• latest Edition

    The Way We Work

    The way we work has changed profoundly in recent years. Job security is a thing of the past – many welcome the flexibility of the new environment while others find it hard to adjust.

    Griffith REVIEW 45: The Way We Work explores the extraordinary structural changes in work caused by technology, globalisation, economic theory, the collapse of the unions and an ageing population. 

    Featuring essays from Ashley Hay, Gideon Haigh, Mandy Sayer, Rebecca Huntley, Peter Mares, Josephine Rowe and more, The Way We Work asks: How does work shape our...

  • Call for submissions

    New Asia

    Griffith REVIEW 49: New Asia seeks to identify the region’s new generation of writers who will be the agenda setters and style leaders of the future, introducing them to readers beyond their national borders.

    New Asia will feature the best young writers in Asia-Pacific today through fiction, essays, reportage, memoir, poetry and more. Co-edited by Julianne Schultz and Jane Camens, New Asia will be published in association with the prestigious Asia Literary Review.

    Submission deadline is 6 February 2015. Early submissions are encouraged!

  • Free ebook

    Download GR45 free ebook

    This ebook is dedicated to Australian journalist, Peter Greste and his colleagues, who were given long prison terms by an Egyptian court for doing their jobs.

    When We Were Kings is a free bonus ebook of journalism and stories about journalism created to
    accompany Griffith REVIEW 45: The Way We Work.

    Featuring essays by Sonya Voumard, Kathryn Knight, Phil Brown, Frank Robson, Peter Mares,
    Craig McGregor, Gijs Verbossen and Rachel Buchanan.

    Available for iBook, Kindle and PDF

  • Contributor's Circle

    LEA MCINERNEY
    More than two stories

    A local warned me when I first went to Tasmania that it takes twenty years to be considered a Tasmanian. My total time there would add up to that now, but I still don't feel like I'm one. I'm part of the place, but not part of it either.

    Lea, a former midwife, palliative care nurse and policy analyst, wrote this insightful piece for our Issue 39, Tasmania – The Tipping Point? in 2013.

    More than two stories

  • 2014 Griffith REVIEW Annual Lecture

    Beyond victims: the challenge
    of leadership

    Finding a better way to recognise and value Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples is essential. If the proposed constitutional amendment is to make a meaningful impact on the lives of all Australians, we require leadership that asks intelligent questions, demands meaningful answers and builds effective outcomes.

    Dr Chris Sarra’s 2014 Griffith REVIEW Annual Lecture, ‘Beyond Victims: the challenge of leadership’ has created quite a stir. Get informed and join the conversation.
    Read online
    Download as PDF
    Download as ebook

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