Constant Radical - The Life and Times of Sue Bradford
Sue Bradford is half American and sixth
generation Kiwi on her father’s side -- her European missionary genes date from
1820s Northland. Despite her grassroots
New Zild twang, she was raised in Auckland by middle class, bohemian
intellectuals and survived a childhood made difficult by her brilliant but
domineering father. Fast forward through the tumultuous Vietnam War protest era, the 1981 Springbok
Tour and 16 years in the invisible community sector where she became, with
husband Bill, a loud voice and a highly effective organiser for society’s
marginalised, and Sue suddenly and unexpectedly found herself in Parliament.
From
December 1999, as a hardworking, and much admired Green MP she managed a hefty
portfolio and succeeded in getting three member’s bills into legislation,
including her contentious bill to amend section 59 of the Crimes Act. Her
mainstream political career ended, abruptly and disappointingly, five months
after she lost the May 2009 Green Party co-leadership contest.
Subsequently
she achieved a PhD and transformed herself into Dr Sue Bradford -- activist and academic. Her readable thesis on the
need for a major left wing think tank in Aotearoa has been downloaded in full
almost 3,000 times and Economic and Social Research Aotearoa (ESRA), the infant
left think tank she set up as a result, is growing lustily.
Sue
Bradford is still evolving but in terms of what matters most, her core social
justice principles, she remains constant.
The Author
Jenny Chamberlain was a journalist with North & South magazine for 21 years – 10 of those as deputy
editor. She won five Qantas Media Awards, the 2003 Magazine Publishers’
Association Feature Writer of the Year Award and was named 2006 European Union
Journalist of the Year for the child welfare feature which prompted this
biography. She lives in Auckland and enjoys being a grandmother, writing,
gardening, walking and volunteering for a local bush restoration society
Constant
Radical: The Life and Timers of Sue Bradford
ISBN: 978-0-9941360-0-8 $39.50
Publisher: Fraser
Books, Chamberlain Road, RD8, Masterton.
1 comment:
This is a very good book, despite a poorly designed cover and text. I can't put it down and am really enjoying it. Well written, clear and easy to read. It's really not only a biography of Sue Bradford, also a biography of the times - 1960s and 1970s. All those who were involved in the protest movement, the Kiwi Pub, etc will love it. Jenny's research is extraordinarily meticulous and thorough. It's like a grown-up serious version of Bullshit and Jellybeans.
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