The PM Glynn Institute's brief is to contribute to deeper thinking and renewed conversations about important issues facing the Catholic community and Australian society, and to develop well-supported, practical and achievable proposals to address them.
The institute's work ranges from reports that map the landscape and highlight important questions for our life in common, to discussion papers on issues of public ethics and public policy and how we might respond to them.
An important goal in this is to bring visibility to evidence and perspectives that may have been overlooked, in a way which contributes to positive debate and building bridges across the divides of politics and ideas.
2022 PM Glynn Survey on Hope Trust and Belonging
The Place of Religion in the School Curriculum
Greg Craven Lecture on Ethics and Politics
Ethos: public ethics and the future of Australia
Cardinal Pell Leadership Program & ACU Student Leaders Program
The Institute has developed a number of resources that approach religious freedom both as a human right in need of legal protection and as a philosophical concept requiring political attention. Its work also encompasses the place of religion in public life in Australia.
Finishing Up Business: What we can learn from Australia’s First Peoples about dying and death
Buraadja: the Liberal Case for National Reconciliation
Anchoring our Commitment in the Constitution: finding common ground
Recognition in keeping with the Constitution: a worthwhile project
Upholding the Big Ideas: options for discussion
The Reframing of Hope in Palliative Care (PDF, 1.4MB)
Speaking of suffering: towards a conversation about death and dying
A Snapshot of Palliative Care Services in Australia
The 2018 PM Glynn Survey on hope, trust and belonging
Shadow of the Cross: Catholic social teaching and Australian politics
The New Social Contract: Renewing the liberal vision for Australia
Story of Our Country: Labor’s vision for Australia
Abbott’s Right: the conservative tradition from Menzies to Abbott
Tribalism's Troubles: responding to Rowan Williams
The Market’s Morals: responding to Jesse Norman
Today’s Tyrants: responding to Dyson Heydon
Building social cohesion and community engagement in Australian schools
Nonsense on Stilts: rescuing human rights in Australia
Federation’s Man of Letters: Patrick McMahon Glynn
Rules of Engagement: from culture wars to reasonable disagreement
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