The Seven Dwarfs: A Team of Rivals

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Brown, Nicholas

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ANU Press

Abstract

The persistence of the idea of the ‘seven dwarfs’ in the fairly thin soil of Commonwealth Public Service (CPS) history testifies to its usefulness – although just as the actual composition of the group remains a matter for debate, so does the question of their significance continue to prompt varied interpretations. In a general sense, the term is well enough understood. The expression, ‘seven dwarfs’, refers to the careers and characteristics of a group of men who secured great influence and authority within and around the CPS from the 1940s until, in some cases, well into the 1980s. They represented a marked expansion in the reach, standing and professionalism of public policy in Australia. They are also a neat encapsulation of ‘the new mandarins’ – a wider company of senior bureaucrats – who rose to prominence in that period, and were associated with a distinct ethic of independence and authority.

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The Seven Dwarfs and the Age of the Mandarins: Australian Government Administration in the Post-war Reconstruction Era

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The Seven Dwarfs and the Age of the Mandarins: Australian Government Administration in the Post-war Reconstruction Era

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Open Access via publisher website

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