Robert Menzies Institute
Afternoon Light
Welcome to the Afternoon Light Podcast, a captivating journey into the heart of Australia’s political history and enduring values. Presented by the Robert Menzies Institute, a prime ministerial library and museum, this podcast illuminates the remarkable legacy of Sir Robert Menzies, Australia’s longest-serving prime minister. Dive into the rich tapestry of Menzies’s contemporary impact as we explore his profound contributions on the Afternoon Light Podcast. Join us as we delve into his unyielding commitment to equality, boundless opportunity, and unwavering entrepreneurial spirit. Our engaging...
Koniecznie odwiedź stronę podcastu i wesprzyj twórcę: www.robertmenziesinstitute.org.au
Autor
Robert Menzies Institute
Kategoria
Strona podcastu
Ostatni odcinek
8 lip 2026
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Odcinki
Joseph Healy on what Adam Smith would make of modern Australia: "We focus so much on what is counted and lose sight of what counts" 15.04.2026 47:41
250 years after Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations, have we in Australia forgotten the foundational economic lessons that Smith offered? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Joseph Healy to resuscitate the insights of famous Scottish Enlightenment thinker Adam Smith to help tackle Australia's current problems. From cost of living and housing crises to corporate cronyi...
Ben Saunders on the intent behind Australia's utilitarian Constitution: "The Character of the People" 07.04.2026 47:39
Does Australia's utilitarian constitution reflect a lack of inspiration on the part of our founding fathers? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Ben Saunders to unpack the intent behind the framing of Australia's constitution. Something which eschewed grand value statements and a Bill of Rights, in favour of trusting the Australian people to 'breathe life' into the 'dry bone...
Lydia Khalil & Zachary Gorman on the Conditions for a Successful Democracy: "They go hand in hand" 01.04.2026 55:22
Amidst seemingly unending crises of social cohesion, cost of living, and in the party system, how is Australia's democracy holding up? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Lydia Khalil and Zachary Gorman to unpack the conditions under which democracy thrives, and issues which currently threaten Australia's democratic health. Offering both timely warnings and enduring optimism...
Bruce Kingston on the eccentricities, dominance and legacy of Queensland Premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen: "The truth is" 25.03.2026 49:24
Before Dan Andrews, who was Australia's most polarising state premier? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Bruce Kingston to discuss one of Australian history's most beloved and bemoaned Queenslanders, Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen. The man who turned the Sunshine State into a modern economic powerhouse, yet who is contrastingly reviled for allegedly representing all of its maroon...
Denis Porter on the importance of the Coal Industry throughout Australian History: "We were desperate for more coal" 18.03.2026 45:01
Did you know that Captain Cook's Endeavour was originally a coal ship? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Denis Porter to explore the crucial role the coal industry has played throughout Australian history, from the earliest days of British settlement right up until the present. A story of triumph and tragedy, in which economic growth and political controversy have often go...
Christina Twomey on Australia's treatment of our returned WW2 POWs: "Suffered on behalf of the nation" 10.03.2026 54:03
Does offering financial support for Prisoners of War risk incentivising surrender? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Christina Twomey, to discuss how the Australian government dealt with returned World War II POWs who had been deeply scarred by their time spent in captivity. Revealing the brutal realism of military commanders who feared that offering too much assistance mi...
Hilary Silbert on Australia's first female parliamentarian Edith Cowan: "You will not get back" 04.03.2026 42:55
What is the story behind the woman who appears on Australia's $50 note? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Hilary Silbert to uncover the remarkable life of Australia's first female parliamentarian, Edith Cowan. Who rose from the familial infamy of having a convicted murderer for a father, to become one of the most influential citizens in the history of Western Australia, an...
Alexander Downer & Tony Parkinson on the life & times of Australia's longest serving Foreign Minister: "We took a view" 25.02.2026 1:02:09
30 years on from the election of the Howard Government, how does its extensive foreign policy legacy live up to scrutiny? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Alexander Downer and his biographer Tony Parkinson to discuss A Step to the Right , the new book on Australia's longest serving foreign minister. The man who oversaw one of the most eventful periods in Australian foreig...
Tony Abbott on his new History of Australia: "A bad history does not produce a good present" 18.02.2026 53:43
Do those who denigrate Australia's past hurt Australia's present? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Tony Abbott to discuss his new book, Australia: A History. An antidote to the 'Black armband' view of our national story, which doesn't downplay the darker aspects of our past, but highlights the overwhelming good. A good we might expect to find if we appreciate the nation t...
Peter Kurti on maintaining national unity amidst Australia's growing pluralism: "Multiculturalism works when it's Civic Anchored" 11.02.2026 52:15
Do Australians still agree on enough fundamental values to hold society together? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Perter Kurti from the Centre for Independent Studies, to ponder how Australia's democratic and social cohesion can survive our increasing pluralism and historically high immigration rate. Exploring whether there remain enough common threads to bind us togethe...
Summer Series 2025-6 Part 7: Paul Brown, Andrew Kemp, & Lucas McLennan 03.02.2026 58:48
In this special summer series of the Afternoon Light podcast you can enjoy the presentations delivered at our November 2025 conference entitled ‘Menzies and the British Commonwealth of Nations’. This seventh & final episode features Paul Brown's paper 'Sons of Empire: Menzies, Downer and their response to Britain joining the EEC', Andrew Kemp's paper 'A very different world: Robert Menzies, Ha...
Summer Series 2025-6 Part 6: Michael de Percy, Greg Melleuish, & Peter Kurti 28.01.2026 1:04:02
In this special summer series of the Afternoon Light podcast you can enjoy the presentations delivered at our November 2025 conference entitled ‘Menzies and the British Commonwealth of Nationa’. This sixth episode features Michael de Percy's paper 'God, King, and Country: British Identity and the Australian Defence Force', Greg Melleuish's paper 'Being British, Being Australian', & Peter Kurti...
Summer Series 2025-6 Part 5: Dan Brettig, Teesta Prakash, Stewart Gill, & Tim Rowse 21.01.2026 1:19:45
In this special summer series of the Afternoon Light podcast you can enjoy the presentations delivered at our November 2025 conference entitled ‘Menzies and the British Commonwealth of Nations’. This fifth episode features Dan Brettig's paper 'Menzies, Cricket, and the Cold War', Teesta Prakash's paper 'Menzies, Commonwealth and Kashmir', Stewart Gill's paper 'Canada and Australia in the Commonwea...
Summer Series 2025-6 Part 4: Selwyn Cornish, John Hawkins, Mark Lunney, & Eliezer Rubenstein Sturgess 14.01.2026 58:53
In this special summer series of the Afternoon Light podcast you can enjoy the presentations delivered at our November 2025 conference entitled ‘Menzies and the British Commonwealth of Nation’. This fourth episode features Selwyn Cornish & John Hawkins's paper 'Menzies, Keynes and the Australian economists', Mark Lunney's paper 'A Judicial Commonwealth?', & Eli Rubenstein Sturgess's paper...
Summer Series 2025-6 Part 3: David Furse-Roberts, Charles Richardson, Alex McDermott, & Kit Kowol 07.01.2026 1:22:00
In this special summer series of the Afternoon Light podcast you can enjoy the presentations delivered at our November 2025 conference entitled ‘Menzies and the British Commonwealth of Nation’. This third episode features David Furse-Roberts's paper 'A Twentieth Century Australian Whig: Robert Menzies and the Nineteenth Century British Liberal Tradition', Charles Richardson's paper 'Menzies, Burke...
Summer Series 2025-6 Part 2: Lee Rippon, Wayne Reynolds, & Sue Thompson 31.12.2025 52:40
In this special summer series of the Afternoon Light podcast you can enjoy the presentations delivered at our November 2025 conference entitled ‘Menzies and the British Commonwealth of Nations’. This second episode features Lee Rippon's paper 'Britain, Australia, the Empire and prisoner of war diplomacy, 1939–1942', Wayne Reynolds's paper 'Navigating Imperial Overstretch east of Suez: Menzies and...
Summer Series 2025-6 Part 1: Martin Farr, Josh Woodward, & David Lee 24.12.2025 1:02:15
In this special summer series of the Afternoon Light podcast you can enjoy the presentations delivered at our November 2025 conference entitled ‘Menzies and the British Commonwealth of Nation’. This first episode features the keynote address delivered by Martin Farr, Josh Woodward's paper 'Enlarged horizons and excited imagination: Rereading Robert Menzies’s 1935 overseas diary', & David Lee's...
Andrew Kemp ranking our best & worst PMs by term: "It's Whack-a-mole" 17.12.2025 53:01
Robert Menzies served 18 years as PM, but were they all as good as each other? On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Andrew Kemp, who has recently ranked Australian Prime Ministers by the best and worst terms of government we have experienced. A fun and enlightening exercise that highlights how good governance can be judged not merely on the policy programs for which governmen...
Matthew Bailey on the Rise of the Australian Shopping Centre: "A Triumph of Consumer Capitalism" 10.12.2025 50:26
How did the shopping centre become a ubiquitous part of Australian life & is its retail and cultural hegemony greater here than anywhere else on the planet? On this week's Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with retail historian Matthew Bailey to reveal the fascinating stories associated with the rise of the Australian Shopping Centre. An outgrowth of Menzies-era prosperity, automobility a...
Roland Perry on Australia's Nuclear Genius Mark Oliphant: "I wanted to scream on the steps" 02.12.2025 58:40
Was an Aussie more essential to the development of the Atom bomb than J. Robert Oppenheimer, & if so why don't we remember him? On this week's Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Roland Perry to reveal the remarkable story of Mark Oliphant. A man who arguably won the Second World War twice: first by developing radar to stave off the Nazis, and then by developing the bomb that knocked o...
Stuart Ward on Australia's formerly pervasive British identity: "The cement of Australia's civic culture" 26.11.2025 49:51
What did it mean when Australians used to boast that we were 'more British than the British'? On this week's Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Stuart Ward to discuss the complexities of British identity, as it once held sway across Australia and the broader British Empire. A defining yet evasive term that meant many different things to many different people, and perhaps because of this,...
David Day on Labor icon Ben Chifley: "It seems in hindsight extraordinary" 18.11.2025 48:26
How did a PM who only ever won one election become as iconic as Ben Chifley? On this week's Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with David Day to discuss Australia's 16th PM. The pipe smoking Bathurst train driver who suffered a trade unionist's martyrdom, before rising to become the architect of Australia's post war settlement. An endearing pragmatist respected even by his opponents, who ironi...
Troy Bramston on his new biography of Gough Whitlam: "We know about the legacy" 11.11.2025 55:48
Did Gough Whitlam crash through or simply crash? On this week's Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Troy Bramston about his new book, Gough Whitlam: The Vista of the New. The first full length biography of the iconic Labor PM since his passing in 2014, and one replete with lessons for Australia's present generation of political leaders. Troy Bramston is a senior writer and columnist with...
Julian Leeser & Damien Freeman on the poetry of R.G. Menzies: "Part of our shared inheritance" 05.11.2025 44:59
How did Robert Menzies develop his skillful way with words? On this week's Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Julian Leeser & Damien Freeman about the new book Fancies I Dare Not Speak: The Hidden Verse of R.G. Menzies . Revealing how poetry helped to shape the young Menzies, Australian culture, and our nation's quest to understand who we are. Julian Leeser is the Shadow Minister for...
Charles Moore on Margaret Thatcher's Life, Legacy & 100th Birthday: "Almost Revolutionary Fervour" 29.10.2025 36:08
What did the Iron Lady have in common with Pig Iron Bob? On this week's Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Margaret Thatcher's official biographer Charles Moore to explore her life and legacy on the centenary of her birth. Revealing how the grocer's daughter from Lincolnshire drew inspiration from the shopkeeper's son from Jeparit, in her trailblazing quest to reinvigorate Britain and def...
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