 2008–9.<br />

Australasian Parliamentary Review 25(1): 224–39.<br />

—— (2010c). The Queensl<strong>and</strong> election of 21 March 2009: Labor’s swim against the tide. <strong>Australian</strong><br />

JournalofPoliticalScience45(2): 277–83. DOI: 10.1080/10361141003736174<br />

—— (2009). Leaders <strong>and</strong> political culture: the development of the Queensl<strong>and</strong> premiership.<br />

Queensl<strong>and</strong> Review 16(1): 15–34. DOI: 10.1017/S1321816600004943<br />

—— (2007). Defying the odds: Peter Beattie <strong>and</strong> the 2006 Queensl<strong>and</strong> election. Australasian<br />

Parliamentary Review 22(2): 212–20.<br />

—— (2006). The greening of the Queensl<strong>and</strong> electorate? <strong>Australian</strong> Journal of Political Science 41(3):<br />

325–37. DOI: 10.1080/10361140600848945<br />

—— (2005). Peter Beattie’s strategies of crisis management: mea culpa <strong>and</strong> the policy ‘backflip’.<br />

<strong>Australian</strong>JournalofPublicAdministration64(4): 41–52. DOI: 10.1111/<br />

j.1467-8500.2005.00463a.x<br />

—— (2004). The Queensl<strong>and</strong> election of 7 February 2004: the coming of the second Labor<br />

hegemony? <strong>Australian</strong> Journal of Political Science 39(3): 635–44. DOI: 10.1080/<br />

103614042000295142<br />

—— (2001a). Meta-populism: Peter Beattie <strong>and</strong> the reinvention of Queensl<strong>and</strong> populist discourse.<br />

Paper delivered to the Australasian Political Studies Conference, Brisbane.<br />

—— (2001b). The Queensl<strong>and</strong> election of 17 February 2001: reforging the electoral l<strong>and</strong>scape?<br />

<strong>Australian</strong> Journal of Political Science 36(2): 363–71. DOI: 10.1080/10361140120078907<br />

About the author<br />

Dr Paul D. Williams is a senior lecturer in the School of Humanities, Languages <strong>and</strong><br />

Social Science, Griffith University, where he teaches politics, journalism <strong>and</strong> public<br />

relations. He has published widely on elections <strong>and</strong> voting in <strong>Australian</strong> journals,<br />

is a weekly newspaper columnist, <strong>and</strong> a regular commentator on Queensl<strong>and</strong> state<br />

<strong>and</strong> <strong>Australian</strong> national politics in the print <strong>and</strong> electronic media.<br />

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