The Aboriginal People, Parliament and
The Aboriginal People, Parliament and "Protection" in New South Wales 1856-1916
by Anna Doukakis
Softcover 216 pgs.
Published: August 2006
ISBN: 1-86287-606-1
ISBN-13: 978-186287-606-4
$38.00

The Aboriginal People, Parliament and "Protection" in New South Wales 1856-1916

Doukakis draws upon 60 years of New South Wales parliamentary debates to investigate early attitudes towards Aborigines and the policies and legislation which affected them. She shows that the men elected to the first democratic Parliament in NSW in 1856, and their successors up to 1916, held wide-ranging views on Aborigines. Some even actively supported their inclusion in colonial society. Their debates ranged from the right to vote to the provision of blankets, from wages to the settlement of Aborigines.

This book shows that no one group of politicians dominated policy or debate. This encouraged an openness which enabled Aboriginal participation in the political process. Some politicians spoke in Parliament on behalf of Aborigines who had approached them with their grievances. This openness ended in 1916, shortly after the NSW Parliament passed legislation empowering the State to remove Aboriginal children from their parents.

By shedding light on the men who made up the NSW Parliament, The Aboriginal People, Parliament and "Protection" in NSW 1856-1916 provides an unusually nuanced picture of parliamentarians and, through them, colonial society.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction

CHAPTER 1: Overview
CHAPTER 2: Indifference
CHAPTER 3: Turning Point
CHAPTER 4: Protection
CHAPTER 5: Marking Time
CHAPTER 6: Protection Deepens: Legislation
CHAPTER 7: Race
CHAPTER 8: Beyond Race
CHAPTER 9: Epilogue

Postscript
APPENDIX 1: Politicians
APPENDIX 2: Locations
Bibliography
Index

"I see no reason why we should shut them out from the franchise [of voting]. We have despoiled them of their land, and have robbed them of everything but their euphonious names, and I am sure there is not one person in our midst who would deliberately prevent them from exercising the franchise in their native land. I, for one, will not be a party to any proposal of that kind."

- Edward William O’Sullivan, Parliamentary Debates, 12 August 1891

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