Academic and writer.
Judith Brett completed a PhD on Hugo von Hofmannsthal (an Austrian literary prodigy) at Melbourne University in 1980.
During the 1980s, she was editor of Meanjin (1982-86) and the Times on Sunday (1987), before beginning her career in political studies at La Trobe University in 1989. During the late 1990s, she wrote a fortnightly column for the Melbourne Age. She has contributed regularly to the Monthly and has written three Quarterly Essays (as at 2018).
Since 1989, Brett has published regularly on political topics, including a political biography of Robert Menzies, a study of the Howard government, and a biography of Alfred Deakin.
Robert Menzies' Forgotten People won the Ernest Scott Prize (1992-1993), the Victorian Premier's Literary Award (1993) and the NSW Premier's Literary Award (1993). Her work Australian Liberals and the Moral Middle Class (Cambridge University Press, 2003) won the 2004 Ernest Scott History Prize.
In 2018, she was emeritus professor of politics at La Trobe University.
In 2019, her From Secret Ballot to Democracy Sausage: How Australia got Compulsory Voting was shortlisted for the Queensland Literary Awards (History). In 2020, it was longlisted for the Colin Roderick Award and shortlisted for the Prime Minister's Literary Award (Australian history).