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Boyer Lectures

The Boyer Lectures are a series of talks by prominent Australians, presenting ideas on major social, scientific or cultural issues, and broadcast on ABC Radio National.

The Boyer Lectures began in 1959 as the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Commission, now the Australian Broadcasting Corporation) Lectures. They were modelled on the BBC's Reith Lectures, and renamed in 1961 after Richard Boyer (later Sir Richard), the ABC board chairman who had first suggested the lectures. The series is broadcast every year in between September and December on ABC Radio National.

The lectures are delivered by prominent Australians selected by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Board, intended to stimulate thought, discussion and debate in Australia on a wide range of subjects, examining key issues and values.

Lectures

1950s

1960s

  • 1960 – Prof Julius Stone – "Law and Policy in the Quest for Survival"
  • 1961 – Prof W. D. Borrie – "The Crowding World"
  • 1962 – Prof W. G. K. Duncan – "In Defence of the Common Man"
  • 1963 – Prof J. D. B. Miller – "Australian and Foreign Policy"
  • 1964 – George Ivan Smith – "Along the Edge of Peace"
  • 1965 – Prof Sir John Eccles – "The Brain and the Person"
  • 1966 – Sir Macfarlane Burnet – "Biology and the Appreciation of Life"
  • 1967 – Robin Boyd – "Artificial Australia"
  • 1968 – Prof W. E. H. Stanner "After the Dreaming"
  • 1969 – Sir Zelman Cowen "The Private Man"

1970s

  • 1970 – Dr H. C. Coombs – "Role of Institutions in Our Lives"
  • 1971 – Prof Basil Hetzel – "Life and Health in Australia"
  • 1972 – Prof Dexter Dunphy – "The Challenge of Change"
  • 1973 – Prof Sir Keith Hancock – "Today, Yesterday and Tomorrow"
  • 1974 – Hugh Stretton – "Housing & Government"
  • 1975 – Dame Roma Mitchell – "The Web of Criminal Law"
  • 1976 – Manning Clark – "A Discovery of Australia"
  • 1977 – Douglas Stewart – "Writers of The Bulletin"
  • 1978 – Sir Gustav Nossal – "Nature's Defence"
  • 1979 – Bob Hawke – "The Resolution of Conflict"

1980s

  • 1980 – Bernard Smith – "The Spectre of Truganini"
  • 1981 – Prof John Passmore – "The Limits of Government"
  • 1982 – Prof Sir Bruce Williams – "Living with Technology"
  • 1983 – Justice Michael Kirby – "The Judges"
  • 1984 – Shirley Hazzard – "Coming of Age in Australia"
  • 1985 – Helen Hughes – "Australia in a Developing World"
  • 1986 – Prof Eric Willmot – "Australia The Last Experiment"
  • 1987 – Davis McCaughey – "Piecing Together a Shared Vision" (multicultural Australia)
  • 1988 – "Postscripts: eight previous Boyer lecturers revisit their lectures"
  • 1989 – Max Charlesworth – "Life, Death, Genes and Ethics: Biotechnology and Bioethics"

1990s

2000s

  • 2000 – Chief Justice Murray Gleeson – "The Rule of Law and the Constitution"
  • 2001 – Prof Geoffrey Blainey – "This Land is all Horizons: Australian Fears and Visions"
  • 2002 – Ian Castles (Not delivered due to bereavement)
  • 2003 – Owen Harries – "Benign or Imperial? Reflections on American Hegemony"
  • 2004 – Peter Conrad – "Tales of Two Hemispheres"
  • 2005 – Archbishop Peter Jensen – "The Future of Jesus"
  • 2006 – Ian Macfarlane – "The Search For Stability"
  • 2007 – Graeme Clark – "Restoring The Senses"
  • 2008 – Rupert Murdoch – "A Golden Age of Freedom"
  • 2009 – General Peter Cosgrove – "A Very Australian Conversation"

2010s

  • 2010 – Professor Glyn Davis – "The Republic of Learning: higher education transforms Australia"
  • 2011 – Geraldine Brooks – "The Idea of Home"
  • 2012 – Professor Marcia Langton – "The Quiet Revolution: Indigenous People and the Resources Boom"
  • 2013 – Governor-General Quentin Bryce – "Back to Grassroots"
  • 2014 – Professor Suzanne Cory – "The promise of science: a vision of hope"
  • 2015 – Dr Michael Fullilove – "A larger Australia"
  • 2016 – Professor Sir Michael Marmot – "Fair Australia: Social Justice and the Health Gap"
  • 2017 – Professor Genevieve Bell – "Fast, Smart and Connected: What is it to be Human, and Australian, in a Digital World?"
  • 2018 – Professor John Rasko – "Life Re-engineered"
  • 2019 – Filmmaker Rachel Perkins – "The End of Silence"

2020s

* 1 "The Atomic Revolution"
* 2 "The Quantum Promise"
* 3 "Imagination and Mindset"
* 4 "The Importance of Doubt"
  • 2024 – Classical music in the contemporary age –
* 1 Professor Anna Goldsworthy, Kairos
* 2 Aaron Wyatt
* 3 Iain Grandage
* 4 Lyn Williams AM
  • 2025 - Australia: A Radical Experiment in Democracy
  • 1 Professor Justin Wolfers, "Australia is Freaking Amazing"
  • 2 John Anderson, AO, "Our Civilisational Moment"
  • 3 Professor Larissa Behrendt, "Justice, Ideas and Inclusion"

See also

References

Further reading

External links