Discusses feminism, maternalism, and the campaign for Aboriginal citizenship in New South Wales, Australia in the late 1930s. Details on the relationship between Pearl Gibbs, a leader of the Aborigines Progressive Association, and a white activist, Joan Strack; Complexity of Strack's position as an activist for Aboriginal citizenship
After years of displacement and dispossession perpetrated by European colonizers the Australian Abor...
The story of the Aboriginal women who participated in Australias nursing history remains largely unt...
Between 1944 and 1963, three young white women set out to conduct anthropological field work in Abor...
he Union of Australian Women (UAW) was a national organisation for left-wing women between World War...
This paper takes the issue of the removal of Aboriginal children, and the broader white anxiety over...
The relations between Aboriginal people and their colonisers in Australia have always been highly ch...
Joan Strack could speak from personal experience. No less than three Aboriginal apprentices had work...
This thesis interrogates the specific construction of the maternal citizen in Australia. While the p...
The arrival of the colonists, the invasion of Aboriginal lands and the subsequent colonization of Au...
The home has a historical significance as a space for white women's intervention in and negotiation ...
From 1950, increasing numbers of Aboriginal and Māori women became nationally or internationally ren...
The story of the Aboriginal women who participated in Australias nursing history remains largely unt...
The Aboriginal movement has been one of the most outspoken Australian social movements for nearly a ...
In Striving Towards a Common Language I outline an innovative methodology which consists of three st...
In this thesis I study Indigenous activism in the inner-Sydney suburb of Redfern in the 1970s. I exp...
After years of displacement and dispossession perpetrated by European colonizers the Australian Abor...
The story of the Aboriginal women who participated in Australias nursing history remains largely unt...
Between 1944 and 1963, three young white women set out to conduct anthropological field work in Abor...
he Union of Australian Women (UAW) was a national organisation for left-wing women between World War...
This paper takes the issue of the removal of Aboriginal children, and the broader white anxiety over...
The relations between Aboriginal people and their colonisers in Australia have always been highly ch...
Joan Strack could speak from personal experience. No less than three Aboriginal apprentices had work...
This thesis interrogates the specific construction of the maternal citizen in Australia. While the p...
The arrival of the colonists, the invasion of Aboriginal lands and the subsequent colonization of Au...
The home has a historical significance as a space for white women's intervention in and negotiation ...
From 1950, increasing numbers of Aboriginal and Māori women became nationally or internationally ren...
The story of the Aboriginal women who participated in Australias nursing history remains largely unt...
The Aboriginal movement has been one of the most outspoken Australian social movements for nearly a ...
In Striving Towards a Common Language I outline an innovative methodology which consists of three st...
In this thesis I study Indigenous activism in the inner-Sydney suburb of Redfern in the 1970s. I exp...
After years of displacement and dispossession perpetrated by European colonizers the Australian Abor...
The story of the Aboriginal women who participated in Australias nursing history remains largely unt...
Between 1944 and 1963, three young white women set out to conduct anthropological field work in Abor...