Greg Woods is an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of NSW Law School.
The new state of which this magnificent work speaks was new in two senses. The colony of NSW had become a state of the new federal Commonwealth of Australia. Less visibly, the government of NSW over the half century the subject of the work was to become more regulatory and more invasive. The pace of change - whether caused by federation, or two wars, or the great depression, or political philosophy, or the development of democracy itself - occurred so quickly in historical terms that mere qualitative change from pre-1901 to post-1955 justifies the title. ... The hero in Woods' history is this incoherent liberalism, a resilient belief that the government in any civilised society is not merely about the exercise of power, or even about its restraint, but about also an explanation of that exercise for the rest of us. It is a tale well told. - David Ash, Francis Forbes Society Newsletter, February 2019