Locked-up Country: Learning the Lessons from Australia's COVID-19 Response - Hosted by the AIIA Queensland
Join us either in-person or online with Professor Shahar Hameiri who will discuss his recent book The Locked-up Country, detailing the problems with Australia's COVID-19 response and suggesting alternatives moving forward.
If you are attending in-person, please arrive at Holding Redlich at 5.30pm for registration and drinks. This event will be available online. After registering, on March 12 at 5:30pm, you will receive a follow-up confirmation email containing further details on how to join the webinar which will commence at 6:00pm AEST. The event is free for AIIA Queensland members and AIIA members from all states. Non-members pay $10 and student non-members $5.
If you arrive after 6:00pm, the lifts may not be accessible. Ring 0481 522 665 for assistance.
For in-person attendees, please note that you may be photographed or filmed for public consumption.
The Locked-up Country, will be available for purchase at the event for all in-person attendees, for $32.99.
Donald Horne famously called Australia 'the lucky country'. So how did we become the locked-up country and how might the future look different?
Australia has changed enormously since Horne's 1960s, but its response to the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrates the enduring truth of his thesis that our 'luck' was undeserved and wouldn't last. By closing its borders and imposing a nationally coordinated lockdown, Australia unexpectedly eliminated COVID-19 in 2020, achieving one of the world's lowest excess mortality rates.
But as governments proceeded to bungle key planks of the pandemic response, by mid-2021, Australia was 'locked up' – closed off to the world and fragmented along state and territory borders, with its major cities enduring repeated and extended lockdowns. It soon became clear that Australia's regulatory state had let us down. But these failures were not inevitable, and we can manage future crises more successfully.
In The Locked-up Country, political experts Tom Chodor and Shahar Hameiri identify the source of Australia's recent challenges and suggest a better way forward.