This chapter explores the early 1960s history of anti-nuclear activism in Australia. It argues that the early developments in Australia helped establish the model for a more sustained campaign against French nuclear testing that gained greater traction, popularity, and governmental support in the early 1970s. The chapter examines the evolution of key concepts of public health and environmental thought to the Australian peace movement, and how this movement attempted to utilize these ideas in its limited engagement with the Pacific. This early history of anti-nuclear activism occupies a key place within the historiography of the broader "peace movement" in Australia, especially because the existing literature contains few studies that specifically examine the role and significance of nuclear weapons to Australian peace organizations. Growing ideas about environmentalism, public health, and the dangers of nuclear testing for the peoples of the Pacific began to stimulate a new direction for Australian anti-nuclear activism.
History
Publication title
The Routledge History of World Peace since 1750
Editors
CP Peterson, WM Knoblauch and M Loadenthal
Pagination
238-248
ISBN
9781138069138
Department/School
College Office - College of Arts, Law and Education
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
New York
Extent
34
Rights statement
Copyright 2019 Individual chapters, the contributors
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Understanding Australia’s past; Understanding past societies not elsewhere classified