Dialogue
Dialogue –
Death and taxes
Why are we led to believe that taxation is something so unpleasant, while in fact it is the most tangible act of citizenship?
Dialogue –
‘Fathers from the Edge’
A recently published compendium of narratives examining the complex and multi-faceted relationship between Greek-Australian writers and their fathers.
Dialogue –
Who’s afraid of multiculturalism?
You know the times are changing when the most progressive, reasonable voices in the west come from representatives of the Muslim community. But not everyone is ready for change.
Dialogue –
ΔΥΣΑΓΓΕΛΙΣΜΟΣ
The burning of the Evangelismos church marks a historical watershed in our community, to which the historians of tomorrow will return.
Dialogue –
Allan Fels – game keeper turned poacher
Taxi drivers forced to adopt Uber’s surge pricing model without receiving compensation or tax reductions.
Dialogue –
Greece will always be the home of the Olympic Games
Having attended three Games, Greek Australian writer Billy Cotsis is convinced there is no better achievement for celebrating all-inclusiveness and fair play.
Dialogue –
On Macedonians, Chaldeans and other figments of our imagination
While ancient history has been used as an anachronism to imagine a nation, it is not the only determinant of ethnic or national consciousness. Politics too plays a major role.
Dialogue –
The truth behind ‘the business of Greece and Macedonia’
Dr Anastasios Panagiotelis and Dr Vasilis Sarafidis from the Australian Institute of Macedonian Studies respond to Alannah MacTiernan.
Dialogue –
Is Bill Shorten feeling the Bern?
By calling for a royal commission into banks, Labor seems to be following an international trend: a return to the values of the left.