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recent papers and books by
 Anne Else 


 Letter from Elsewhere 


 

The Ghost of Ideology Past, Sunday Supplement, Radio New Zealand, 26 January 2003.

Child Sex Abuse, Sunday Supplement, Radio New Zealand, 27 January 2002.

script, Sunday Supplement, Radio New Zealand, August 2001.

Fatherless Children, Sunday Supplement, Radio New Zealand, 27 August 2000.

Through a Glass Darkly: Seeing Old Age and the Old, University of Auckland Winter Lecture, 10 August 1999.

"And we all live happily ever after": Fairy Tales from the Global Marketplace, presented at: Beware the Miss-leaders; Women's Conference against APEC, Wellington, 19-20 June 1999.

High Time to Protect Our Future, published (slightly reduced) in the NZ Herald, 28 January 1999, under the header "Assisted reproduction bill doesn't address real issues".

A Super Future? It All Depends on Us..., Speech for the launch of A Super Future? The Price of Growing Older in New Zealand, by Anne Else and Susan St John, Tandem Press 1998

The End of the Fairytale: Beyond The Capitalist Romance, Talk for Beyond Capitalism Seminar, Wellington, 2 October 1998

Reviving the Jabberwock; Women, Taxes and Democracy, paper presented at the May 1998 Conference of the Women's Studies Association of New Zealand, Massey University.

Having it Both Ways? Social Policy and the Positioning of Women in Relation to Men, Social Policy Journal of New Zealand 9: 16-26, November 1997.

Other Halves: Women, Work, and a Universal Basic Income, Wellington, 1-2 July 1996 UBINZ Conference Paper.

 

Books

A Super Future? The Price of Growing Older (October 1998); Anne Else and Susan St John, Tandem Press

False Economy: New Zealanders face the conflict between paid and unpaid work, Anne Else, Tandem Press, Auckland, 1996

False Economy homes in on the reality behind the New Right reforms. Unpaid work is changing just as rapidly and profoundly as paid work is; but the conflict between the two is becoming more and more difficult to resolve, as hours on the job shrink or expand uncontrollably, job security disappears and un- or under-employment continues to grow. In these conditions, caring work, the basis of human existence, is becoming a nightmare, as short-term market time and long-term family time collide. If society is not to disintegrate, collective solutions are required.
 


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