| + + | Ann. Am. Acad. 29: 230. Ja. ’07. 610w. |
“We highly commend the impartial statements of fact to be found in it, combined as they are with a form and style of exposition rarely to be met with among writers upon such topics.”
| + + − | Ath. 1907, 1: 320. Mr. 16. 540w. |
“Dr. Clark has given students of this problem a most admirable statement of the situation in Australasia,—free from bias, well arranged and comprehensive enough to include the essential facts.” W. B. Guthrie.
| + + | Charities. 17: 468. D. 15, ’07. 480w. |
“It is refreshing to find an author who is willing to let the facts speak for themselves without playing tricks on credulous partisans and furnishing food for prejudice; and in this interesting volume the author seems to be honestly trying to place the reader in position to form his own judgment in the presence of the actual situation without too much prompting as to the conclusions he ought to derive from the survey.” Charles Richmond Henderson.
| + | Dial. 42: 288. My. 1, ’07. 370w. |
“Written in scientific spirit, with unprejudiced presentation of both light and shade, composed in orderly manner with the use of clear unstrained English.”
| + + | Ind. 63: 455. Ag. 22, ’07. 600w. |
“Dr. Clark’s discussion of the working of social democracy in Australasia impresses one as being eminently fair.” John Cummings.