Abstract
Federalism is usually described in political science as a single body of ideas—in Australia's case arriving in the 1840s–50s and moving to constitutional reality in the 1890s. This article re‐examines the origins and diversity of federal ideas in Australia. It suggests that federal thought began influencing Australia's constitutional development significantly earlier than previously described. This first Australian federalism had a previously unappreciated level of support in British colonial policy and drew on Benjamin Franklin's American model of territorial change as a ‘commonwealth for increase’. The revised picture entrenches the notion of federalism's logic but also reveals a dynamic, decentralist style of federalism quite different from Australia's orthodox ‘classic’ or compact federal theory. In fact, Australian political thought contains two often‐conflicting ideas of federalism. The presence of these approaches helps explain longstanding dissent over the regional foundations of Australian constitutionalism.
Notes
A.J. Brown is a Senior Research Fellow in the Key Centre for Ethics Law Justice and Governance at Griffith University. The article is adapted from a paper delivered to the Annual Conference of the Australasian Political Science Association in Hobart in October 2003. The author thanks Haig Patapan, the conference participants, particularly Rod Rhodes and John Wanna, and this journal's anonymous reviewers for their comments.