reconciliation and social justice: news index
Government timetable for Indigenous employment reforms announced
30 April 2008 - Media Release - The Government will shortly begin consultations on Indigenous employment services reforms which will form part of a broader Indigenous Economic Development Strategy to be announced by the end of the year.
Forget a treaty, say Pearson, Yunupingu
25 April 2008 - TWO of the nation's most powerful Aborigines have dismissed the treaty movement as a political "dead horse" and have urged their fellow indigenous leaders to embrace the mainstream push towards constitutional recognition of Aboriginal people.
The gains must not be squandered
24 April 2008 - Aboriginal children "can't eat the constitution," Professor Marcia Langton said at the 2020 Summit. She is one of various high-profile indigenous commentators who have criticised the indigenous stream's emphasis on constitutional reform since the weekend. She is right, of course. Constitutional reform alone will not fix the problems facing indigenous children and their families in Australia.
Call to offer Aboriginal scholarships
18 April 2008 - PRIVATE and public schools should be given annual results-based incentive payments to cover scholarships for indigenous students and staff in an "education revolution" reflecting the urgent need to address low Aboriginal education standards.
Aborigines to welcome Pope Benedict
17 April 2008 - Aboriginal elders will be the first Australians to officially welcome the Pope when he arrives in Sydney for the Catholic Church's World Youth Day (WYD) in July.
Aboriginal skulls to return home from UK
9 April 2008 - The skulls of six Aborigines that have been gathering dust in Scotland since the 19th century will be returned to Australia within weeks.
Rudd pledges annual update on indigenous crusade
6 April 2008 - A Progress report by the Government on how it is closing the gap between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians will be made on the first working day of every parliamentary year, Kevin Rudd has pledged.
Indigenous mining share deal
1 April 2008 - More than 2500 of the country's most disadvantaged Aborigines will become shareholders in an Australian Securities Exchange-listed mining company under an innovative native title agreement.

Reconciliation Australia applauds a new alliance to turn good intentions into measurable actions
20 March 2008 - Media Release - The signing today of a Statement of Intent to close the gap in health status between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples marks another milestone along the road to reconciliation.

Historic signing of Statement of Intent between Australian Government and Indigenous peoples on health equality
20 March 2008 - Media Release - Historic signing of Statement of Intent between Australian Government and Indigenous peoples on health equality (the first from HREOC and the second from the Close the Gap coalition).
Annual Social Justice and Native Title Reports tabled in Parliament today
20 March 2008 - Media Release - Amending the Northern Territory intervention legislation to maximise protection of children from abuse while ensuring the basic human rights of Indigenous people are protected is one of the major elements of a 10 point plan outlined in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Report 2007 tabled in federal Parliament today.
Australia's hidden empire
6 March 2008 - The New Statesman (UK) - That Canberra runs an imperial network is unmentionable, yet the chain of control stretches from the Aboriginal slums of Sydney to the South Pacific.

Attacking the great digital divide
4 March 2008 - IT is transforming the world. But is it leaving indigenous Australia behind? Cynthia Karena travelled to the Northern Territory to investigate the digital divide in our own backyard.Having to transport computer equipment in a tinny down the river so it can get to a remote indigenous school in the Northern Territory is just part of the challenge of bringing technology to remote communities.

Financial services sector unites around reconciliation agenda
26 February 2008 - media release - In an industry where competition rules, Australia’s four big banks along with credit unions and building societies are working side by side to make their own unique contribution to reconciliation.
Indigenous appeal: sorry is not hard to say
27 January 2008 - "IT'S BEEN a tough year." Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service chief executive Julie Tongs knows a little about doing it tough.
Invasion Day protests
26 January 2008 - Around the country, hundreds of people marked white invasion of Australia on January 26 by attending protests and festivals.
Sorry message hangs over Australia Day
26 January 2008 - Reconciliation was a dominant theme as millions of people celebrated Australia Day, which included a mystery skywriter scrawling "sorry" above Sydney Harbour.
Indigenous posting jumps gun
25 January 2008 - SOUTH Australia has recycled a former ATSIC commissioner into the role of its top indigenous advocate, jumping the gun on federal moves to set up a new representative organisation for Aborigines.
Reconciliation requires an Aborigine for head of state
22 January 2008 - Until now, if you wished to be appointed to the post of governor-general, two of the essential qualities were that you were white and male. The first appointment, of Lord Hopetoun, had its problems, not least because he was criticised as pallid, sickly and bedecked with too many plumes. When a youthful Prince Charles - possibly impressed by his encounter with local bikini girls - thought he might fit the bill, he was told to back off as Australians had their own blokes for the job.
Rudd prepares for national reconciliation
21 January 2008 - NZ Herald - Australia's new Labor Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, has returned to work, facing a task that none of his predecessors could master - reconciliation with Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders.
An apology is the first step on a long road
20 December 2007 - Economic progress is vital to ensure better lives for Aboriginal people.
Indigenous affairs top priority at COAG
17 December 2007 - Indigenous affairs will be a top priority when Kevin Rudd meets state and territory counterparts this week as the new prime minister pledges to turn COAG into a workhorse not a "whipping boy".
Aboriginal people need the fires of reconciliation to be relit
11 December 2007 - TODAY is a historic day, not only in the life of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people but in the life of this nation.
Addressing extreme disadvantage through investment in capability developement
6 December 2007 - Ken Henry Secretary to the Treasury - Thank you to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), and to Dr Penny Allbon in particular, for organising this conference and inviting me to speak. The AIHW’s report ‘Australia’s welfare 2007’ is the eighth in a long standing biennial series published by the AIHW but is the first under the stewardship of Dr Allbon.
CommBank to support Aboriginal reconciliation
6 December 2007 - The Commonwealth Bank has announced it will support a formal commitment to Australia's reconciliation with Indigenous, saying the bank will now focus on a reconciliation strategy, including employment.
Dawn of a new era
27 November 2007 - Kevin Rudd, prime minister-elect, has declared his hand openly on the issue of a national elected Indigenous representative body and hopefully Labor will implement it within the first 12 months of their new term.
Aboriginal leaders letter to Editor
28 November 2007 - Kevin Rudd's election provides an opportunity for Australia and Aboriginal people to repair amage caused by the Howard years. Mr Rudd's intention to apologise to the Stolen Generations already indicates a positive change of national policy towards Aboriginal people and should he remove the NT Emergency laws Aboriginal reconciliation will be further enhanced.
Dodson backs Labor on reconciliation
26 November 2007 - Leading Aboriginal activist Mick Dodson says he is confident progress on reconciliation will be achieved with the new Labor government.
Church urges treaty to help deal with Aboriginal unrest
12 November 2007- The Uniting Church is urging that the South Australian Government sign a treaty recognising Aboriginal land rights in SA.
Nigeria: Priest Finds African Parallels With Australian Aborigines
6 November 2007 - Wilcanna - Though surrounded by Western civilization, especially popularity of the nuclear family, the indigenous peoples of Australia still treasure their extended family system and matriarchal culture, a Nigerian priest found out.
Aeotearoa Declaration puts Australia under international microscope
18 October 2007 - Australia's poor record in overcoming Indigenous disadvantage has again come under the microscope overseas, with an international health meeting making a formal declaration to urge the Australian government to act.
The symbolism isn't bad, but the hypocrisy and cruelty are
15 October 2007 - The poor track record of Australia's public institutions on indigenous issues remains undiminished. It is therefore significant to hear the Prime Minister finally acknowledge the psychological terra nullius that fuels indigenous detachment.
John Howard U-turn on Aborigine policy
12 October 2007 The Times UK - John Howard, the Australian Prime Minister, promised yesterday to hold a referendum to recognise Aborigines in the Constitution in a dramatic policy shift weeks before going to the polls.
Howard calls for 'New Reconciliation' referendum for indigenous people
11 October 2007 - SYDNEY: The Australian prime minister, John Howard, proposed a referendum Thursday to change the country's Constitution to recognize the role of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in Australia's history.
Constitutional recognition of Indigenous rights long overdue
11 October 2007 - media release - Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation (ANTaR) said tonight it would welcome constitutional change that enshrines the distinctive rights of the first Australians, but the wording of any preamble would need to be developed on the basis of genuine negotiations with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
Labor spells out indigenous plan
6 October 2007 - A LABOR government would retain the 30-year old Aboriginal work-for-the dole scheme in the Northern Territory, in its first major departure from the Government over its controversial emergency intervention in the NT.
The story of the Chagossians
4 October 2007 - "Vidisha Biswas investigates the story of the Chagossians - forcibly removed from their Indian Ocean island home - and finds, 40 years on, opinion is divided about going back
Northern Territory Intervention Threatens Australian Tourism
18 September 2007 - Today Dr. Jan Turek, (Institute of Archaeological Heritage, Czech Republic) in his Ian Potter Foundation Keynote Address, likened the Australian government's treatment of its Aboriginal citizens to the genocidal excesses of Stalinist Russia.
United Nations adopts Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples
13 September 2007 – The General Assembly today adopted a landmark declaration outlining the rights of the world’s estimated 370 million indigenous people and outlawing discrimination against them – a move that followed more than two decades of debate. The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples has been approved after 143 Member States voted in favour, 11 abstained and four – Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States – voted against the text.
Wik women sign up for a new battle in Territory
1 September 2007 - HUNDREDS of women, including Lady Deane, the wife of the former governor- general, have pledged their support to the lobby group Women for Wik, which its organisers reactivated a week ago to oppose the Federal Government's intervention in Northern Territory Aboriginal communities.
Forming a new voice that speaks for Aborigines without one
31 August 2007 - A decade with John Howard has included: native title made harder to get with his "bucket loads of extinguishment" legislation; the elected body ATSIC sacked; the Reconciliation Council dumped; paternalistic funding conditions imposed (wash hands and attend school to get Commonwealth monies); the Northern Territory land rights act amended to increase access for mining; and now vulnerable Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory are invaded by troops. It has been a nightmare decade for Aborigines.
Pearson’s Gamble, Stanner’s Dream - The Past and Future of Remote Australia
August 2007 - In 1934 the Professor of Anthropology at the University of Sydney, AE Elkin, published a small pamphlet which called for "a positive policy which aims at the welfare and development of the aborigines". To us, Elkin's words seem anodyne.
Black dollars go everywhere but to blacks
21 August 2007 - HUNDREDS of millions of dollars which the Federal Government says it has spent on indigenous affairs have never been spent, have been used to benefit all Australians or have gone towards opposing Aboriginal native title claims.
From park layabout to head of an indigenous telecom
16 August 2007 - Eighteen years ago, Michael McLeod lived in Belmore Park near Central station - and others like it - where he passed the days between dole payments, booze binges and hits.
Give Aborigines hope
15 August 2007 - Australia has the wealth to help its indigenous people, but this is the wrong way to do it, writes Fred Chaney.
Alcohol ban for Australian town
1 August 2007 - BBC UK - Residents feared the town would draw Aborigines seeking alcohol The town of Alice Springs in Australia's Northern Territory has become a dry zone, with drinking banned in all public places.
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
18 July 2007 - Statement as delivered at a press conference at UN Headquarters presented by Les Malezer, Chairperson of the Indigenous Peoples Caucus - I open this statement with the acknowledgement of the First Peoples of this region and, as such pay our respects to them, their ancestors and their lands and territories.
Government approach to Indigenous affairs seriously flawed
14 June 2007 - HREOC - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma has called on the federal Government to address serious flaws in their Indigenous affairs programs and services.
ANU Reconciliation lecture
4 June 2007 - Respect for human rights, equality and justice must be at the heart of reconciliation. When the British settled Australia, they used their laws to dispossess and oppress the indigenous people of this country.
Crying for the place we could become
2 June 2007 - I'VE always believed in the power of music as a potent catalyst for socialchange. I believed it when I first heard Bart Willoughby's voice out front of No Fixed Address in 1981 proudly proclaiming We Have Survived. I believed itwhen Shane Howard's band Goanna made the first non-indigenous musical statement about land rights with Solid Rock.
Third Report on Indigenous Disadvantage
1 June 2007 - Media Release - The third in the series of reports Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage: Key Indicators has been released.

Black and White together, we shall overcome, some day
29 May 2007 - It is a very great honour to be here tonight, in Reconciliation week, to mark with you the 40th Anniversary of the 1967 Referendum.

Indigenous people working on country to be recognised
28 May 2007 - HREOC Media Release - A new national program creating environmental jobs for Indigenous people is a welcome move by the federal Government, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma said today.
10th anniversary is ‘bittersweet’
25 May 2007 - HREOC Media Release - The 1997 Bringing them home report has reunited many Indigenous peoples with their families and created a groundswell of compassion and support but the 10th anniversary of the report is a bittersweet one, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma said today.
Where budget promises remain a dream
13 May 2007 - TREASURER Peter Costello's announcement — that, for the first time, remote-community Aborigines will be offered title to their own homes under a $700 million indigenous housing package — seems beyond the dreams of the families of Yarrabah.
Urban outcasts
8 May 2007 - In the past six months the federal and state governments have clearly demonstrated complicity in introducing discriminatory policies which have caused, and will continue to cause, anguish for members of Indigenous communities.
Indigenous spending to benefit some, but still gaps galore
9 May 2007 - HREOC - Despite some welcome initiatives in relation to education and employment, the Federal Budget has missed the opportunity to close the gap in Indigenous health, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma said today.
Class Action
3 May 2007 - A fortnight ago, the remote Aboriginal community of Wadeye lodged a landmark case in the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission alleging that for 30 years, the Northern Territory and federal governments have deliberately discriminated against the community by grossly underfunding their local school.
Outlaw Nation: The Lucky Country is No Longer So Lucky
30 April 2007 - Once upon a time, it was called the "Lucky Country." Touted as an international model of social tolerance and environmental concern, Australia and Australians were looked upon by the rest of the world with more than a tinge of envy.
Survivor Howard in battle for his political career
20 April 2007 - The Independent (UK) - An uncanny ability to tap into the hopes and fears of middle Australia has seen John Howard retain power for 11 years and become his country's second longest-serving prime minister.
In memory of reconciliation
31 March 2007 - Not so very long ago Yothu Yindi's Treaty seemed the biggest Australian hit since Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport. Perhaps you dimly remember a time when "reconciliation" was in the political vocabulary and when Cathy Freeman did her lap of honour with the Aboriginal flag? It was a time of some optimism for Australia's future, based on an acknowledgment of the past.
Bridging a divide
28 March 2007 - What is now known as known as Sydney Harbour has always been a focal point for Aboriginal tribes, especially the Gadigal (Cadigal) and the Cammeragail peoples.
Australia, Rathbone not spared as Lekota rages against post-1994 'racists'
15 February 2007 - Cape Times (Edition 2) - South Africans who emigrated post-1994, were more motivated by racist fears of black rule than concerns about crime, according to Defence Minister Mosiuoa Lekota.
Community discusses indigenous rights decleration
3 February 2007 - One-hundred people gathered at Brisbane’s Riverside Centre on January 27 to discuss Indigenous self-determination and the United Nation’s draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which is expected to be ratified this year.
Young Aussie bewails Aboriginal plight
25 January 2007 - Young Australian of the Year Tania Major says many indigenous people are seeing nothing of the success of modern-day Australia, just desperation.
Cruelty and xenophobia stir and shame the lucky country
19 January 2007 - (The Guardian UK) - The social regression and flag-waving promoted by Australia's neocon prime minister may come unstuck in Guantánamo
Black welfare report ignored
18 January 2007 - A CONFIDENTIAL report warning of the devastation of Aboriginal people through violence, alcoholism, disease and hopelessness was shelved ahead of the Queensland state election as Premier Peter Beattie moved to abolish the agency charged with redressing the problems facing the indigenous community.
1901-2007 They Are Still Dancing on Our Peoples Graves
13 January 2007 - (Indymedia.org.uk) - The 1st January 2007 marks the 106th “Birthday” of Australian Federation 1901. In the same year, Sir Edmund Barton endorsed the commonwealth government’s participation in the legislation of an archaic, barbaric act of genocide.
Israel to train Australian educators
9 January 2007 - (Jerusalem Post) - A group of Australian educators landed in Israel on Monday to study firsthand the Israeli experience with educating disadvantaged populations, hoping to apply the knowledge in their efforts to improve education for Australia's Aboriginal population.
Maklin vows to end Aboriginal poverty
14 December 2006 - Ideology is dead in Aboriginal affairs and Labor will design policy that "makes poverty history" for all families, black and white, said Opposition indigenous affairs spokeswoman Jenny Macklin yesterday.
White Australia policy continues. Dodson
3 December 2006 - Aboriginal leader Pat Dodson has fired a salvo at the Federal Government, accusing it of a "virulent strain of assimilation" aimed at continuing the goals of a white Australia policy.
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
29 November 2006 - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma today expressed his disappointment at the decision of the United Nations General Assembly to delay consideration of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples for up to 12 months.
Utopia – a place where Aborigines live long and prosper
13 November 2006 - (The Times UK) - Hidden off a long, lonely dirt road in the centre of Australia, the scattered Aboriginal settlements of weathered iron shanties, upturned cars and sullen dogs might be expected to fit the usual description: degradation, disease, filth.
UN seminar to discuss treaty rights in Hobbema
9 November 2006 - Gateway (Canada) - The Experts will converge on Hobbema next week to discuss processes for making treaties with indigenous peoples, in the first United Nations seminar of its kind held outside of a UN venue.
Swoop on township part of a 'vendetta'
8 November 2006 - THE Howard Government was accused of running a "vendetta" against the Aboriginal community of Mutitjulu yesterday after police swooped on the troubled township in the shadow of Uluru.
Aborigines 'shut out' by neglect
3 November 2006 - Australia's failure to solve the problems of "dysfunctional and disintegrating" Aboriginal communities is diminishing the whole nation, but most people don't want to know about it, says Treasury secretary Ken Henry.
Noel Pearson: A peculiar path that leads astray
21 October 2006 - DURING the past decade we have been told that some myths pertaining to the Aboriginal people of Australia have been debunked. The myth of frontier massacres is said to have been debunked by Keith Windschuttle. The myth of the stolen generations is said to have been debunked by Quadrant magazine. The myth of the noble savage is said to have been debunked by Roger Sandall. The myth of terra nullius is said to have been debunked by Michael Connor.
Pope Urges Australia to Aid Aborigines
8 October 2006 -The Guardian (UK) - Pope Benedict XVI has called on Australians to address the social divisions that have left hundreds of thousands of Aborigines living in dire poverty.
The great St Vincent's break-in
31 July 2006 - It was a big day at St Vincent's Redfern yesterday, but Father Gerry Prindiville sat grim-faced through the celebrations.
Aboriginal jackaroos invited back to the farm
24 August 2006 - The Telegragh (UK) - Four decades after Aboriginal cowboys quit in disgust at low pay and dreadful conditions, a campaign has been launched to lure them back to the land.
Respecting and Valuing Indigenous Rights
9 August 2006 - Address at Human Rights Commission Symposia on Indigenous Rights to mark the International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples, August 9, 2006, by Joris de Bres, Race Relations Commissioner (Wellington) and Rosslyn Noonan, Chief Commissioner (Auckland).
Making indigenous poverty history in Australia
8 August 2006 - (Ekklesia UK) - The worldwide campaign to 'Make Poverty History' rightly draws vital attention to the poorest of the world's poor, which includes the majority of indigenous peoples.
Government morally irresponsible: retiring church head
7 July 2006 -The Australian Government has sacrificed millions of people on the altar of the market, preferred to help the rich over the poor, and has made human rights negotiable, outgoing Uniting Church president Dean Drayton said in his farewell speech yesterday.
Making Indigenous Poverty History
27 July 2006 -People with names like Mabo and Mundine don’t take backward steps. Graham Ring discovers a force to be reckoned with.
Australian PM finally wins black support
25 July 2005 - (UK Reuters) - Prime Minister John Howard has been demonised by Aborigines for a decade, but on Tuesday one of Australia's most influential black leaders said Howard could be the person that ends generations of black squalor.
Scientist gives his award to Aboriginal
24 July 2006 - (The Journal of Turkish Weekly) - Anger about government inflexibility and inaction on Aboriginal training programs has prompted a leading ANU scientist to donate a $30,000 national environmental prize to pay for an indigenous trainee fire ecologist at Jervis Bay to continue his education.
The gentle activist
14 July 2006 - (Sur Spain) - Faith Bandler (born 1918) showed the many qualities that blossomed in her later life. The abuse and exclusion she experienced as an indigenous schoolgirl in white Australia left a lasting impression on her, but she still exudes a serenity that belies her extraordinary energy for the cause of justice for indigenous peoples, for women, and for the peace movement.
Aborigines fear 'new paternalism'
3 July 2006 -The author of a landmark report into violence in Aboriginal communities has attacked the Howard Government for attempting to introduce "antiquated solutions" that are proven failures.
The land of the dead
24 June 2006 - (Guardian UK) - How did two tiny islands off Australia's north coast come to have the highest suicide rate in the world?
Summit discusses Aboriginal abuse
26 June 2006 - (BBC UK) - Politicians from Australia's state and federal governments are meeting in Canberra to discuss ways to combat child abuse in Aboriginal communities.
Australian Government blamed for abuse of women,children
6 June 2006 - (FinalCall.com News) - Revelations of horrific sexual abuse and violence suffered by women and children in Australia’s Aboriginal communities has surfaced during the fifth session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII) held in New York.
The 25 reports on Aboriginal Australia that line government bookshelves
31 May 2006 - As more allegations about the state of Aboriginal living conditions have emerged in recent weeks, we're constantly told about the numerous reports over recent decades highlighting the state of Aboriginal Australia that have been ignored or filed away. How many reports, we wondered, and what did they say? Here's a Crikey list of at least 25 government or UN reports on the subject:
Problems in remote community of Imanpa
29 May 2006 - Ten days ago we saw the worst that can happen when things go wrong in remote Aboriginal communities, when the rest of Australia became aware of the anarchy and violence at Wadeye.
Indigenous people 'worst-off world over'
26 May 2006 - (BBC UK) - The health of indigenous people worldwide is much worse than that of other communities, even the poorest communities in the countries where they live. This is among the findings of a major investigation launched by the medical journal The Lancet into indigenous communities.
Officials discuss Aborigine abuse
25 May 2006 - (BBC UK) - Aborigine communities are beset by many problems.
Representatives from Australia's state and federal governments are meeting to discuss ways to tackle violence and abuse in Aboriginal communities.
Action plan over Aborigine strife
23 May 2006 - (BBC UK) - Aborigine communities are beset by many problems. Officials in the largest Aboriginal community in Australia's Northern Territory are considering plans to send residents to camps to escape violence.
Pope calls on Govt to apologise to Aboriginal Australians
22 May 2006 - The Pope has called on the Australian Government to ask forgiveness from Indigenous Australians.
International aid agency to work with Indigenous kids in Perth'Chicken coop' village fights to shed despair
18 May 2006 - The international aid agency, Save the Children, known for its work in the third world, is now planning to work with Aboriginal children in metropolitan Perth before the end of the year.
A troubled town in Oz called Alice Springs
9 May 2006 - Independent Online (South Africa) - Sydney - Most visitors come away from the archetypal Australian Outback town of Alice Springs with no memories of what happens after dark.
Australian shame as Aborigine left to die
26 March 2006 - The Observer (UK) - Australia's attitude to its indigenous people is back under the microscope after an Aboriginal woman who had a stroke was left for dead at a bus stop and ignored by hundreds of passers-by for five hours.
Queen urges Australia to do more for Aborigines
15 March 2006 - (Reuters UK) - The Queen praised Australia for its international leadership on Tuesday, but urged the country to do more at home to alleviate poverty and to help disadvantaged Aborigines.
A Treaty Between Our Nations?
11 July 2000 - Inaugural professorial lecture by Professor Marcia Langton, Inaugural Chair of Australian Indigenous Studies, University of Melbourne - At the end of the Twentieth Century, the public culture of Australia remains, as it has for the previous two centuries, riven by disputes as to the status of indigenous people in Australian civil society. I argue here that it remains the case that the Australia polity is devoid of a clear and just status for indigenous people within its ambit. Further, this continuing dispute is a loose hanging thread in the web of our civil society.
return to reconciliation and social justice: eniar.org