Sydney Institute

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Sydney Institute
Formation 1989
Type Public affairs forum
Headquarters 41 Phillip Street, Sydney,
New South Wales, Australia
Location Sydney
Executive Director Gerard Henderson
Website http://www.thesydneyinstitute.com.au

The Sydney Institute, founded in 1989, is a privately funded, Australian current affairs forum.[1] The institute took over the resources of the Sydney Institute of Public Affairs which ceased activity in the late 1980s.[2] It receives support from the Australian business community.[3]

The Sydney Institute was opened on 23 August 1989 by then New South Wales Premier Nick Greiner with supporting remarks from Bob Carr (then NSW Opposition Leader).

Columnist and writer Gerard Henderson is the Executive Director of the institute. His wife, Anne Henderson, who is also an author, is the Deputy Director.

Activities

The institute holds weekly forums and an annual dinner at which a lecture is given by a person who has been deemed to have made an important contribution in a particular field at either an international or national level. From time to time the institute organises and hosts international conferences, addresses to the institute are published in The Sydney Papers. The institute also publishes The Sydney Institute Quarterly.

Gerard Henderson writes a regular weekly column for The Sydney Morning Herald and The West Australian. Henderson also comments on public radio and appears occasionally on the ABC TV Insiders programs.[4]

Speakers at the Sydney Institute have included Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey, former Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, former Australian Prime Minister John Howard, former Opposition Leader Kim Beazley, Nobel Prize recipient Peter C. Doherty, General Peter Cosgrove, former Reserve Bank Governor Ian Macfarlane, former Chief Justice Murray Gleeson and writer David Malouf.

International figures such as Dick Cheney, Jung Chang, William Shawcross, James A. Kelly, Alexander Dubcek, John Ralston Saul and Tariq Ali have also given lectures.

References

  1. Hannan, Ewin; Carney, Shaun (10 December 2005). "Thinkers of influence". The Age. "While not a think tank, it operates as a forum for debate. It does not commission research or have policies.” “The institute is privately funded, with all papers delivered to it published in The Sydney Papers." 
  2. Hyde, John (2002). "Dry, In Defence of Economic Freedom" (PDF). Institute of Public Affairs. 
  3. Norington, Brad (12 August 2003). "Think Tank Secrets". The Sydney Morning Herald. 
  4. "About". Insiders (Australia: ABC TV). 2011. Retrieved 22 November 2011. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.