On 11th December, 2005, a violent mob of about five thousand young 'white' Australians gathered on the beach at Cronulla, New South Wales. Waving Australian flags, singing Waltzing Matilda and Australia's national anthem and chanting anti Muslim/immigration slogans, the mob verbally abused and physically assaulted anyone of 'Midle Eastern appearance'. Some days later, revenge followed: cars full of 'Middle Eastern appearing' men and youth sought revenge by smashing cars and shopfronts in Cronulla and by beating local residents (see: Ingliss: 2006, Abraham: 2005). In an attempt to prevent further violence and an escalation of the events, an exceptionally large number of police were deployed on the beach in the months ahead.\ud \ud The incide...
The Cronulla riots signalled the existence of a banal everyday form of racism operating in Australia...
This research explores the role of opinion-based groups in understanding responses to racist violenc...
The hate crime legislation is introduced in the UK and US to send a strong message to the community ...
The article focuses on the violent riots made by Australians in Cronulla, New South Wales. On Decemb...
© James Jupp, John Nieuwenhuysen, Emma Dawson 2007. In Sydney on Sunday, 11 December 2005, riots on ...
In December 2005, in the predominantly Anglo surf community of Cronulla, in Sydney’s Sutherland Shir...
This article reconsiders the 2005 Cronulla riots after ten years. We begin by examining three exampl...
In December 2005 youth unrest erupted in the southern Sydney suburb of Cronulla Beach, with an appar...
The outbreak of mass racist violence against young men of ‘Middle Eastern appearance’ on Cronulla be...
On the Friday before the Cronulla riots, Sydney's daily tabloid newspaper the Daily Telegraph (2005:...
On 11 December 2005 at Sydney’s Cronulla Beach about 5000 Australians, mostly young men from Sutherl...
Since 11 September 2001, Australia’s race relations have been an issue of significant cultural...
Ten years after the Cronulla riots, the violence, racism and branding of young bodies with signs and...
Henry Reynolds, leading historian of indigenous dispossession, John Hirst, Australia’s leading polit...
Young Australian Muslims living in Sydney have been influenced by the Cronulla riot. Online surveys ...
The Cronulla riots signalled the existence of a banal everyday form of racism operating in Australia...
This research explores the role of opinion-based groups in understanding responses to racist violenc...
The hate crime legislation is introduced in the UK and US to send a strong message to the community ...
The article focuses on the violent riots made by Australians in Cronulla, New South Wales. On Decemb...
© James Jupp, John Nieuwenhuysen, Emma Dawson 2007. In Sydney on Sunday, 11 December 2005, riots on ...
In December 2005, in the predominantly Anglo surf community of Cronulla, in Sydney’s Sutherland Shir...
This article reconsiders the 2005 Cronulla riots after ten years. We begin by examining three exampl...
In December 2005 youth unrest erupted in the southern Sydney suburb of Cronulla Beach, with an appar...
The outbreak of mass racist violence against young men of ‘Middle Eastern appearance’ on Cronulla be...
On the Friday before the Cronulla riots, Sydney's daily tabloid newspaper the Daily Telegraph (2005:...
On 11 December 2005 at Sydney’s Cronulla Beach about 5000 Australians, mostly young men from Sutherl...
Since 11 September 2001, Australia’s race relations have been an issue of significant cultural...
Ten years after the Cronulla riots, the violence, racism and branding of young bodies with signs and...
Henry Reynolds, leading historian of indigenous dispossession, John Hirst, Australia’s leading polit...
Young Australian Muslims living in Sydney have been influenced by the Cronulla riot. Online surveys ...
The Cronulla riots signalled the existence of a banal everyday form of racism operating in Australia...
This research explores the role of opinion-based groups in understanding responses to racist violenc...
The hate crime legislation is introduced in the UK and US to send a strong message to the community ...