Since 2008 the social policy of Australia’s Labor government (in office since 2007) has been framed by a commitment to ‘social inclusion’. In this respect Australia belatedly aligned itself with policy imaginaries already widely, if variably, adopted in Europe (Atkinson and Davoudi, 2000, Levitas etal, 2007, Buckmaster and Thomas, 2009).1 This framework has been self-consciously identified as what Labor governments are equipped to do. Framed by the post-2007 global financial crisis and agreeing with claims that ‘excessive greed’ and irresponsibility on the part of financial markets sponsored that calamity, the Labor government vigorously promoted its ‘social democratic’ credentials. Former Prime Minister Rudd has explained this meant that Australia would no longer adopt a neoliberal orientation promoting unrestrained capitalism (Rudd, 2009).
CITATION STYLE
Bessant, J. (2013). Justice and Social Inclusion Policies. In Critical Criminological Perspectives (pp. 34–48). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137008695_3
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