Full Record

Main Title: Civil rights : how indigenous Australians won formal equality / John Chesterman. Book Cover
Author: Chesterman, John, 1967-
Year: 2005.
Collation: xiii, 357 p. : notes, bib., index, pbk ; 20 cm.
Summary: 1. Taking civil rights seriously -- 2. Defending Australia's reputation: ending Commonwealth discrimination -- 3. Civil rights and states' rights -- 4. The limits of 'the Liberal promise' -- 5. Beyond civil rights: non-discrimination and indigenous rights -- 6. The legacy of civil rights.

Draws on government and other archival material from around the country to make a compelling case that Indigenous people, together with non-Indigenous supporters, did effectively agitate for civil rights, and that this activism, in conjunction with international pressure, led to legal reforms. Author from University of Melbourne.
Subject: Civil rights
Political activists and activism
Discrimination
First Nations Australians
First Nations Australians - - Government policy
Australia
ISBN: 0702235148 9780702235146
Notes:
Australians know very little about how Indigenous Australians came to gain the civil rights that other Australians had long taken for granted. One of the key reasons for this is the entrenched belief that civil rights were handed to Indigenous people and not won by them. In this book John Chesterman draws on government and other archival material from around the country to make a compelling case that Indigenous people, together with non-Indigenous supporters, did effectively agitate for civil rights, and that this activism, in conjunction with international pressure, led to legal reforms. Chesterman argues that these struggles have laid important foundations for future dealings between Indigenous people and Australian governments. (Publisher.)
Bibliography: p. [321]-341.
Result Collection Location Shelf No Status Notes
Non-Fiction Stacks 305.801 GOV CHE Available