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* Dr [[Jennifer Marohasy]], Director, Environment Unit
* Dr [[Jennifer Marohasy]], Director, Environment Unit
* Dr Mike Nahan, Executive Director (who became a Liberal member of the Western Australian parliament at the 2008 state election)
* Dr [[Mike Nahan]], Executive Director
* Mr Don D'Cruz, Senior Fellow
* Mr Don D'Cruz, Senior Fellow
* Hon Dr [[Gary Johns]], Director, Governance Unit (an ex-[[Bob Hawke|Hawke]] [[Australian Labor Party|Labor]] minister)
* Hon Dr [[Gary Johns]], Director, Governance Unit (an ex-[[Bob Hawke|Hawke]] [[Australian Labor Party|Labor]] minister)

Revision as of 01:23, 29 December 2010

The Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) is a libertarian think tank[1] based in Melbourne, Australia.

History

The IPA was founded in the early 1940s, partly in response to the collapse of Australia's main conservative party, the United Australia Party.[original research?] The IPA was one of a number of groups which came together to form the Liberal Party of Australia, and was, for many years, primarily a fund raising conduit for the Liberal Party, particularly in Victoria.[2] The IPA returned to prominence as a thinktank in the 1990s, following a merger with the Australian Institute of Public Policy, headed by John Hyde who became Executive Director.

Ideology

The IPA advocates free market economic policies such as privatisation and deregulation of state-owned enterprises, trade liberalisation and deregulated workplaces, climate change skepticism (through its environmental subsidiary the Australian Environment Foundation), and the accountability of non-government organisations (NGOs).[citation needed] In its own words, the Institute believes in "the free market of ideas, the free flow of capital, a limited and efficient government, the rule of law, and representative democracy."[3]

Funding

In 2003, the Australian Government paid $50,000 to the Institute of Public Affairs to review the accountability of NGOs.[4]

The IPA funded by its membership which include both private individuals and businesses. Among these businesses are ExxonMobil,[5] Telstra, WMC Resources, BHP Billiton, Phillip Morris,[6] Murray Irrigation Limited,[7] and Visy Industries.

IPA donors have also included Clough Engineering, Caltex, Shell and Esso.[8] Other backers were electricity and mining companies, as well as British American Tobacco (BAT).[8]

The Institute has close ideological and political affinities with the Liberal Party in Australia.

John Roskam, the IPA's Executive Director, worked on the Liberal Party's 2001 election campaign. He has also run for Liberal Party preselection.[9]

Prime Minister John Howard (Liberal Party) delivered the 60th CD Kemp lecture to the Institute in 2004, titled Iraq: The Importance of Seeing it Through.[10]

With the demise of the Howard Government, the Institute has played a significant role in generating intellectual analysis and criticism of the Rudd Government's policies.

Research focus

Since the early 1980s, the Institute has argued the case for a range of right-wing public policies, such as:

The IPA has affiliations with think tanks in the U.S., Canada, UK and Asia. It has a close relationship with the American Enterprise Institute, a right-wing US think-tank.

IPA publications are highly critical of the operations of many NGOs, particularly their interaction with governments and with international agencies. The IPA criticises some NGOs as lacking transparency. A recent government-commissioned IPA report recommended a 'protocol' for greater transparency about the nature and extent of these interactions.

In 2003 the Institute published a backgrounder titled Myth and the Murray - measuring the real state of the river environment compiled by Jennifer Marohasy, head of the Institute's Environment Unit.[11] The Institute also received a $40,000 donation from Murray Irrigation Limited after research for this paper had begun.[12] This paper is quoted in the Interim Report of the Inquiry into future water supplies for Australia’s rural industries and communities of the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, March 2004. At a science round table of the committee, when asked for her views on how much water should be returned to the River Murray, Dr Marohasy argued that there was no need for additional flows at that time and that we should test the results of current environmental measures before committing to more.[13]

Position on passive smoking

The IPA is highly critical of scientific research on the dangers of passive smoking, describing a major report of the National Health and Medical Research Council as "incoherent", "corrupt" and "incompetent""Smokescreen: 'Passive Smoking' and Public Policy | Institute of Public Affairs Australia".

Position on climate change and environmental issues

The IPA adopts a position of climate change scepticism.[14] It promotes the views of two prominent Australian climate change sceptics, Bob Carter and Ian Plimer. The IPA supports elements of climate change science, including some link between the use of fossil fuels and rising carbon dioxide levels, however it also disagrees with certain aspects of climate theories [citation needed]. Jennifer Marohasy supports the view that many environmental issues, including climate change, are exaggerated, and that green groups promote solutions that ultimately do not benefit society.[15]

In 2008, the institute facilitated a donation of $350,000 by Dr G. Bryant Macfie, a climate change sceptic, to the University of Queensland for environmental research. The money is to fund three environmental doctoral projects, with the IPA suggesting two of the three agreed topics.[16] George Bryant Macfie is a top 20 shareholder in Strike Resources Limited.[1][2]

Staff

John Roskam is the institute's executive director. Prior to his employment at the IPA, Roskam was the Executive Director of the Menzies Research Centre in Canberra. He has also held positions as Chief of Staff to Dr David Kemp, the Federal Minister for Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs, as Senior Advisor to Don Hayward, Victorian Minister for Education in the first Kennett Government, and as Manager of Government and Corporate Affairs for Rio Tinto Group.[17] He is currently undertaking a PhD and teaching politics at the University of Melbourne.

Other staff include:

  • Dr Alan Moran, Director, Deregulation Unit
  • Mr Chris Berg, Research Fellow
  • Mr Tony Barry, Director, Finance and Operations
  • Mr Tim Wilson, Director, Intellectual Property and Free Trade Unit
  • Mr John Pesutto, Director, Productivity and Employment Unit
  • Mr Ken Phillips, Director Workplace Reform Unit
  • Ms Louise Staley, Director, Food and Environment Unit
  • Professor Sinclair Davidson, Senior Fellow
  • Mr John Hyde, Emeritus Fellow
  • Ms Julie Novak, Research Fellow
  • Mr Richard Allsop, Research Fellow
  • Ms Carolyn Popp, Research Fellow
  • Mr Graham Farebrother, Research Fellow
  • Mr Andrew Poon, Marketing Manager
  • Professor Bob Carter, Emeritus Fellow, Science Policy Advisor
  • Mr Brad Laver

Former staff include

Kemp Family

Publications

The IPA Review is published bi-monthly. ISSN 1329-8100 - January 2008 is Volume 59/4.

See also

References