有争议的命运:南澳大利亚两次世界大战期间的原住民倡导

IF 0.4 Q1 HISTORY Aboriginal History Pub Date : 2018-12-20 DOI:10.22459/AH.42.2018.04
R. Foster
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在两次世界大战期间,随着保护政策在澳大利亚各地站稳脚跟,原住民政治组织和倡导团体开始抗议并要求权利和自由。在土著领导的组织中,较为知名的有弗雷德·梅纳德(Fred Maynard)在新南威尔士州的澳大利亚土著进步协会(AAPA)和威廉·库珀(William Cooper)在维多利亚州的澳大利亚原住民联盟。这些地区组织主要与地方问题作斗争,如“根据该法案”的生活不公正,或争取更好地获得土地和资源。然而,他们也涉及国家问题,例如威廉·库珀的《国王请愿书》,该请愿书在全国各地流传,并呼吁在联邦议会中为原住民保留席位。1然而,更具影响力的是白人倡导团体。成立于1911年的土著民族保护协会从国家角度出发,寻求联邦政府对土著事务的更大控制。2成立于20世纪20年代中期的国家传教士委员会,是许多主流教会的平台。3更多的当地团体,如西澳大利亚的澳大利亚原住民改善协会和墨尔本的维多利亚原住民团体。正如阿特伍德所观察到的,这些组织都是高度家长式的组织,他们认为自己是“为‘原住民’工作,而不是通过他们”-
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Contested destinies: Aboriginal advocacy in South Australia’s interwar years
In the interwar years, as protection policies took hold across Australia, Aboriginal political organisations and advocacy groups emerged to protest and demand rights and freedoms. Among the better known of the Indigenous-led organisations were Fred Maynard’s Australian Aboriginal Progressive Association (AAPA) in New South Wales, and William Cooper’s Australian Aborigines’ League in Victoria. These were regional organisations fighting mostly local issues such as the injustices of life ‘under the Act’, or for better access to land and resources. However, they also engaged national issues, as exemplified by William Cooper’s Petition to the King, which was circulated throughout the country and called for reserved seats for Aboriginal people in federal parliament.1 More influential, however, were the white-run advocacy groups. The Association for the Protection of Native Races, established in 1911, had a national perspective and, among other things, sought greater federal control of Aboriginal affairs.2 The National Missionary Council, established in the mid-1920s, was a platform for many of the mainstream churches.3 More locally were groups such as the Australian Aborigines Ameliorative Association in Western Australia and the Victorian Aboriginal Group in Melbourne. As Attwood has observed, these were highly paternalistic organisations, who saw themselves working ‘for’ Aboriginal people ‘rather than through them’.4 This was certainly true of South Australia’s long-
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