The Racket: How Abortion Became Legal In Australia
By (Author) Gideon Haigh
Melbourne University Press
Melbourne University Press
1st September 2008
Australia
General
Non Fiction
History: specific events and topics
363.460994
Short-listed for NSW Premier's Literary Award Gleebooks Award for Cultural & Literary Criticism 2009
Paperback
288
Width 156mm, Height 232mm, Spine 26mm
336g
A generation ago in Australia, abortion was a crime. It was also the basis of one of the country's most lucrative and longest-lasting criminal rackets. The Racket describes the rise and fall of an extraordinary web of influence, which culminated in the landmark ruling that made abortion legal, and a public inquiry that humiliated a powerful government and a glamorous police force. With forensic skill and psychological subtlety, Gideon Haigh brings to life a story of corruption in high places and human suffering in low, of murder, suicide, courtroom drama, political machinations, and of the abortionists themselves- among them a multi-millionaire philanthropist, a communist bush poet, a timid aesthete and a bankrupt slaughterman. It is the story, too, of Bertram Wainer, abortion's crash-through-or-crash campaigner, and the moral issue he bequeathed which still divides Australians.
Born in London and based in Melbourne, Gideon Haigh has been a journalist almost thirty years, and written widely on business, sport, both and neither.