Includes bibliographical references (pages 275-294) and index.
Contents:
Introduction -- What Is Civic Republicanism? -- 1837: The Almost Revolution -- Lord Durham and the Grand Compromise -- Nova Scotia and the New Deal -- The Domino Effect -- The Future America of the Southern Hemisphere: Dr Lang and the Failure of Separatism -- A Colony of Virtue: The Anti-Transportation League -- Eureka Revisited: How Republican Was the Great Stockade? -- Responsible Government: A Liberal or a Civic.
Summary:
"Despite remarkable similarities, little attempt has been made to compare the political development of colonial-era Australia and Canada. Both nations were born as British colonies and used violent and non-violent means to agitate for democratic freedoms. Republicanism and Responsible Government explores how these sister colonies transformed the very nature of the British Empire by insisting on democratic self-rule. Focusing on the middle of the nineteenth century, Benjamin Jones explores key points in colonial Australian and Canadian history - Canada's Rebellions of 1837-38 and the Durham Report, and Australia's anti-transportation movement and the Eureka Stockade. Previously, historians have looked to liberalism when explaining radicalism and democratization. Jones, however, contends that Canadian and Australian radicals and reformers were influenced by the ancient political philosophy of civic republicanism, with its focus on collectivism, civic duty, and virtue. William Lyon Mackenzie and John Dunmore Lang, he argues, did not champion republicanism to achieve individual rights but to create a virtuous society free from the corruption they saw in the status quo.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.