| 1. | Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission ATSIC
Ever since 1788, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) people have been greatly disadvantaged and deprived of their rights. ...
As a result of this need for justice, The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), was established. ATSIC, which is Australia’s leading de...
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| 2. | Research Focus Group Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders ... The white settlers saw aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander groups as barbaric and primitive natives. In spite of the fact that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander groups had systems of customs and law, the British neither recognised Aboriginal Customary Law nor acknowledged that the indige...
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| 3. | Removal Of Aboriginal Children The Removal of Aboriginal Children.
Within this essay issues including removal by force and coercion + strategies aboriginal people used to prevent their children from being taken by authorities, why aboriginal children were removed from their families, what the children did once they were remove...
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| 4. | aboriginals and the law ... aboriginal ownership was not recognised until after many years of struggle, aboriginal law and land rights were recognised in australian law in the Aboriginal Land Rights (Nothern Territory) Act 1976. this aboriginal Land Rights Act is a bench mark law: it was the first attempt by the austr...
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| 5. | Aborigines The aborigines are the original inhabitants of this country we call Australia, but sadly they are a minority in it. And to prove this, let us consider their health status. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders people have a poorer health profile than any other Australian, or migrant group, for that...
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| 6. | Catering for the needs of the Aboriginal child in primary settings Utilising current appropriate resources which ...
In this essay I would like to examine the situation of Aboriginal children in urban schools, the reasons why these children are not achieving in a mainstream education system, and how to avoid the ‘discrimination’ and ‘alienation’ that occurs in urban classrooms. In doing so I explore the in...
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| 7. | George Strait George Strait
Country music started with a fiddle and a voice, this was known as old time music at the time. ... George Strait fits into this style of music, because he wanted to keep the tradition of real country and not be sold out to the mere middle of pop music. ...
Like previous pure count...
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| 8. | Aboriginal deaths in custody The Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody was an important step in not just the quest to stem the flow of indigenous deaths in custody, but in other indigenous issues centered on reconciliation. As suspected, in the 99 deaths in custody that were thoroughly investigated, the aboriginali...
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| 9. | Aboriginal arrival in Australia There have been many theories concerning the arrival of the Aboriginal People to Australia. These include Aboriginal beliefs and archaeological discoveries.
The Aboriginal people have a belief of their own, which describes how they arrived in Australia. ...
None of these theories however, either...
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| 10. | stolen generation Oral
‘The Stolen Generation’. Between 1910 and 1970, up to 100,000 Aborigional children were stolen from loving peaceful families. ... Sorry again, 25,000 stolen children. ... That is simply because the stolen generation did not exist. ... An in depth study was carried out around 1998 in which...
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| 11. | What challenges have aboriginal people faced in the 20th century Throughout the 20th century, in Australia, the Aboriginal population has had to deal with many challenges. ... Some major challenges they have had to face are the stolen generation which split up many families, reconciliation which invlolves the rest of the population to have a better understanding...
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| 12. | aboriginal generation stolen The play stolen is based on 5 aboriginal children removed from their families in the 1960s under official Australian government policy. ... Shirley was a stolen child and became a mother. ... Sandy was suppressed from telling his stories of the dream time which was part of an aboriginal culture. W...
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| 13. | Just Lather That s All Character Analysis Barber ... ” A key sentence in, Just Lather, That’s All. In this story we are introduced to two characters that are on opposing political sides, the Barber and Captain Torres.
We see through the course of this story that the barber is a very conscientious man. He states this himself,
“Yes, I was secr...
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| 14. | Nutrition of Aboriginal People of Australia Nutrition of Aboriginal People of
Australia
The Aboriginal is traditionally nomadic. ...
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Some of the typical dishes of the aboriginal people were:
Insects: Bogong moth – would arrive seasonally, from November to January, in the mountains of the Eastern Highlands. ... It was a ...
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| 15. | Aboriginal Music Australian Music
Aboriginal Music –
Music is an important Aboriginal life. It is through music, both song and dance, that the Aborigines learn about their relationship to the land – their environment and how to live in it, their culture and customs- and the way their world was created – th...
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| 16. | With reference to at least three Australian plays examine the way that national indentity has been Having decided to examine the way Aboriginal national identity has been constructed within Australian Drama over the last two hundred years since colonisation of this country took place, it was with interest I opened Towards an Australian Drama by Leslie Rees, written in 1953 which contained a chapt...
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| 17. | religion · In 1770 the Australian continent was claimed as British territory by captain James Cook. · Cooks encounter with the Aboriginal peoples can be seen as violent, but the European colonisation of the continent which then followed, can only be described as invasion. · White settlement brought with it t...
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| 18. | Just Lather Thats All Literary Essay Hernando Téllez’, “Just Lather, That’s All”, is written informally and in the first person. ... ” When an animal first enters a room is as if they creep in the room silently, which is exactly how Téllez seems to describe Torres in the beginning of “Just Lather, That’s All”. ... The thinks to himsel...
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| 19. | YEAR 11 ADVANCED ASSESSMENT 3 THE CHANT OF JIMMIE BLACKSMITH ABORIGINAL POETRY PART B: How are issues about Aboriginal/White relationships communicated in ‘The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith’ and two Aboriginal poems of your choice?
Issues concerning Aboriginal and White relationships at the turn of the twentieth century formally arose due to the white European culture dominati...
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| 20. | medicine that walks ... Aboriginal medicines were based upon their beliefs, the healers and medicine men were reassuring and comforting members of the community since they could communicate with these spirits. ... This forcing uncomfortable and untrustworthy situations to arise within the “western world of medici...
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