Publications by WSC Members
(In alphabetical order by member)
Dr Stephen Brown
Mechanised Horsemen: Red cavalry commanders and World War Two’, paper presented to the Fourteenth Biennial Conference of the Australasian Association for European History (Brisbane, Queensland, 2003)
“Voroshilov and the Red Cavalry”, in Rewriting Europe’s Pasts, University of Queensland Press, Santa Lucia (2003).
“‘The Jew among the Cossacks'; Isaac Babel and the Soviet-Polish War of 1920”, Slavonica (formerly Scottish Slavonic Review, Manchester, 3 (1) (1997).
“Lenin, Stalin and the Failure of the Red Army in the Soviet-Polish War of 1920”, War and Society, 14 (2) (1996).
“Communists and the Red Cavalry; the political education of the Konarmiia in the Russian Civil War, 1918-20', Slavonic and East European Review, 73 (1) (1995), 82-99.
John Gonzalez
John Gonzalez, "N.A. Rozhkov: His Bolshevik Years and the Origin of His Polemics with Lenin", forthcoming in Revolutionary Russia, Volume 18, Number 2, June 2005.
Dr Charles Hawksley
‘Conceptualising Imperialism in the 21 st Century’, refereed paper for APSA Conference 2004, University of Adelaide, September 29-October 1 2004.
‘The Enhanced cooperation Package between Australia and PNG: the intervention you have when you’re not having an intervention’, refereed paper for the First Oceanic Conference on International Studies, Australian National University July 14-16 2004.
The 2007 Cricket World Cup in the Carribean: a straight drive to regional integration?’, Kunapipi, Vol XXVI, No 1, 2004, pp 246-261.
R. Iredale, C. Hawksley and S. Castles (eds), Migration in the Asia Pacific: Population, Settlement and Citizenship Issues, Edward Elgar Publishing Company Ltd, Aldershot, UK, 2003, c.480 pp.
Karl James
“‘Uncle Stan’ and the Staff Corps”, Sabretache, Vol XLV, no 2, June 2004, pp 5-9.
“‘White, black, and brown’: attitudes to race as reflected during the Bougainville Campaign, 1944-1945”, Alpheus: Postgraduate Online Journal, vol 1, no 1, 2004, http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/research/ejournal/
“‘It is considered that no nurses or AWAS should be brought into the area until American Negroes have departed’: Attitudes to race as reflected during the Bougainville Campaign, 1944-45”, paper for the Visions: 12th Biennial National Conference of the Australian Historical Association, Newcastle, 5-9 July 2004.
‘Uncle Stan and the Staff Corps’, paper for Feast by the Murray: Australian Historical Association, 30th Anniversary Conference, Mildura, 28 September - 1 October 2003.
‘Australia’s war in the South-West Pacific, 1944-1945: a work in progress’, paper to People and War: Aspects of Military History, University of Wollongong, 16-18 July 2001.
Associate Professor John McQuilton
“Gallipoli as Contested Commemorative Space: The Peninsula and Australia”, in J. McLeod (ed.), Gallipoli: Making History (Frank Cass, London, 2004).
Rural Australia and the Great War: from Tarrawingee to Tangambalanga , ( Melbourne University Press, Carlton, 2001).
(with B. Kelson), Kelly Country: A Photographic Journey ( University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, 2001).
“Community 1940-1980” in J. Hagan, and H. Lee (eds), A History of Work and Community in Wollongong: 1888-2000 (Halstead Press. 2001).
“’Doing the back-block boys some good’: exemption court hearings in North Eastern Victoria 1916, Historical Studies 115 (Oct. 2000).
“Enlistment for the First World War in rural Australia: the case of North Eastern Victoria”, Journal of the Australian War Memorial 33 (2000).
”German Australians in Rural Society 1914-1918”, Journal of Australian Studies, 61 (1999).
Associate Professor Greg Melleuish
‘The Clash of civilizations: a model of historical development?’, in Said Amir Arjomand and Edward A Tiryakian (eds), Rethinking Civilizational Analysis, Sage, 2004.
(with Imre Salusinszky as co-editor) Blaming Ourselves: September 11 and the agony of the left, Sydney, Duffy and Snellgrove, 2002
Dr. Peter Sales
Asia Pacific Defence Reporter
“War in Mindanao Revisited”, Asia-Pacific Defence Reporter (June 2003), 24-25.
“”Sometimes It Takes War to Achieve Peace’! Contextualizing Peacekeeping and Terrorism in the Southern Philippines”, Conference on Peacekeeping in the Asia Pacific, University of Wollongong, NSW; September 23-24, 2003.
Philippines Election Adds to Armed Forces’ Difficulties”, Asia-Pacific Defence Reporter (May 2004), 32-33.
“Reinventing the Past or Redefining the Future? An assessment of Sanctuaries of Peace in the Southern Philippines”, Oceanic Conference on International Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, July 14-16, 2004.
“Analysis: Counterinsurgency - or Counterproductive?” Asia-Pacific Defence Reporter (July/August 2004), 46-48.
“Unimaginable Communities: The Davao Death Squad and Anti-People Terror in the Southern Philippines”, School of History & Politics Research Seminar Series, University of Wollongong, NSW; August 6, 2004.
Dr Lorraine White
La transición a las fortificaciones modernas en la Guerra luso-castellana, 1640-1668 (The transition to modern fortifications in Iberia in the war of 1640-1668), forthcoming in Actas de las VIII y IX Journadas de Historia Millitar ( Spain).
Estrategia geográfico y fracaso en la reconquista de Portugal por la Monarquia hispanica, 1640-1668 (Strategic geography and the Hispanic Monarchy’s failure to reconquer Portugal, 1640-1668, forthcoming in Studia Histórica (Historia Moderna), Vol. 25, 2003, pp. 27-59.
“Guerra y revolución militar en la Iberia del siglo XVII”, (War and military revolution in 17 th century Iberia), Manucrits 21 (2003), 63-93.
“The experience of Spain’s early modern soldiers: combat, welfare and violence”, War in History 9 (1) (2002), 1-38.
“Spain’s early modern soldiers: origins, motivation and loyalty”, War & Society 19 (2) (2001), 19-47.
“Faction, administrative control and the failure of the Portuguese India Company, 1628-33”, in A. Disney and E. Booth (eds.), Vasco da Gama and the Linking of Europe and Asia (Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2000), 471-483.
“Los tercios en España: el combate” (The 'tercios' in Spain: combat), Studia Histórica (Historia Moderna), 19 (1998), 141-167.
“Dom Jorge Mascarenhas: family tradition and power politics in Habsburg Portugal”, Portuguese Studies, 14 (1998), 65-83.
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