- Introducing History Service – Civil Society & Political History
One might think, in the modern world, that the civil society is a state of pretence, or a hollow existence, or a utopian ideal. This is because civil society is conceived in political theory. Modern politics is too often the antithesis of the civil society with plotting, scheming, and other Machiavellian forms of partisan action.
For more information, please go to [click]
ANNOUNCING…
2019 Australian Christian Higher Education Alliance (ACHEA) Conference, at the State Library of Queensland from Wednesday 31 July – Friday 2 August.
I will be presenting a paper on ‘Before and After 1989: The Conceptual Schemas, Christian Education, and Queensland Society.’
For more information, please go to [click]
THE MARKETING DEAL OF THE CENTURY!
This month only! If you ask for a service in Civil Society & Political History, you will get 10% off the marketplace professional rate!
THE SCHOLARSHIP
The above announcement is a piece of satire. Like all satire, there is a grain of truth. People sometimes do not get satire, so I will explain. Public history was once supported by public institutions. Under the narrative of neo-liberal economies, public history is now expected to be supported by the market. The problem, as explained by the best and honest economists, is that there are some areas of society that are not meant to be placed on the market, those areas that can never be ‘efficient’ (in reality) through competition policy. Researched education, learning and scholarship, is one of those areas.
Since neo-liberal politicians have won the day, those of us who are professional humanities and social science workers have been forced into a choice, with the exception in the paper-thin token number of colleagues, luck enough to have one of the very few positions still open at universities, or other public institutions. We are forced to choose to abandon our careers in professional research, even as we have proved ourselves in higher degrees and quality publications, OR we place our services to the marketplace, until the day returns when we are sufficiently employed back in the public sphere.
The grain of truth in the above satire piece is that I will provide a history service for a price, negotiable around the Professional Historians Australia fee scale. The other business option is lobbying for the return of public funding levels to public institutions for the sufficient employment of professional researchers.
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Neville Buch
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