Missionary protection or assimilation periods of aboriginal and torres strait...Service_supportAssignment
Aboriginal people are considered to be the native people dwelling in Australia for many centuries prior to advent of Europeans. Lt James Cook in 1770 found Australia and declared it a property of Britain’s King George II (Broome, 2010).. In 1788 there was a massive invasion and take over of the land by the European invaders. Aboriginal people had been beleaguered after the invasion (Broome, 2010). With new invaders came a whole host of new diseases this had lead to the decimation of the population. There were numerous events that had entailed during this time period. The time period that has been considered the from1952 to 1965 AD.
Missionary protection or assimilation periods of aboriginal and torres strait...Service_supportAssignment
Aboriginal people are considered to be the native people dwelling in Australia for many centuries prior to advent of Europeans. Lt James Cook in 1770 found Australia and declared it a property of Britain’s King George II (Broome, 2010).. In 1788 there was a massive invasion and take over of the land by the European invaders. Aboriginal people had been beleaguered after the invasion (Broome, 2010). With new invaders came a whole host of new diseases this had lead to the decimation of the population. There were numerous events that had entailed during this time period. The time period that has been considered the from1952 to 1965 AD.
History, Culture, Social Justice and Contemporary Issues of Aboriginal peoples in Canada are explored for purposes of equity education and orientation on an Aboriginal perspective.
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He plays two characters in the video.
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Australia is often referred to as a society of immigrants and, since the 1970s, as a multicultural society. We shall look at the evolution from ‘White Australia’ to modern multiculturalism, and beyond, at the current ‘crisis of multiculturalism’. We shall also look at the problematic relationship between multiculturalism and Aboriginal claims for recognition. This shall lead us to question what forms race take today in a rapidly changing Australia. In particular, how does the immigration system, with its emphasis on ‘skilled migration’, contribute to writing a particular version of the national story and citizenship, one that arguably is still ‘raced’.
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2. This presentation draws on knowledge provided by;
Karen Bell- Lecturer in SocialWork and Human Services (CSU)
And most importantly…
The many Indigenous friends, family, Elders and colleagues that
I continue to hold dear as an invaluable resource in developing;
knowledge, insight and reflective capabilities.
3. Aboriginal people in Australia are the oldest
surviving continuous culture in the world.
For at least 60,000 years, they have
survived with warmth, strength, personal
courage and a commitment to community
and their land
4. 2016 census data
• Indigenous people – 2.8% of Australia’s population.
• NT has the highest proportion of people identifying as Indigenous (25.5%) and
Victoria has the lowest (0.8%).
• Decline in those identifying as Indigenous proportion since last census, prior to that
steady incease – increased birth rate, decreasd mortality rate, more identifying as
Indigenous.
• The majority of Indigenous people in Australia lived in major cities (35%).
4
5. Census, ABS and institute of Criminology data
• Education- Under-represented in higher education, post-school qualifications, and
completion of high school numbers.
• Employment- Indigenous Australian’s are twice as likely to be unemployed
• Health- Life Expectancy - women 64.8 years (compared to 82 years) - men 59.4
years (compared to 76 years). Infant mortality - 4 x that of the non-indigenous
population
• Young Indigenous people are incarcerated at 23 x non-Aboriginal rate. (Adults 15
times more likely).
• Young Indigenous people represented 52% of those in custody. (Adults – 20% of
incarcerated people).
5
6. “Current statistics on every indicator- health, child protection,
prisons- highlight that there is something desperately wrong in
the way that Aboriginal people are treated in this country and
presents us with some serious challenges that, as social work
practitioners, we need to be addressing”
Bessarab (2015)
7. ATSI communities are heterogeneous – not homogenous
Non indigenous ‘social workers cannot expect to work
effectively with Indigenous communities without a sound
knowledge of the history of Australia and the experiences
of ATSI people with government authorities. Working with
ATSI people requires soul searching, forgiveness and
preparedness to challenge our potential for racism. At
both an individual and societal level it may also require a
rethinking of our history’ (Gilbert 2005, p. 63)
7
8. Historical Context- European Colonisation
• Fallacy of terra nullius – ‘empty land’
• Killings, incarceration, forced removal from land, wars, disease, restriction of movement and early
attempts at forced assimilation
• By the early 1900s, armed resistance from Indigenous peoples wanes and poisonings and
massacres decrease. Slowly, the population begins to increase. In this period, legislation is
introduced that describes the relationship as one of ‘protection’
8
Consider this in the context of
Social Darwinism which was
influential until at least the 1930’s.
Social Darwinism saw Europeans
as ‘different and superior to all non-
European people’
(Markus 1994, cited by Gilbert
2005, p. 64)
• By 1911 laws are taken up in all states,
giving governments total control over the
lives of Indigenous Australians, dictating
where they could live and be employed.
It also makes all children of Aboriginal
peoples wards of the state, meaning they
can be removed without permission.
• Late 1800s, early 1900s – missions,
reserves and institutions specifically for
controlling aboriginal people
(http://www.shareourpride.org.au/sections/our-shared-history/)
9. Historical Context- 1910-1970
The Stolen Generation
• Between the two world wars it is determined that children with non-Indigenous ancestry should be taken from their families and raised in white
institutions. This approach leads to the forced removal of children, Aboriginal missions are established by a number churches.
Post 1940
• Assimilationist policy – missions as a way for aboriginal people to assimilate into ‘respectable’ society
• Missions did provide rations, some training and some protection. Also very negative effects and undermined basic human rights.
1948 - Counted as Australian citizens
• In 1948, the Commonwealth Citizenship and Nationality Act gives the category of Australian Citizenship to all Australians, including Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander peoples, for the first time. However, at a state government level Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples still suffer discrimination.
1962 - Right to vote
• The Commonwealth Electoral Act is amended to give the vote to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples at Federal elections. The Act provides
that Indigenous Australians should have the right to enrol and vote at federal elections but enrolment was not compulsory. Despite this amendment, it is
illegal under Commonwealth legislation to encourage Indigenous Australians to enrol to vote. Western Australia extends the State vote to Aboriginal
people. Three years later Queensland becomes the last state to grant Indigenous Australians the right to vote in state elections.
1967 - Referendum
• After a decade long campaign by Indigenous and non-Indigenous people working side by side to move the nation forward, a referendum held in May
1967 is the most successful this nation has ever seen. More than 90 per cent of Australian voters say YES that Indigenous people should be counted in
the national census of the population.
Footer text here9
10. Historical Context- 1970-1980
1972 - Land rights
• 26 January 1972 - OnAustralia Day in 1972, the AboriginalTent Embassy is
pitched outside Parliament House in Canberra.The activists were protesting
against the McMahon Liberal Government’s statement in which land rights
were rejected in favour of 50-year leases to Aboriginal communities.The
protesters issued a petition in February, which detailed a five point plan
addressing Aboriginal ownership of existing reserves and settlements,
preservation of all sacred sites, $6 million in compensation and full rights of
statehood for the NorthernTerritory.
1972 - Self-determination
• TheWhitlamGovernment establishes the Department of AboriginalAffairs
and commits to a policy of self-determination.Three years later, the Australian
Senate unanimously endorses a resolution put up by Aboriginal Senator
Neville Bonner acknowledging prior ownership of this country by Indigenous
peoples. Federal Parliament also passes the Racial DiscriminationAct.
1988 -The Barunga Statement
• At the Barunga Festival, Prime Minister Bob Hawke is presented with two
painting and text calling for Indigenous rights.This is known as the Barunga
Statement.The Prime Minister responded by saying there will be a treaty
within the life of the current parliament (http://www.shareourpride.org.au/sections/our-
shared-history/)
Footer text here10
Australian National Archive
11. Historical Context- 1980’s and 1990’s
1991 -The reconciliation movement
• In 1991, the Report of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody is handed down recommending a formal
process of reconciliation.The Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation holds its first meeting in Canberra.The work of theCouncil for
Aboriginal Reconciliation during the ‘90s stimulated heightened awareness among non-Indigenous people. But the legacy of the
past, which was exacerbated by continuing policy failure means that the lives of many Aboriginal andTorres Strait Islander people
continue to be marred by poor health, unemployment, imprisonment, homelessness, substance abuse and family violence.
1992 - Historic Redfern address
• 10 December 1992 - Prime Minister Paul Keating’s historic address is given to a largely Aboriginal gathering at Sydney’s Redfern
Park to commemorate theYear of theWorld’s Indigenous People.The powerful speech, was one of the most significant
reconciliation events, asks non- IndigenousAustralians to think about how they would feel if the past injustices inflicted on IndigenousAustralians had been
inflicted upon them inst
1992 -The Mabo decision
• The High Court of Australia passed down the judgement in Mabo which recognised that NativeTitle did in fact exist and that Australia had not been terra
nullius at the time of European settlement.
1993 - ReconciliationWeek
• 15 June 1993 -The first National Week of Prayer for Reconciliation is supported byAustralia's major faith communities.Three years later, in 1996, the
Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation launchesAustralia's first National ReconciliationWeek.
1993 - Native title (Wik)
• The High Court overturns the notion of terra nullius (that the Australian land belonged to no one when Europeans arrived in 1788). As a result, the Federal
Parliament passed the NativeTitleAct. In 1996, Aboriginal, pastoral and environmental groups on CapeYork signed the a landmark agreement on land use.
1997 - Bringing them home
• 26 May 1997 - On 26th May 1997 the Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal andTorres Strait Islander children from their families is
tabled in Federal Parliament.The 'Bringing them home' Report revealed the extent of the forcible removal policies, which were passed and implemented
for generations and into the 1970s. May 26 has since become known as National Sorry Day.
Footer text here11
12. ‘We took the traditional lands and smashed the traditional way of life. We brought the
diseases. The alcohol. We committed the murders. We took the children from their
mothers. We practised discrimination and exclusion… It might help if … non-
Aboriginal Australians imagined… [being] dispossessed of land we had lived on for
50,000 years, and then imagined ourselves told that it never had been ours. Imagine
ours was the oldest culture in the world and we were told it was worthless. Imagine if
we had resisted settlement, suffered and died in defence of our land, and then were
told in history books that we had given up without a fight … imagine if we had
suffered the injustice and then were blamed for it…’
(excerpt - Keating’s ‘Redfern’ speech 1993 in Markus 1994, cited by Gilbert 2005, p.71).
12
13. Historical Context- Howard Government 1996-2007
Howard Government 1996- 2007
• 10 point plan in response to Wik judgement, to amend the Native Title Act 1993.
• Main aim was to close gap opened by Wik re native title claims – diminution of collective rights
• No apology for stolen generation
• De-funding of ATSI services (started in 1970s)
• Mainstreaming of services
• 1997 – ACOSS apology on behalf of many social welfare
organisations (including AASW) to those identified in the
Bringing them home report
Footer text here13
14. Historical Context- 2000 onwards
2000 - Bridge walks
• More than a million Australians walk across bridges to show their support for reconciliation. The Council for Aboriginal
Reconciliation is wound up, presenting a set of recommendations to the Government as part of Corroboree 2000 at the Sydney
Opera House. Reconciliation Australia is also set up as an independent, not-for-profit organisation to encourage and support the
nation in taking the next steps in the reconciliation movement.
2001 - Centenary of Federation
• Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and cultures feature in the Centenary of Federation; and the Yeperenye Festival,
just outside of Alice Springs, hosts the largest gathering of Indigenous people in Australian history.
2002 - ATSIC inquiry
• The Howard government calls for an inquiry into the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC).This was followed,
in 2004, by the abolition of ATSIC; the ‘main-streaming’ of Indigenous services and the establishment of the National Indigenous
Council.
2006 - Reconciliation in action
• Prime Minister John Howard and Reconciliation Australia Co-Chair Professor Mick Dodson launch the Reconciliation Action Plan
program. The program is designed to embed cultural change within organisations through building good relationships, respecting
the special contribution of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and creating opportunities.
(http://www.shareourpride.org.au/sections/our-shared-history/)
Footer text here14
15. Historical Context- 2000 onwards continued
2007 - The Intervention
• Prime Minister John Howard and Indigenous Affairs Minister Mal Brough announce a dramatic intervention into the Northern
Territory Aboriginal communities in response to the findings of a report about sexual abuse, giving the Government power to;
acquire Aboriginal land and communities for up to five years, hold back 50% of all welfare payments, so as to control how
money is being spent by Indigenous people, ban all alcohol. The long standing permit system, enacted as part of the 1976
Aboriginal Land Rights Act (Northern Territory) was scrapped.
2008 - The Apology
• The Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, makes a formal apology to the Stolen Generations in the House of Representatives.
2009 - United Nations Declaration
• Australia supports the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People. Previously, Australia had been one of
only four nations to oppose the Declaration.
2010 - Constitutional recognition
• In December 2010, an expert panel is appointed by the Government to consult and lead a nationwide discussion about formally
recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the Constitution. After a period of consideration, discussion and
consultation with all Australians, the panel developed recommendations to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
peoples in our nation's founding document..
2012 - Act of Recognition
• In November an Act of Recognition bill is introduced into the House of Representatives. The Act ensures that constitutional
recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples will remain on the agenda in the next term of Government, asks the
Parliament to recognise the impressive history of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in this land and their unique
contribution to the nation.
(http://www.shareourpride.org.au/sections/our-shared-history/)
Footer text here15
16. Footer text here16
Megan Davis from the Referendum
Council reads the statement from the
Uluru meeting.
2017 National Constitutional Convention- 26th May
17. Referendum Council- Final Report
• Delivered to the Prime Minister MalcomTurnbull and Opposition Leader Bill
Shorten on June 30th 2017
• Rejected tokenistic recognition within the Constitution, instead highlighting
the needs for a new representative body that will give Indigenous Australian’s
a political voice on issues that affect them.
https://www.referendumcouncil.org.au/final-report
A visit to the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet in June 2018 notes that
the ‘latest news’ on this is a meeting on 30th November 2016.
17
18. Social work practice issues
• Acknowledge Social Work’s part in unjust practices and social
control
• Understand Australia’s history, social injustice and human rights
violations
• Acknowledge sources of resistance and activism (past, present,
future)
• Develop culturally appropriate, human rights approach to
practice
18
19. What is culturally appropriate practice?
Personal and professional practice is also political
Empowerment
Use AASW Code of Ethics
Acknowledge life experience – self and client
Positionality – self reflection
Examine beliefs and value system
20. ‘Becoming culturally responsive does not imply that one is
expert; rather, it implies that one is constantly in a state of
learning in relation to where they are and the local context and
that each situation, family, and community, while there may be
similarities, are also different and diverse and will require
different responses. It requires social workers to be reflexive
about their own identity and positioning, their biases, history,
and social work theories and skills that they bring to practice’
Dawn Bassarab (2015)
21. “We know we cannot
live in the past, but the
past lives with us”
Charles Perkins
22. Archie Roach-Took the Children away
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aywDT6yHMmo&list=RDaywDT6yHMmo#t=0
23. References
• Australian Bureau of Statistics (2018) www.abs.gov.au
• Australian Institute of Criminology (2018) www.aic.gov.au
• Bessarab, D. (2015) Changing How and what we Do: The Significance of Embedding Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Ways of Knowing, Being, and Doing in Social Work Education and Practice Australian Social Work Volume 68,
Number 1 pp.1-4.
• Bennett, Green, Gilbert, & Bessarab (2013) Our voices. Palgrave Macmillian: South Yarra.
• Gilbert, S. (2005). Social work with indigenous Australians. In Alston, M. & McKinnon, J. (eds) Social work fields of
practice. OUP.
• Gilbert, S. (2013). Aboriginal issues in context. In Connolly, M. & Harms, L. (Eds.) Social work contexts and practice.
OUP.
• Hanson, T. Personal Communication, 8th March 2017
• O’Hara, A. & Weber, Z. (2005). Skills for human service practice – working with individuals, groups and communities.
OUP.
• Rudd, K. (2008). National Apology to the Stolen Generations. www.abc.net.au/news/events/apology
• Weeks, W. & Quinn, M. (2000). Issues facing Australian families – human services respond. Longman.
Note- Images used within the presentation were sourced from pixabay, National archives and personal collections