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  2. Professor Timothy J. Lynch
  • Professor Timothy J. Lynch

    Associate Dean (International): Social and Political Sciences, Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne

  1. 21 January 2017 - Public Affairs

    President Trump: 10 reasons not to be afraid

    President Trump won't have a completely clear run to do what he wants in Government – there are checks and balances says University of Melbourne expert.

  2. 10 November 2016 - Public Affairs

    How the unfit triumphed over the uninspiring

    Hillary Clinton lost because she didn’t promise any real change. A University of Melbourne experts says people had grown weary of her progressive platitudes.

  3. Podcast1 November 2016 - The Policy Shop

    The US Election is a policy-free zone

    Policy issues make up less than nine per cent of media coverage and the presidential qualifications account for even less says University of Melbourne experts.

  4. 21 October 2016 - Public Affairs

    Debate trilogy: From the mad to the bad to the crazy

    The three divisive Donald Trump-Hillary Clinton debates in the 2016 Presidential campaign shows the diverse and wondrous perplexity of United States politics.

  5. 11 October 2016 - Public Affairs

    Why Trump is like the Terminator

    Just like the movie character Terminator, Donald Trump is still standing in the Presidential race despite the hammer blows he’s taken to his reputation.

  6. 9 September 2016 - Public Affairs

    Trump, Clinton and the politics of 9/11

    Donald Trump exploits the fact he was in New York when the Twin Towers, fell while Hillary Clinton is a foreign policy hawk says University of Melbourne expert

  7. Podcast8 September 2016 - The Policy Shop

    How can literature influence public policy?

    Has literature failed to elicit empathy for our fellow human beings? And are we asking too much of literature in an age of 140 characters or less?

  8. 26 July 2016 - Public Affairs

    Trump v Clinton: The stark choice facing the United States

    US voters in America's presidential election have likened the choice between Trump and Clinton to being shot or poisoned says University of Melbourne expert.