Social Justice In Australia Essay

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The article mentions about the struggle for social justice by the indigenous Australians that have constituted challenges to the Australian state, including its welfare and community development practices. The Mabo judgement and resultant Native Title Act 1993 (Stephenson and Ratnapala, 1993; Goot and Rowse, 1994; Brennan, 1995) can be read as marking the success of indigenous groups in obtaining special status as a people within Australian constitutional and administrative systems. This paper briefly portrays the historical emergence of a prejudiced welfare state in Australia as well as more recent histories of community development within Aboriginal people. The early attempts to “civilise and Christianise” were unsuccessful as the indigenous …show more content…

It pity that many communities still remember the hardship of injustice towards their families. It is good to know that Efforts were made from the government to eradicate “the native problem” by either concentrate and segregate them from the wider society or, when that failed, to compel them to disperse and become 'assimilated' into non-Aboriginal settings. Both these strategies enlarged bureaucracy and control of people presumed to be incapable to assume responsibility as full citizens. The paper also mentions about struggles of Australian Indigenous with their effort to maintain their cultures. In this context the aboriginal community development can be well explained in terms of a denial between community autonomy, and piercing resulting from the requirements of financial accountability to a non-Aboriginal state. It has been said that for the last three decades the success in cultural and political areas has changes the Australian national consciousness. Aborigines have gained official recognition as a people and support for self-management and self-determination

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