Presented at Sharing is Caring 2017, 20 November 2017, in Aarhus, Denmark. You can also…
Read the Post‘The badge of the outsider’: open access and closed boundaries
Presented at Sharing is Caring 2017, 20 November 2017, in Aarhus, Denmark. You can also…
Read the Post‘The badge of the outsider’: open access and closed boundaries
The image above is from Geoff Hinchcliffe’s awesome visualisation of more than 12,000 #fundTrove tweets.…
Contribution to a panel discussion on ‘Access and Innovation’ at Digital Directions 2016, Canberra, 10…
Keynote presented at Forging Links, the Annual Conference of the Australian Society of Archivists, Parramatta,…
The clouds of radioactive fallout are descending and humanity is doomed to extinction. In Nevil Shute’s book, On the Beach, the inhabitants of Melbourne await their end – the final victims of a 37 day nuclear war that has destroyed the northern hemisphere. John Osborne, played by Fred Astaire in the film version, decides to die in the embrace of the one he loves. So donning his crash helmet and goggles, he pops his suicide pills while sitting behind the wheel of the Ferrari that has recently won him the Australian Grand Prix: ‘The car had won him the race that was the climax of his life. Why trouble to go further?’ For John, as for all, it was the end of the road.
With the onset of the Atomic Age, Australia set out optimistically along the yellow-brick road to peace and prosperity, but 50 years later, the Emerald City seems as far away as ever. Australia’s involvement with nuclear energy has been largely limited to the provision of raw materials – uranium to power other countries’ reactors, and test sites for Britain’s bomb program. To understand Australia’s nuclear history you need to focus not on the journey’s end, but on the journey itself. How was the road mapped? Where were the markers? And who was doing the driving? Read MoreOn the beach: Australia’s nuclear history