The relationship between nationally unified calls for immigration restriction in the White Australia period and the emergence of an imagined national identity has been the focus of much valuable historical research. Through the method of content analysis, a geographical lens was used to re-examine the Commonwealth Parliamentary debates regarding the development of the Immigration Restriction Act 1901 and to provide empirical support to the existing scholarship. The content analysis provided statistical evidence for the ways in which immigration restriction in this specific historical context was legitimised and rationalised by social constructions that reproduced racisms. Constructions of the Self and the Other were fundamental in defining ...
Australia's modern history has been defined by the country's experience of migration and its associa...
© 1982 Robert J. LewisIn 1901 the Commonwealth Parliament passed the first national law restricting ...
In the past decade arguments concerning who can claim belonging in Australia, and fears surrounding ...
This article builds on recent efforts to cast the understanding of ethnic and racialized tensions le...
This research explores experiential narratives of national belonging and dislocation. It focuses on ...
This paper offers the historical context and a conceptual framework to understand how race has shape...
Although multiculturalism replaced the White Australia Policy in the 1970s, the Australian nationcon...
[Extract] As with many Western nations with high numbers of immigrant intake, the Australian public ...
This thesis involves an examination of a range of historical discourses and how they have contribute...
Australia’s immigration policies have remained an unsettled area subject to political disputation si...
This paper deals with Australian immigration policy, its evolution and current situation. It analyse...
Due to the way racism is now hidden behind discourses of ‘cultural difference’ rather than relying o...
Over time, the Immigration Restriction Act of 1901 and its later amendments were remarkably successf...
The \u27White Australia\u27 policy is associated with the Immigration Restriction Act in 1901 and th...
The basis for the construction of Australian identity and citizenship in the period 1919-1969 was a ...
Australia's modern history has been defined by the country's experience of migration and its associa...
© 1982 Robert J. LewisIn 1901 the Commonwealth Parliament passed the first national law restricting ...
In the past decade arguments concerning who can claim belonging in Australia, and fears surrounding ...
This article builds on recent efforts to cast the understanding of ethnic and racialized tensions le...
This research explores experiential narratives of national belonging and dislocation. It focuses on ...
This paper offers the historical context and a conceptual framework to understand how race has shape...
Although multiculturalism replaced the White Australia Policy in the 1970s, the Australian nationcon...
[Extract] As with many Western nations with high numbers of immigrant intake, the Australian public ...
This thesis involves an examination of a range of historical discourses and how they have contribute...
Australia’s immigration policies have remained an unsettled area subject to political disputation si...
This paper deals with Australian immigration policy, its evolution and current situation. It analyse...
Due to the way racism is now hidden behind discourses of ‘cultural difference’ rather than relying o...
Over time, the Immigration Restriction Act of 1901 and its later amendments were remarkably successf...
The \u27White Australia\u27 policy is associated with the Immigration Restriction Act in 1901 and th...
The basis for the construction of Australian identity and citizenship in the period 1919-1969 was a ...
Australia's modern history has been defined by the country's experience of migration and its associa...
© 1982 Robert J. LewisIn 1901 the Commonwealth Parliament passed the first national law restricting ...
In the past decade arguments concerning who can claim belonging in Australia, and fears surrounding ...