Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/140390
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Type: Book chapter
Title: Protection Regimes
Author: Nettelbeck, A.
Citation: Cambridge Legal History of Australia, 2022 / Cane, P., Ford, L., McMillan, M. (ed./s), Ch.20, pp.482-501
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Issue Date: 2022
ISBN: 1108633943
9781108633949
Editor: Cane, P.
Ford, L.
McMillan, M.
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Amanda Nettlebeck
Abstract: The term ‘protection’ in Australia is closely associated with the practices and institutions of assimilation imposed upon Indigenous people through much of the twentieth century. These practices and institutions were backed by laws that granted state governments wide-ranging powers of control over Indigenous lives, purportedly for their own good. The multi-generational impacts of assimilative policies continue to resonate for Indigenous communities today. Yet apart from the legal regime of assimilation that defined Indigenous policy through the mid-twentieth century, protection has a longer and more complex history in Australia, as it does globally. This chapter traces Australia’s history of protection, from its nineteenth-century origins as a program designed to build Indigenous people’s status as British subjects, to its twentieth-century expressions as a legally-empowered system of state guardianship. While the history of protection is one of legal authority, it is also a history of Indigenous political action.
Keywords: protection legislation; Protector of Aborigines; Stolen Generations; stolen wages; state surveillance; assimilation; residual welfare; civil rights; Indigenous petitions
Rights: © 2022 Cambridge University Press
DOI: 10.1017/9781108633949.020
Grant ID: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP140103049
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108633949.020
Appears in Collections:Humanities publications

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