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Vol. 5 No. 1 (2019): NEW: Emerging scholars in Australian Indigenous Studies
NEW: Emerging scholars in Australian Indigenous Studies
Vol. 5 No. 1 (2019): NEW: Emerging scholars in Australian Indigenous Studies
Published:
2020-03-06
Preface
NEW Preface
Anne Maree Payne, Jennifer Newman
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Articles
Truth telling in Australia's historical narrative
Iva Mencevska
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Who knows best? Paternalism in Aboriginal policy
Emily Jeffes
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Contemporary consequences of the 1967 Referendum
Brooke Ottley
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Can historians tell the truth? The Uluru Statement from the Heart and the quest for a new history
Ansel Wakamatsu
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Re-examining Australia’s hidden genocide: the removal of Aboriginal children in Australia as an act of cultural genocide
Emily Mays
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The evolution of the ancestral voice that always was and always will be
Kerri Simpson
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Truth-telling: a key to liberating Australia from a deliberate silence
Madeleine Wedesweiler
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A powerful history told badly
Nadine Silva
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The case for cultural economic participation: achieving social and political change for Aboriginal peoples through community owned and run businesses
Sophie Hopkins
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The impacts of control, racism, and colonialism on contemporary Aboriginal-police relations
Joshua Green
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The lessons in the 1967 Referendum campaign
Gabrielle Watson
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Wielding the past to voice the future: an exploration of Indigenous Australians’ sustained call to be heard
Joseph Khan
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Blood Money Currency Exchange Terminal
Tooba Anwar
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Native Tongue by Mojo Juju
Paul Murchison
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Reclaiming what was lost in the fire: a review of Jonathan Jones’ "Barrangal Dyara"
Francesca Timar
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White Australia has a Blackie Blackie Brown history
Kezia Aria
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How Wayne Blair’s "The Sapphires" tells a story of collective and individual belonging
Lexy Akillas
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Capturing "The Rabbits"
Sarah Furlan
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A.B. Original’s "Reclaim Australia" is ensuring Australians can no longer say “I just didn’t know” about Aboriginal issues
Sian Brian
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"Sweet Country"'s powerful depiction of racial dynamics and tensions of the 1920s
Casey Clarke
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"Jasper Jones" as a Window into Australia’s Aboriginal history
Lucy Dalziel
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Silent but deadly: a review of "Samson & Delilah"
Rayane Tamer
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Limits in complexity: the contextual boundaries of Peter Carstairs’ "September"
Freya Howard
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Speculating reality: a review of Claire Coleman’s "Terra Nullius"
Samantha Lejeune
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Victoria Park
Nathaniel Sharpley
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The reality of remembrance in Camperdown Memorial Rest Park
Hannah Robinson
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Waraburra Nura
Manning Nolan-Laykoski
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The Australian National Maritime Museum’s view from the ship and view from the shore
Freya Smail
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First Footprints
Erin Buechele
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The Battlefield of Australian History
Rachel Nasr
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The Gweagal Shield
Kathryn Lawn
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Constitutional Recognition: reflecting on the prospect and direction in the 46th Parliament
Ashley Cleavin
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Constitutional Recognition: a vital human need, not a courtesy
Stephanie Roberts
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Constitutional Recognition: within a colonial framework
Diane Songco
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Constitutional Recognition: retiring from the hamster wheel
Grace Hartley
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Constitutional Recognition or treaty?
Carla Sullivan
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