Sneha Girap (Editor)

Gary Johns

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Preceded by
  
John Hodges

Occupation
  
Writer

Party
  
Australian Labor Party

Alma mater
  
Monash University

Education
  
Monash University


Political party
  
ALP

Role
  
Australian Politician

Nationality
  
Australian

Name
  
Gary Johns

Succeeded by
  
Teresa Gambaro

Gary Johns mediatheaustraliancomauauthorsimagesbiogary

Born
  
29 August 1952 (age 71) Melbourne, Victoria (
1952-08-29
)

The charity ball cis roundtable with gary johns robert mclean dyson heydon


Gary Thomas Johns (born 29 August 1952) is an Australian writer and former politician.

Contents

Why gary johns broke up with labor and left leftism with gary johns and dave pellowe


Political career

Johns was born in Melbourne, Victoria and received a Bachelor of Economics and a M.A. from Monash University. He was elected as the member for Petrie in 1987, and held it for the Australian Labor Party until his defeat in 1996. He served as Assistant Minister for Industrial Relations from December 1993 and Special Minister of State and Vice-President of the Executive Council from March 1994 until the defeat of the Keating government in 1996, in which he lost his seat to Liberal candidate Teresa Gambaro.

Later career

Since his defeat, Johns has drifted from the ALP and has been critical of his old party. Johns told Brett Evans that he might still be a member of the ALP but Evans says that in Johns' heart he has moved on from the ALP.

From 1997 to 2006, he was a senior fellow at the neo-liberal/conservative think tank the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA). Within the IPA, he was head of the Non-Government Organisations unit. From 2006-2009 Johns worked with a consultancy firm, ACIL Tasman. In 2009 he was appointed Associate Professor of Public Policy at the Australian Catholic University's Public Policy Institute. In 2012 he was appointed visiting fellow at QUT Business School. He was president of the Bennelong Society, an organisation that advocated the provision of welfare for Indigenous Australians under the same rules as for all other Australians. From 2002-2004 he was appointed Associate Commissioner of the Commonwealth Productivity Commission, an Australian government policy research and advisory body, with the responsibility for an inquiry into the national workers’ compensation and occupational health and safety framework.

He was awarded a PhD in political science in 2001 from the University of Queensland, in 2002 the Fulbright Professional Award in Australian-United States Alliance Studies, Georgetown University in Washington D. C., and in 2003 the Centenary Medal for ‘service to Australian society through the advancement of economic, social and political issues’.

He is columnist for The Australian newspaper, the author of numerous papers and books: Waking up to Dreamtime. Media Masters (2001), Aboriginal Self-determination. Connor Court (2011), Right Social Justice. Connor Court (2012), Really Dangerous Ideas. Connor Court (2013), Recognise What? Connor Court (2014), and The Charity Ball. Connor Court (2014). No Contraception, No Dole. Connor Court (2016).

References

Gary Johns Wikipedia