Klaus Neumann is an Honorary Professor at Deakin University. Until recently he worked for the Hamburg Foundation for the Advancement of Research and Culture writing a history of local German responses to refugees.
Essays & reportage
A volcano and its people
Klaus Neumann
19 September 2014
Twenty years ago today, the bustling port town of Rabaul was all but destroyed in an eruption that was remarkable in more ways than one
International
Two countries, two elections
Klaus Neumann
16 September 2013
Like Australia, Germany has seen a shift in the political middle ground. But there, it’s ended up in an intriguing place, writes Klaus Neumann
National affairs
After the tears
Klaus Neumann
2 July 2012
An emotional parliamentary debate failed to come to grips with why people move and why we sometimes worry about it, writes Klaus Neumann
Essays & reportage
Matters of the heart
Klaus Neumann
30 June 2011
Compassion as a motivator for action is overrated, writes Klaus Neumann, but Go Back to Where You Came from is a reminder that it’s not a bad starting point
Essays & reportage
Everything was Friede Freude Eierkuchen
Klaus Neumann
14 October 2010
Prompted by the twentieth anniversary of German reunification in October 1990, Klaus Neumann dusts off an article he wrote in 1991
Essays & reportage
Rights versus compassion
Klaus Neumann
3 June 2009
Government policy should confer rights rather than privileges, writes Klaus Neumann
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