Aborigines Essay

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    had the largest impact upon Indigenous Australians and the three supporting arguments to prove this are the Aborigines losing their rights to freedom, Aboriginal children being removed from their families, and finally the loss of aboriginality. The Assimilation was a policy set by the government in 1937 and went to till 1964. This policy of Assimilation was set not just for Aborigines in Australia but for all foreign immigrants that were not European and white in colour. Having this policy set

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    Walkabout

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    movies that are missing from the distribution. The movie Walkabout is a 1971 drama about two British siblings a little boy and his older fourteen-year-old sister, who are marooned and lost in the Australian outback by their father and are saved by an Aborigine boy who is, walking his rite of passage into manhood. "Nicolas Roeg was a cinematographer before he was a director, and this is one of the best-photographed films ever filmed" . This movie is also about peace and tranquility on earth, which finds

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    Indigenous Customary Law

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    response to having perpetrated a murder or stolen someone’s wife (Finnane, 2001, p. 295-296). ‘Payback’ was noted in some Aborigine groups from the late 18th century but cannot be given a place today in its violation of several laws including human rights standards. The court and its assignees are to punish an offender, not angry Aborigines. Customary law among various Aborigine groups does involve corporal punishment that is indeed criminal in the thinking of Australian law in what can be severe

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    The Australian Aborigines were the original occupants of Australia but like most continents western settlers came for the opportunity of new land. Due to the colonialism in 1788, when European settlement in Australia began as banished prisoners, Australia’s white population was about 400,000. Today, over 20 million white Australians occupy the continent. Out of those 20 million Australians, only 2.5% of the population are Australian Aborigines. With the discovery of gold just outside Bathurst

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    The Australian Invasion

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    The Europeans were forcing them off their hunting land and sacred areas. They couldn't compensate for the increasing population of the settlers. Before long, the Europeans became annoyed with the Aborigines and violence was inevitable. Some of the Aborigine groups were able to wage successful guerilla war against the Europeans, but eventually, the lack of technology became their downfall. Other groups were forced into hiding while others stayed in camps. Since they were force

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    How did it effect Aboriginal Australians? Give examples Significance This document made Victoria the first Colony to enact a comprehensive scheme to regulate the lives of Aboriginal people. The Act giving powers to the Board for the Protection of Aborigines which subsequently developed into an significant level of control of people 's lives including, However, not limiting to; the regulation of residence, employment, marriage, social life and other aspects of daily life. History Victoria enacted this

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    Social Anthropology, and how does it relate to Australian Aborigines? Social Anthropology is the comparative study of the ways in which people live in different social and cultural settings across the globe. If we wanted to go even deeper, Anthropology is the study of various aspects of humans within past and present societies. Biological or physical anthropology studies the biological development of humans. This relates to the Australian Aborigines in many ways, for example, Socials Anthropology is the

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    colony, and drove Aboriginals off their land in order to make room for both prisoners and free settlers. These first encounters set the stage for the next 300 years of interactions between the Aborigines and the British. Until the beginning of the 21st century, the British seem to have seen the Aborigines as a primitive people and the only way to “deal” with them was through strict control and enforcing British customs. While some may argue that the British were trying to protect the Aboriginal people

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    The Secret River Essay

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    A massacre is described as ‘an indiscriminate and brutal slaughter of many people.’ by the Collins English Dictionary. In Kate Grenville’s, The Secret River, the early settlers from England massacre a group of aborigines. This is based around true events, Grenville says “The massacre scene is based on eyewitness accounts of the Waterloo Creek killings in 1838”. The events in The Secret River do not quite reach the level grotesque violence that was perpetrated by the white settlers. In the Secret

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    II began” (1990, Canberra) : planes, Western people, Aborigines, birds are painted on wood. He found a way to incorporate outsiders (the Europeans with their boat and planes, cattle, horses and guns into Aborigines rather than being themselves dissolved into invaders history). Paintings occasionally represent scenes from the ancestral past, for exemple the Djang’kawu giving birth (p74). Mawalan Marika illustrated the creation of Aborigines, an “magnificently conveys the creative powers of the

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