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1.

Aboriginals


Aboriginals have lived in Australia for over 40 000 years. ... Authorities had the power to separate families and condemn aboriginals to living in reserves separating them from their land, their people and their culture. ... Because they believed that aboriginals, like children, could not take ca...

2.

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...

3.

Taiwanese aboriginals working rights


... This has caused several problems for the Taiwanese aboriginal people, such as working rights. Working rights is a serious problem for the aboriginal people because they would have to change their way of life and some of their beliefs in order to survive in the modern world of Taiwan Through...

4.

Explain in detail the misery and degradation that Aborigines have experienced since the arrival of white


White man arrived on Australian shores in 1788, and ever since have caused the Aboriginals nothing but heartache and grief. They have also suffered from degradation, deaths of friends and family, the Stolen Generation and also the loss of traditional land, custom and beliefs. All these have been a...

5.

Question How do similarities between Christian and Aboriginal spiritualities help with the process of reconciliation


What is reconciliation? Reconciliation is the process of Aboriginals and Australians coming together to share the pain of the Aboriginal past and heritage and to seek a better future for all Australians. ... This empathy is brought about by understanding the physical and psychological pain but we ...

6.

Aborginal History


Aboriginal history, after European settlement in Australia, is a rather dark, shameful area in our country’s history. Aboriginals were treated like criminals, and the white people of this country considered themselves far superior to and ‘coloured’ person, such as the natives to this land, Aborigina...

7.

australian assimilation


From 1940 to the 1960s the Australian Government adopted the policy of assimilation. This policy aimed to assimilate migrants that were fair-skinned and educated into the Australian lifestyle, eventually hoping the migrants previous traditions would disappear. ... The experiences of Australian Abor...

8.

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...

9.

morals and its links to law


... Some morals are not laws but is known as common courtesy, like saying please and thank you when receiving or asking for something, there are also private morals that are not reinforced by the law like respecting gays and lesbians like normal beings, like letting the gay or lesbians be married ...

10.

Bruce Chatwin and the Aboriginals of Australia


I have always found Australia very interesting, although I cannot name any particular reason why. ... However, after reading Bruce Chatwin’s book The Songlines I noticed that I have ignored one important issue about Australia entirely. ... However, the dark skinned Aboriginal is an extremely impor...

11.

Fur Trade


Canadian Aboriginals and the Fur Trade “It is irrefutable that contact and the fur trade set into motion processes that led to the loss of autonomy of the Indian societies. ... Companies were formed and monopoly charters granted by the French crown in an attempt to exclude foreigners from ...

12.

Introduction to Law


Introduction to Law What is law? ... As defined by Encarta Encyclopaedia, law is a body of official rules and regulations, generally found in constitutions, legislation, judicial opinions, and the like, that is used to govern a society and to control the behaviour of its members. The...

13.

reconciliation


Reconciliation The question of Reconciliation remains an issue for Australians to resolve, to start healing the wounds Australia’s indigenous population, but there are no quick or easy answers. Does it require a treaty? Does it require a simple saying of the word “sorry”? Up until the 1960’s, lighte...

14.

WAS AUSTRALIA IN 1901 A COUNTRY WHERE ALL PEOPLE WERE EQUAL


In 1901, Australia was not a country where all people were equal. The majority of Australia’s population was white and spoke English. ... Most women did not have the right to vote and the Immigration Restriction Act prevented non-European people from coming to Australia. Aboriginal people were t...

15.

Migration. Ethnicity and Australian Aboriginality


Migration, Ethnicity and Australian Aboriginality a. Symbolic Interactionism Perspective applied to an Issue in Chapter 12 When you think of the Aborigines you think of the people that were first to live in this country and their amazing survival technique, although you need to remember that, that w...

16.

English Language sources of law


Sources of Law The "law" that applies to a particular situation is rarely found in just one place. The following describes how the various sources of law interact and notes where you can find the actual law. Federal law — These are the laws passed by Congress. Landlord tenant issues are generally ...

17.

aboriginals of Canada and the fur trade


It is undisputable that the discovery of the prosperity of the Canadian fur trade took away the rights and land of the aboriginal people of Canada changing them forever. Prior to the 16th century what is now Canada was entirely in the possession of its aboriginal peoples and the arrival of Europeans...

18.

Historical Events that Shaped the Australian Health Care System


Today Australia provides it’s population with a health care system which is amoung the best in the world. So how is it that this system fails to distribute health care equally between the Indigenous and Non-Indigenous population (Baum, 2002, p227)? ... In order to understand the current condi...

19.

law


... There are three types of laws, which are: tort law, criminal law and contract law. Tort law is a civil wrong, criminal law is a public wrong and contract law is a wrong against a contract, written or oral. Tort law is the primary source for the authority of private security officers and the li...

20.

Law


... In Australia, there is still a need to maintain the use of the doctrine because it provides a level of cohesion and consistency in the law and society4 . ... Precedent also underpins the role and public expectations of judges as to their impartiality and strict adher...


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