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Victorian Historical Journal
VICTORIAN HISTORICAL JOURNAL VOLUME 87, NUMBER 2, DECEMBER 2016 ROYAL HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF VICTORIA VICTORIAN HISTORICAL JOURNAL ROYAL HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF VICTORIA The Royal Historical Society of Victoria is a community organisation comprising people from many fields committed to collecting, researching and sharing an understanding of the history of Victoria. The Victorian Historical Journal is a fully refereed journal dedicated to Australian, and especially Victorian, history produced twice yearly by the Publications Committee, Royal Historical Society of Victoria. PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE Jill Barnard Marilyn Bowler Richard Broome (Convenor) Marie Clark Mimi Colligan Don Garden (President, RHSV) Don Gibb David Harris (Editor, Victorian Historical Journal) Kate Prinsley Marian Quartly (Editor, History News) John Rickard Judith Smart (Review Editor) Chips Sowerwine Carole Woods BECOME A MEMBER Membership of the Royal Historical Society of Victoria is open. All those with an interest in history are welcome to join. Subscriptions can be purchased at: Royal Historical Society of Victoria 239 A’Beckett Street Melbourne, Victoria 3000, Australia Telephone: 03 9326 9288 Email: [email protected] www.historyvictoria.org.au Journals are also available for purchase online: www.historyvictoria.org.au/publications/victorian-historical-journal VICTORIAN HISTORICAL JOURNAL ISSUE 286 VOLUME 87, NUMBER 2 DECEMBER 2016 Royal Historical Society of Victoria Victorian Historical Journal Published by the Royal Historical Society of Victoria 239 A’Beckett Street Melbourne, Victoria 3000, Australia Telephone: 03 9326 9288 Fax: 03 9326 9477 Email: [email protected] www.historyvictoria.org.au Copyright © the authors and the Royal Historical Society of Victoria 2016 All material appearing in this publication is copyright and cannot be reproduced without the written permission of the publisher and the relevant author. -
Great Ocean Road and Scenic Environs National Heritage List
Australian Heritage Database Places for Decision Class : Historic Item: 1 Identification List: National Heritage List Name of Place: Great Ocean Road and Rural Environs Other Names: Place ID: 105875 File No: 2/01/140/0020 Primary Nominator: 2211 Geelong Environment Council Inc. Nomination Date: 11/09/2005 Principal Group: Monuments and Memorials Status Legal Status: 14/09/2005 - Nominated place Admin Status: 22/08/2007 - Included in FPAL - under assessment by AHC Assessment Recommendation: Place meets one or more NHL criteria Assessor's Comments: Other Assessments: : Location Nearest Town: Apollo Bay Distance from town (km): Direction from town: Area (ha): 42000 Address: Great Ocean Rd, Apollo Bay, VIC, 3221 LGA: Surf Coast Shire VIC Colac - Otway Shire VIC Corangamite Shire VIC Location/Boundaries: About 10,040ha, between Torquay and Allansford, comprising the following: 1. The Great Ocean Road extending from its intersection with the Princes Highway in the west to its intersection with Spring Creek at Torquay. The area comprises all that part of Great Ocean Road classified as Road Zone Category 1. 2. Bells Boulevarde from its intersection with Great Ocean Road in the north to its intersection with Bones Road in the south, then easterly via Bones Road to its intersection with Bells Beach Road. The area comprises the whole of the road reserves. 3. Bells Beach Surfing Recreation Reserve, comprising the whole of the area entered in the Victorian Heritage Register (VHR) No H2032. 4. Jarosite Road from its intersection with Great Ocean Road in the west to its intersection with Bells Beach Road in the east. -
Aboriginal Reconciliation Action Plan 2017–19 Summary
Aboriginal Reconciliation Action Plan 2017–19 Summary Cover art: Jarra Karalinar Steel, Boon Wurrung Alfred Health uses the term ‘Aboriginal’ to mean both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander throughout this document Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are warned that this document may contain images and names of deceased people. Message from our Chief Executive I am delighted to present Alfred Health’s first Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP): a living and practical plan built around strong relationships, respect and pride in our local Aboriginal community and the potential for employment and business opportunities. This plan is something of a watershed in our relationship with our Aboriginal community. It recognises that we need to do better in providing care for our Aboriginal patients and commits us to a journey to achieve greater equality in healthcare for our first peoples. Already it has been a two-year journey in developing this plan and along the way we have learnt much about what reconciliation means to us and the importance of meaningful and respectful relationships. Thanks must go to the many people involved in creating this plan, particularly to local elder Caroline Briggs, The Boon Wurrung Foundation, and Reconciliation Australia who have supported and guided us through this process. More about our plan The vision for reconciliation is for all Australians to be equal, to have equal opportunities and for there to be trust as we move forward in a shared vision for our country. I sincerely hope that this plan This plan is a summary of and the energy and commitment of our Alfred Health staff will contribute to achieving this vision. -
Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia 1788-1930: Sources
Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia 1788-1930: Sources © Ryan, Lyndall; Pascoe, William; Debenham, Jennifer; Gilbert, Stephanie; Richards, Jonathan; Smith, Robyn; Owen, Chris; Anders, Robert J; Brown, Mark; Price, Daniel; Newley, Jack; Usher, Kaine, 2019. The information and data on this site may only be re-used in accordance with the Terms Of Use. This research was funded by the Australian Government through the Australian Research Council, PROJECT ID: DP140100399. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1340762 Colonial Frontier Massacres in Australia 1788-1930: Sources 0 Abbreviations 1 Unpublished Archival Sources 2 Battye Library, Perth, Western Australia 2 State Records of NSW (SRNSW) 2 Mitchell Library - State Library of New South Wales (MLSLNSW) 3 National Library of Australia (NLA) 3 Northern Territory Archives Service (NTAS) 4 Oxley Memorial Library, State Library Of Queensland 4 National Archives, London (PRO) 4 Queensland State Archives (QSA) 4 State Libary Of Victoria (SLV) - La Trobe Library, Melbourne 5 State Records Of Western Australia (SROWA) 5 Tasmanian Archives And Heritage Office (TAHO), Hobart 7 Colonial Secretary’s Office (CSO) 1/321, 16 June, 1829; 1/316, 24 August, 1831. 7 Victorian Public Records Series (VPRS), Melbourne 7 Manuscripts, Theses and Typescripts 8 Newspapers 9 Films and Artworks 12 Printed and Electronic Sources 13 Colonial Frontier Massacres In Australia, 1788-1930: Sources 1 Abbreviations AJCP Australian Joint Copying Project ANU Australian National University AOT Archives of Office of Tasmania -
Kooyang Sea Country Plan Prepared by Members of the Framlingham Aboriginal Trust and Winda Mara Aboriginal Corporation Back to Contents
Kooyang Sea Country Plan Prepared by members of the Framlingham Aboriginal Trust and Winda Mara Aboriginal Corporation Back to Contents Acknowledgements KOOYANG SEA COUNTRY PLAN Developed in response to Action 3.11.2 of the South-east Regional Marine Plan Denis Rose Winda Mara Aboriginal Corporation Report prepared by Smyth and Bahrdt Consultants on behalf of the Framlingham and NOO Indigenous Reference Aboriginal Trust and Winda Mara Aboriginal Corporation. Group Funding provided by the National Oceans Office Damien Bell Winda Mara Aboriginal Corporation Brian Smith Facilitated by Dermot Smyth, Smyth and Bahrdt Consultants, Winda Mara Aboriginal Corporation and Steve Szabo, Steve Szabo & Associates Neil Martin Framlingham Aboriginal Corporation Copyright: © Framlingham Aboriginal Trust and Winda Mara Aboriginal Lionel Harradine Corporation 2004 Framlingham Aboriginal Corporation Published by the Framlingham Aboriginal Trust and the Winda Mara Aboriginal Heather Builth Corporation Tyrendarra Indigenous Protected Area State Library Ref: Kooyang Sea Country Plan Barry Goodall Deen Maar Indigenous Protected Area Copies of this report are available from: Elise Hardiker/Julia Curtis Framlingham Aboriginal Trust Winda Mara Aboriginal Corporation National Oceans Office c/- PO Purnim VIC 3278 PO Box 42 Heywood VIC 3304 Phone 03 5567 1003 Phone 03 5527 2051 Joe Agius Contact: Neil Martin/Lionel Harradine Contact: Denis Rose SA Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement and NOO Indigenous Reference Group Information in this report may be reproduced in whole or in part for study or training Rodney Dillon purposes, subject to the inclusion of acknowledgement of the source and provided no ATSIC and National Oceans Office commercial usage or sale of the material occurs. Reproduction for purposes other than Indigenous Reference Group those given above requires written permission from the publishers. -
Aboriginal Flora and Fauna Names of Victoria: As Extracted from Early Surveyors’ Reports
Aboriginal Flora and Fauna Names of Victoria: As extracted from early surveyors’ reports Sue Wesson research consultant © Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages 2001 Published by the Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages, 238 High Street, Northcote 3070, Victoria This publication is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for private study, research, criticism or review allowed under the Copyright Act 1968, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages. Disclaimer The views expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages. Information published by the Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages (VACL) is considered to be true and correct at the time of publication. Changes in circumstances after the time of publication may impact on the accuracy of this information and the Corporation gives no assurance of any information or advice contained. Citation This report may be cited as: Wesson, S. (2001) Aboriginal flora and fauna names of Victoria: As extracted from early surveyors’ reports. Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages, Melbourne. ISBN 9–9579360–0–1 Copies of this report are available through the Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages: 238 High Street, Northcote 3070, while stocks last. Printed on recycled paper to help conserve our natural environment Summary The Flora and Fauna Names Project is an initiative of the Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages and the Victorian Biodiversity Strategy. -
Comment on Objections 54
Comment on objections 54 Sarah Voogels 3 pages Victorian secretariat Phone (03) 9285 7197 Fax (02) 6293 7664 Email [email protected] From: To: FedRedistribution - VIC Subject: [VIC REDISTRIBUTION COMMENT ON OBJECTIONS] Sarah Voogels *WWW* [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED] Date: Friday, 18 May 2018 1:36:24 PM Attachments: vic-Sarah Voogels-.pdf Victorian Redistribution comments on objections uploaded from the AEC website. Name: Sarah Voogels Organisation: Individual Address: Phone number: Additional information: In relation to OB126, as proposed by Mr Andy McClusky, if the indigenous name of Corangamite is to be replaced, I agree and believe that a more appropriate name should be Gadubanud, to honor and acknowledge one of our first Australian tribes of the Surf Coast Shire - Colac Otway Shire - Great Ocean Road region of Victoria. Historical facts attached. Kind Regards, Sarah Voogels Indigenous History of the Otways “We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of Gadubanud country, The Gunditjmara people, Elders past and present.” Aboriginal people have lived in Victoria for at least 30,000. The Gadubanud (Ktabanut) or King Parrot people have occupied the rainforest, estuaries, grass and wetlands, and coastline of The Otways for many thousands of years. Local estuaries such as the Barwon and Gellibrand rivers provided natural boundaries with other tribes. Wada Wurrung to the north east of the Barwon River, Guidjan to the north (Lake Colac area) and Girai Wurrung to the west of the Gellibrand River. The Gadubanud maintained complex ties -
In Good Faith? Governing Indigenous Australia Through God, Charity and Empire, 1825-1855
In Good Faith? Governing Indigenous Australia through God, Charity and Empire, 1825-1855 In Good Faith? Governing Indigenous Australia through God, Charity and Empire, 1825-1855 Jessie Mitchell THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY E PRESS E PRESS Published by ANU E Press and Aboriginal History Incorporated Aboriginal History Monograph 23 This title is also available online at: http://epress.anu.edu.au/good_faith_citation.html National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Author: Mitchell, Jessie. Title: In good faith? : governing Indigenous Australia through god, charity and empire, 1825-1855 / Jessie Mitchell. ISBN: 9781921862106 (pbk.) 9781921862113 (eBook) Series: Aboriginal history monograph ; 23 Notes: Includes bibliographical references. Subjects: Indigenous peoples--Government relations. Philanthropinism. Aboriginal Australians--Politics and government. Aboriginal Australians--Social conditions--19th century. Colonization--Australia. Dewey Number: 305.89915 Aboriginal History Incorporated Aboriginal History is administered by an Editorial Board which is responsible for all unsigned material. Views and opinions expressed by the author are not necessarily shared by Board members. The Committee of Management and the Editorial Board Kaye Price (Chair), Peter Read (Monographs Editor), Maria Nugent and Shino Konishi (Journal Editors), Robert Paton (Treasurer and Public Officer), Anne McGrath (Deputy Chair), Isabel McBryde, Niel Gunson, Luise Hercus, Harold Koch, Christine Hansen, Tikka Wilson, Geoff Gray, Jay Arthur, Dave Johnson, Ingereth Macfarlane, Brian Egloff, Lorena Kanellopoulos, Richard Baker, Peter Radoll. Contacting Aboriginal History All correspondence should be addressed to Aboriginal History, Box 2837 GPO Canberra, 2601, Australia. Sales and orders for journals and monographs, and journal subscriptions: Thelma Sims, email: Thelma.Sims@anu. edu.au, tel or fax: +61 2 6125 3269, www.aboriginalhistory.org Aboriginal History Inc. -
Coastal Urban and Peri-Urban Indigenous People's Adaptive
Low Choy, Darryl, Clarke, Philip, Serrao-Neumann, Silvia, Hales, Robert, Koshade, Olivia and Jones, David 2016, Coastal urban and peri-urban Indigenous people’s adaptive capacity to climate change. In Maheshwari, Basant, Singh, Vijay P. and Thoradeniya, Bhadranie (eds), Balanced urban development: options and strategies for liveable cities, Springer, Cham, Switzerland, pp.441-461. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-28112-4_27 This is the published version. ©2016, The Authors Reproduced by Deakin University under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Licence Available from Deakin Research Online: http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30090806 Chapter 27 Coastal Urban and Peri-Urban Indigenous People’s Adaptive Capacity to Climate Change Darryl Low Choy , Philip Clarke , Silvia Serrao-Neumann , Robert Hales , Olivia Koschade , and David Jones Abstract This chapter discusses the adaptive capacity of coastal urban and peri- urban Indigenous People’s to climate change. It is based on the fi ndings of a National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (NCCARF) funded project that uti- lised a series of case studies that engaged key representatives from Indigenous organisations in fi ve coastal locations in three states of south-eastern Australia (Low Choy D, Clarke P, Jones D, Serrao-Neumann S, Hales R, Koschade O et al., Aboriginal reconnections: understanding coastal urban and peri-urban Indigenous people’s vulnerability and adaptive capacity to climate change, National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility, Gold Coast, 139 pp, 2013). The study has highlighted the social, economic and environmental impacts on urban and peri- urban Indigenous communities inhabiting coastal areas throughout south-eastern Australia. -
Skin, Kin and Clan: the Dynamics of Social Categories in Indigenous
Skin, Kin and Clan THE DYNAMICS OF SOCIAL CATEGORIES IN INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIA Skin, Kin and Clan THE DYNAMICS OF SOCIAL CATEGORIES IN INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIA EDITED BY PATRICK MCCONVELL, PIERS KELLY AND SÉBASTIEN LACRAMPE Published by ANU Press The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at press.anu.edu.au A catalogue record for this book is available from the National Library of Australia ISBN(s): 9781760461638 (print) 9781760461645 (eBook) This title is published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial- NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). The full licence terms are available at creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ legalcode Cover design and layout by ANU Press. Cover image Gija Kinship by Shirley Purdie. This edition © 2018 ANU Press Contents List of Figures . vii List of Tables . xi About the Cover . xv Contributors . xvii 1 . Introduction: Revisiting Aboriginal Social Organisation . 1 Patrick McConvell 2 . Evolving Perspectives on Aboriginal Social Organisation: From Mutual Misrecognition to the Kinship Renaissance . 21 Piers Kelly and Patrick McConvell PART I People and Place 3 . Systems in Geography or Geography of Systems? Attempts to Represent Spatial Distributions of Australian Social Organisation . .43 Laurent Dousset 4 . The Sources of Confusion over Social and Territorial Organisation in Western Victoria . .. 85 Raymond Madden 5 . Disputation, Kinship and Land Tenure in Western Arnhem Land . 107 Mark Harvey PART II Social Categories and Their History 6 . Moiety Names in South-Eastern Australia: Distribution and Reconstructed History . 139 Harold Koch, Luise Hercus and Piers Kelly 7 . -
Parliamentary Inquiry Into Biodiversity Loss And
Dr. Tamasin Ramsay (PhD) Medical Anthropologist PARLIAMENTARY INQUIRY INTO BIODIVERSITY LOSS AND ECOSYSTEM DECLINE 30TH AUGUST 2020 This submission begins with an anthropological review of our current crisis, recognizing the recent silo focus on human interests. Following this are the five key drivers of biodiversity loss and ecosystem decline: exploitation, habitat loss, pollution, introduced species and climate change. The submission then identifies detrimental actions that are perpetuating our current predicament, and suggests restorative actions that can help facilitate a recovery. The summary calls for robust legislation, and offers four recommendations including supporting farmers in transitioning towards plant agriculture, incorporating First Nations culture and care for Country, re‐introducing the Dingo as apex predator, and restoring the natural sense ofr wonde that exists in the naturally life‐affirming human. TABLE OF CONTENTS Contents Background _______________________________________________________________________________________________ 1 Preface _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________1 Author Introduction ______________________________________________________________________________________________1 Submission Structure _____________________________________________________________________________________________1 Submission _______________________________________________________________________________________________ 2 The Anthropocene ________________________________________________________________________________________________2 -
Case Studies Into the Invisible Presence of Aboriginal People
School of Media, Creative Arts and Social Inquiry Faculty of Humanities Connecting the Dots: Case Studies into the ‘Invisible Presence’ of Aboriginal People Living in Victoria Jessi Coyle This thesis is presented for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy of Curtin University January 2019 To the best of my knowledge and belief this thesis contains no material previously published by any other person except where due acknowledgement is made. This thesis contains no material which has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma in any university. Signed: Date: 15 January 2019 ABSTRACT Aboriginal Victorians have been rendered as an ‘invisible presence’ by the various discourses of race and culture that emerged in 19th-century forms of colonialism, which remain influential today. This thesis demonstrates how (white) belonging is constructed within national narratives by drawing on case study analyses of contemporary Victoria’s central and western goldfields districts, and of Aboriginal Victorian participation in Australian (Rules) Football. Semi-structured interviews were conducted across two case studies, with 28 Aboriginal participants and four non- Aboriginal participants. Interviews were analysed using a grounded theory framework, which prioritises culturally respectful and transparent research by positioning the research around participant testimony rather than the 19th-century colonial research conventions that are still influential and popular today. Working within critical theory, this thesis draws on race and settler colonialism to position the invisible presence of Aboriginal people within the ‘(white) settler colonial psyche’. A central feature of the (white) settler colonial psyche is the maintenance of settler sovereignty, as imagined through (white) belonging.