Bernard Keane

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

OccupationJournalist, political editor, author
NationalityAustralian
AlmamaterUniversity of Sydney
Bernard Keane
OccupationJournalist, political editor, author
NationalityAustralian
EducationUniversity of Sydney
Alma materUniversity of Sydney
Period2008–present
GenreNon-fiction, politics, satire, fiction
SubjectPolitics of Australia, national security, economics, internet freedom

Bernard Keane is an Australian journalist for Crikey.[1] He became Crikey's political correspondent in 2008 and has since become its politics editor.

He is also the author of several books on politics and related topics, including Surveillance (2015),[2] War On The Internet,[3][4] and A Short History of Stupid (with Helen Razer).[5]

Before joining Crikey, Keane studied history at the University of Sydney, and later worked as a public servant and speechwriter in the transport and communications sector. In doing so, he acted unceasingly to achieve his childhood ambition of bringing very fast train travel to the Australian people, without success.[6]

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