Index-To-Aboriginal-Family-History

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Index-To-Aboriginal-Family-History 1 Newcastle Region Library Index Resources for Aboriginal History Aboriginal Family History in NSW Welcome Local Studies - NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 2 This index is a guide to resources held at Newcastle Region Library that relate to Aboriginal History and Aboriginal Family History Research in New South Wales. This index is a guide only and is being constantly updated as new material is added to the collection. It is therefore recommended that you also search the library catalogue as not all items are contained within this index. The index has been divided into twelve (12) general sections, including nine (9) main districts of New South Wales. Topic Page Number 1. General Reference Guides 3 2. General Resources for NSW 5 3. Australian Defence Force Resources 12 4. Newcastle and Lake Macquarie 13 5. Hunter Valley, New England and Manning 18 6. Port Stephens and Great Lakes 21 7. North Coast 23 8. Central and North Western 24 9. Far Western Districts 26 10. Sydney and Central Coast 27 11. South Coast 28 12. Central and Southern 29 Other useful family history resources in the collection include, but are not limited to: • Birth, Deaths and Marriage Indexes • Pioneer Indexes • Church and Parish Registers • Newspapers • Cemetery and Burial Listings • Magazines • Electoral Rolls • School Newsletters • Historical Society Publications • Maps and Photographs Local Studies - NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 3 General Reference Guides Loc Call Number Author Title STA 305.89915/TAY Taylor, Penny Telling it like it is: a guide to making Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history LS FH929.1089/SMI Smith, Diane Lookin' for your mob: a guide to tracing Aboriginal family trees LS FHQ025.171/NEW Archives Authority of NSW A guide to NSW State Archives relating to Aboriginal people Connecting kin: a guide to records to help people separated from their families search for LS Q929.394/THI Thinee, Kristy their records LS 027/PAM BOX State Library NSW Services to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people at the State Library of NSW NSW Department of Aboriginal STA SQ362.849915/NEW Finding your mob Affairs LS Q025.171/NEW State Records NSW A guide to NSW State Archives relating to Aboriginal people Australian Archives ACT Regional Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Commonwealth records: a guide to records STA FHQ305.89915/AUS Office in the Australian Archives, ACT Regional Office Mura Gadi: a guide to manuscripts, pictures and oral histories in the National Library of IRC S305.89915/MUR National Library of Australia Australia relating to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples LS FHQ929.1072/AUS AIATSIS Koori ancestry: family research guidelines STA Q994.006/ROY Miller, James Tracing Koori ancestry LS 572.89915/MCG McGuigan, A Aboriginal reserves in NSW: a land rights research aid STA 363.75/INS Byrne, Denis In sad but loving memory: Aboriginal burials and cemeteries of the last 200 years in NSW Local Studies - Index to NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 4 LS FHQ572/PAM BOX Mitchell Library Researching local Aboriginal community: a guide to resources in the Mitchell Library LS FH929.394/NAT National Archives of Australia Finding families - genealogists guide to the National Archives of Australia Local Studies - NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 5 General Resources for NSW Loc Call Number Author Title The Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history, IRC SQ572.89915/ENC Horton, David society and culture SQ301.45199/TIN/1.1 Aboriginal tribes of Australia: their terrain, environmental controls, distribution, limits and IRC Tindale, Norman Vol 1 & Vol 2 proper names B 305.89915/BLA Blandowski, William Australia: William Blandowski's illustrated encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia STA ADVD AIATSIS Dawn and New Dawn 1952-1975: a magazine for the Aboriginal people of NSW STA E Drawer 3 AIM Our A.I.M.: a monthly record of the Aborigines Inland Mission of Australia IRC S305.89915/BEI Bowden, R Being Aboriginal: comments, observations and stories from Aboriginal Australians IRC SQ994.9915/AFT Taylor, Penny After 200 years: photographic essays of Aboriginal and Islander Australia today B J796.08/ALB Albert, Trish Indigenous sporting greats B J796.089/BRU Bruce, linda Indigenous sportspeople IRC SQ796.089/TAT Tatz, Colin Obstacle race: Aborigines in sport Local Studies - NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 6 IRC SQ796.0899915/TAT Tatz, Colin Black gold: the Aboriginal and Islander sports hall of fame IRC 796.0994/HAR Harris, Bret The proud champions: Australia's Aboriginal sporting heroes STA 796.334/MAY Maynard, John The Aboriginal soccer tribe: a history of Aboriginal involvement with the world game STA 796.830994/MCL McLennan, Wayne Tent boxing: an Australian journey IRC S331.699915/COO Coolwell, Wayne My kind of people: achievement, identity and Aboriginality IRC S301.451/TAT/1.1 Tatz, Colin Black viewpoints: the Aboriginal experience IRC S920/SKY Sykes, Roberta Murawina: Australian women of high degree B 305.489/ABO Bin-Sallik, Mary Ann Aboriginal woman by degrees: their stories of the journey towards academic achievement B 305.899/PUR Purcell, Leah Black chicks talking NSW Office EO in Public IRC S331.69/YAR Yarnin' up: Aboriginal people's careers in the NSW public sector Employment IRC S994.0049915/CHR Chryssides, Helen Local heroes Local Studies - NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 7 STA 305.89915/RAM Ramsland, John Remembering Aboriginal heroes: struggle, identity and the media B 781.642/WAL Walker, Clinton Buried country: the story of Aboriginal music IRC S362.849915/BRI Briskman, Linda The black grapevine: Aboriginal activism and the stolen generations IRC A822.3/HAR Harrison, Jane Stolen B J994.004/HIL Hill, Marji Stories of the stolen generations LS FHQ572/PAM BOX Kendall, Carol Link-up The lost children: thirteen Australians taken from their Aboriginal families tell of the B 362.797/LOS Edwards, Coral struggle to find their natural parents STA 362.849915/REA Read, Peter The stolen generations: the removal of Aboriginal children in New South Wales 1883-1969 B 362.849915/BRI HREOC Bringing Them Home (videorecording) IRC S362.849915094/INT Wilson, Tikka In the best interest of the child: stolen children, Aboriginal pain, white shame IRC SQ346/PAM BOX Tobin, Peter Aboriginal land rights in NSW: demands, law and policy Local Studies - NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 8 IRC SQ994.004/ABO Action for World Development Aboriginal heroes of the resistance: from Pemulwuy to Mabo IRC S305.89915/CUR Cuthoys, Ann Freedom ride: a freedom rider remembers B J305.899/GUI Guile, Melanie Charles Perkins and the freedom ride IRC SQ323.119915/ATT Attwood, Bain The 1967 referendum - when Aborigines didn't get the vote IRC SQ030/AUS Vol 5 Cuthoys, Ann Australians from 1939 LS 994.02/MAY Maynard, John Living with the locals: early European's experience of Indigenous life Six Australian battlefields: the black resistance to invasion and the white struggle against IRC S994.0049915/GRA Grassby, Albert colonial oppression IRC SQ305.89915/PAR Parbury, Nigel Survival: a history of Aboriginal life in New South Wales LS 572/PAM Part 1 & 2 McCarthy, Frederick Catalogue of the Aboriginal relics of NSW B 305.8/NEA Neal, Robbi After before time Country women and the colour bar: grassroots activism and the Country Women's B e-book Jones, Jennifer Association Local Studies - NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 9 B 305.89915/KOO NSW Office of Communities Koori Elders: stories from past to present (videorecording) B 305.89915/CAR Carlson, Bronwyn The politics of identity: who counts as Aboriginal today LS LHQ572.89915/MUL Mulvaney, Richard From Curio to Curation - The Morrison collection of Aboriginal wooden artefacts B 305.89915/NOR Norman, Heidi What do we want - a political history of Aboriginal land rights in NSW B 328.23/DAV Davis, Megan Everything you need to know about the referendum to recognise Indigenous Australians It's our country: Indigenous arguments for meaningful constitutional recognition and B 323.119/ITI Davis, Megan reform B 305.89915/OSU O'Sullivan, Domonic Indigenous health: power, politics and citizenship B B/MAH Mahood, Kim Position doubtful: mapping landscapes and memories B 994/ABO Clark, Ian The Aboriginal story of Burke and Wills B 305.89/ROB Robert, Hannah Paved with good intentions: Terra Nullius, Aboriginal land rights and settler-colonial law B 306.089/GRI Griffin, Max Aboriginal Affairs: a short history Local Studies - NSW Aboriginal Family History Resources V1-7-17 10 IRC S305.89915/GRI Griffin, Max Aboriginal Affairs 1967-2005: seeking a solution IRC 994/ATT Attwood, Bain Telling the truth about Aboriginal history IRC S323.119915/ATT Attwood, Bain The struggle for Aboriginal rights: a documentary history B 305.89915/PRE Prentis, Malcolm A concise companion to Aboriginal history IRC S305.800994/GOO Goot, Murray Divided nation: Indigenous affairs and the imagined public IRC S305.89915/MCS McGregor, Russell Imagined destines: Australian Aborigines and the doomed race theory 1880-1939 IRC S305.89915/KID Kidd, Rosalind The way we civilise: Aboriginal affairs - the untold story IRC S305.89915/BRO Broome, Richard Aboriginal Australia: a history since 1788 IRC 306.0899915/SWA Swain, Tony A place for strangers: toward a history of Australian Aboriginal being IRC S305.89915/BAB Babidge, Sally Aboriginal family and the state: the conditions of history IRC S305.89915/MIT Mitchell,
Recommended publications
  • Incorporating Indigenous Knowledge in the Care of Threatened Species at Arakwal National Park
    Incorporating Indigenous knowledge in the care of threatened species at Arakwal National Park Project 6.2.1 KEY MESSAGES • Scientists, Traditional • We have held planning • Over the past year, this Owners and Park staff and evaluation workshops project has supported are working together to to develop knowledge- a back-to-country manage the Byron Bay sharing protocols, priority workshop for local Orchid (Diuris byronensis) actions and measures Indigenous families, and its clay heath habitat of success to care for cultural burning in Arakwal National Park. these important areas. on the clay heath habitat and community engagement activities. What is the problem being tackled? The endangered Byron Bay Orchid (Diuris byronensis) is unique to Arakwal National Park. The orchid and its endangered clay heath habitat, which is an endangered ecological community, have important conservation and cultural values. Yet these values are threatened by wild fires, weeds, feral animals and the impact of thousands of tourists who visit this region throughout the year. Joint managers at Arakwal need to work together to ensure effective joint management of these important species and areas. Indigenous burning of clay heath was recently carried out for the first time in 30 years. Photo: Arakwal Aboriginal Corporation. Who is involved? Why is this important to the Bundjalung of Byron Bay People (Arakwal)? This project is a collaboration Local Traditional Owners are the Bundjalung of Byron Bay between Bundjalung people interested in the decisions and People (Arakwal) to look after of Byron Bay (Arakwal), outcomes achieved in this the things they think are most Arakwal joint Park Managers, protected area.
    [Show full text]
  • RAL-Chapter-9.Pdf (PDF, 231.64KB)
    9 Maam ngawaala: biindu ngaawa nyanggan bindaayili. Language centres: keeping language strong Anna Ash, Pauline Hooler, Gary Williams and Ken Walker1 Abstract We begin by describing the history and main activities of Muurrbay Aboriginal Language and Culture Co-operative and Many Rivers Aboriginal Language Centre. Comments from Elders, language teachers and researchers are included to reflect the opinions of a diverse range of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people. We discuss some aspects of research, publishing, language education and information technology. Finally we make some recommendations for groups who are just starting out on this challenging but rewarding road. This volume was at least partially inspired by The green book of language revitalization in practice. There is a chapter in that book called ‘Diversity in Local Language Maintenance and Restoration: A Reason for Optimism’. It emphasises that there is a positive future for the revitalisation of Aboriginal languages: There is reason for optimism because local language communities all over the world are taking it upon themselves to act on behalf of their imperilled linguistic traditions in full understanding of, and in spite of, the realistic perception that the cards are stacked against them. There is, in effect an international movement in which local communities work in defiance of the forces pitted against their embattled languages. It has something of the character of a modern miracle, if you think about it – while they share the goal of promoting a local language, these groups are essentially independent of one another, coming together sometimes to compare notes, but operating in effective separation. Two factors in our optimism are the very existence of the movement itself and what is sometimes decried as a flaw in the movement: the feature of 1 All authors are from the Muurrbay Aboriginal Language and Culture Co-operative & Many Rivers Aboriginal Language Centre.
    [Show full text]
  • Ruby Langford Ginibi: Bundjalung Historian, Writer and Educator
    Ruby Langford Ginibi: Bundjalung Historian, Writer and Educator Patricia Grimshaw School of Historical and Philosophical Studies University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC. 3010 [email protected] Abstract: The chapter considers the leadership of Ruby Langford Ginibi, whose writings recorded the history of the Bundjalung people of the Northern Rivers Region of New South Wales. She became prominent in national debates on Indigenous issues from the publication in 1988 of her autobiography, Don’t Take Your Love to Town until her death in 2011. Langford Ginibi was an effective voice in the attempt to persuade non-Aboriginal Australians to acknowledge the oppressive character of settler colonialism and its outcome in negative aspects of many Indigenous Australians’ lives in contemporary Australia. Above all, she drove understanding of the precariousness Indigenous peoples’ livelihoods and the social wellbeing of their families when they left impoverished communities to seek waged work in far flung rural and in urban environments. Through her numerous publications, her research, public talks and interviews, Langford Ginibi made a major contribution to Australia that was recognized by numerous prestigious awards and an honorary doctorate. In 2012, a special issue of the Journal of the European Association of Studies on Australia commemorated her achievements. Key words: Aboriginal historians, Aboriginal writers, Indigenous rights, Bundjalung people, human rights, social justice In 1988 a Bundjalung woman, Ruby Langford (later Ruby Langford Ginibi), published her autobiography Don’t Take Your Love to Town to considerable applause, including the Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission’s Award for Literature.1 Encouraged that she had an audience open to the story of the fraught life situations of Indigenous people, Langford Ginibi continued to produce works that informed non-Indigenous Australians about the past experiences of her people until shortly before her death in October 2011.
    [Show full text]
  • Caleb Threlkeld's Family
    Glasra 3: 161–166 (1998) Caleb Threlkeld’s family E. CHARLES NELSON Tippitiwitchet Cottage, Hall Road, Outwell, Wisbech, PE14 8PE, U. K. MARJORIE RAVEN 7 Griffin Avenue, Bexley, New South Wales 2207, Australia. INTRODUCTION The Revd Dr Caleb Threlkeld was the author of the first flora of Ireland (Nelson 1978, 1979; Doogue & Parnell, 1992), and a keen amateur botanist (Nelson, 1979, 1986). A native of Cumberland, Threlkeld was a physician by profession and a dissenting minister by vocation. He lived in Dublin from 3 April 1713 until his death on 28 April 1728. Hitherto biographical information about Caleb Threlkeld has been derived from contemporary parochial and university records, from his book Synopsis stirpium Hibernicarum (Threlkeld, 1726; Nelson & Synnott, 1998), and from biographies written many years after his death (Pulteney, 1777, 1790). Until the present authors, quite by chance, made contact no other sources were known to Irish and British scholars, but we now wish to draw attention to the existence of a manuscript containing substantial details of Threlkeld’s family in The Mitchell Library, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. In particular, the manuscript provides previously unavailable information about Caleb Threlkeld’s parents, wife, and children. THE THRELKELD MANUSCRIPT: history and contents The Mitchell Library manuscript, a book of 60 folios, was ‘found among the private papers of the Revd Lancelot Threlkeld, late of Premier Terrace, William Street, Sydney’, following his death on 10 October 1859.1 Lancelot Edward Threlkeld was descended from Joshua Threlkeld (b. 29 July 1673), an elder brother of the Irish botanist, the Revd Dr Caleb Threlkeld.
    [Show full text]
  • Ntscorp Limited Annual Report 2010/2011 Abn 71 098 971 209
    NTSCORP LIMITED ANNUAL REPORT 2010/2011 ABN 71 098 971 209 Contents 1 Letter of Presentation 2 Chairperson’s Report 4 CEO’s Report 6 NTSCORP’s Purpose, Vision & Values 8 The Company & Our Company Members 10 Executive Profiles 12 Management & Operational Structure 14 Staff 16 Board Committees 18 Management Committees 23 Corporate Governance 26 People & Facilities Management 29 Our Community, Our Service 30 Overview of NTSCORP Operations 32 Overview of the Native Title Environment in NSW 37 NTSCORP Performing the Functions of a Native Title Representative Body 40 Overview of Native Title Matters in NSW & the ACT in 2010-2011 42 Report of Performance by Matter 47 NTSCORP Directors’ Report NTSCORP LIMITED Letter OF presentation THE HON. JennY MacKlin MP Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs Parliament House CANBERRA ACT 2600 Dear Minister, RE: 2010–11 ANNUAL REPORT In accordance with the Commonwealth Government 2010–2013 General Terms and Conditions Relating to Native Title Program Funding Agreements I have pleasure in presenting the annual report for NTSCORP Limited which incorporates the audited financial statements for the financial year ended 30 June 2011. Yours sincerely, MicHael Bell Chairperson NTSCORP NTSCORP ANNUAL REPORT 10/11 – 1 CHAIrperson'S Report NTSCORP LIMITED CHAIRPERSON’S REPORT The Company looks forward to the completion of these and other ON beHalF OF THE directors agreements in the near future. NTSCORP is justly proud of its involvement in these projects, and in our ongoing work to secure and members OF NTSCORP, I the acknowledgment of Native Title for our People in NSW. Would liKE to acKnoWledGE I am pleased to acknowledge the strong working relationship with the NSW Aboriginal Land Council (NSWALC).
    [Show full text]
  • [email protected] O
    51 Lawson Crescent Acton Peninsula, Acton ACT 2601 GPO Box 553, Canberra ACT 2601 ABN 62 020 533 641 www.aiatsis.gov.au Environment and Communications References Committee The Senate Parliament House Canberra ACT 2600 Via email: [email protected] o·ear Committee Members Senate Inquiry into Australia's faunal extinction crisis AIATSIS Submission The Australian Institute for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) welcomes the opportunity to make a submission in support of the Senate Inquiry into Australia's faunal extinction crisis. AIATSIS would recommend the focus of this senate inquiry includes: consultation with traditional owner groups; native title corporations administering native title settlements and agreements bodies; Native Title Representative Bodies (NTRBs); Native Title Service Providers (NTSPs) and Aboriginal Land Councils: all of whom exercise responsibility for the management of the Indigenous Estate and large tracts of the National Reserve System. This critical consultation and engagement is to ensure that traditional knowledge and management is acknowledged as being an essential element in threatened species recovery, management and conservation. AIATSIS submits that acknowledging the totality of the Indigenous Estate and its interconnection with the National Reserve System is essential in terms of addressing the faunal extinction crisis across the content. Caring for Country programs, Indigenous Land and Sea Management Programs (ILSMPs) and Indigenous Protected Areas (IPAs) are achieving great success in terms of threatened species recovery and the eradication of feral pests and species. Please find attached the AIATSIS submission which is based upon 26 years of research and practice by AIATSIS in Indigenous cultural heritage and native title law.
    [Show full text]
  • Yarnupings Issue 1 March 2018
    March 2018 Issue 2 Aboriginal Heritage Office Yarnupings www.aboriginalheritage.org In this Edition: ∗ NSW Aboriginal Knockout in Dubbo 2018 ∗ It’s a Funny World ∗ Is it possible? ∗ Kids page... Nature Page ∗ Crossword & Quizerama ∗ Book Review: A Fortunate Life by A.B Facey ∗ This Months Recipe : Chicken Pot Roast ∗ Strathfield Sites ∗ YarnUp Review: Guest Speaker Tjimpuna ∗ Walk of the Month: West Head Loop Mackerel Beach -West Head Loop Shell Fish -Hooks Page 2 For at least the last thousand years BC (Before Cook) the waters of Warringá (Middle Har- bour), Kay -ye -my (North Harbour), Weé -rong (Sydney Cove) and other Sydney estuaries were the scenes of people using shell fish -hooks to catch a feed. With no known surviving oral tradition for how and who would make the fish -hooks and use them in this area, the historical and archaeological records become more important. What do we know? Shell fish -hooks were observed and reported on by a number of people from the First Fleet. They mention being made and used by local women. “Considering the quickness with which they are finished, the excellence of the work, if it be inspected, is admirable”, Watkin Tench said on witnessing Barangaroo making one on the north shore. First Fleet painting of fish -hook (T. Watling) The manufacturing process involved the use of a strong shell. So far the only archaeological evidence is from the Turbo species. Pointed stone files were used to create the shape and then file down the edges to the recognisable form. Use -wear analysis on files has confirmed that they were used on shell as well as wood, bone and plant material.
    [Show full text]
  • Aboriginal Languages
    Aboriginal Languages Advice on Programming and Assessment for Stages 4 and 5 Acknowledgements The map on p 8 is © Department of Lands, Panorama Ave, Bathurst, NSW, www.lands.nsw.gov.au © 2003 Copyright Board of Studies NSW for and on behalf of the Crown in right of the State of New South Wales. This document contains Material prepared by the Board of Studies NSW for and on behalf of the State of New South Wales. The Material is protected by Crown copyright. All rights reserved. No part of the Material may be reproduced in Australia or in any other country by any process, electronic or otherwise, in any material form or transmitted to any other person or stored electronically in any form without the prior written permission of the Board of Studies NSW, except as permitted by the Copyright Act 1968. School students in NSW and teachers in schools in NSW may copy reasonable portions of the Material for the purposes of bona fide research or study. When you access the Material you agree: • to use the Material for information purposes only • to reproduce a single copy for personal bona fide study use only and not to reproduce any major extract or the entire Material without the prior permission of the Board of Studies NSW • to acknowledge that the Material is provided by the Board of Studies NSW • not to make any charge for providing the Material or any part of the Material to another person or in any way make commercial use of the Material without the prior written consent of the Board of Studies NSW and payment of the appropriate copyright fee • to include this copyright notice in any copy made • not to modify the Material or any part of the material without the express prior written permission of the Board of Studies NSW.
    [Show full text]
  • Innovate Reconciliation Action Plan
    Innovate Reconciliation Action Plan April 2017 - March 2019 2 Index 3 | Message from the CEO and Chair 10 | Our Partnerships 4 | Our Vision for Reconciliation 11 | Activities/Initiatives 4 | Our Organisation 12 | Our Planned Activities 5 | The Hunter Region 12 | Relationships 6 | Hunter Primary Care Staff 14 | Respect 7 | Our Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) 17 | Opportunities 8 | Achievements of our first RAP 19 | Tracking and Progress 9 | Case studies of how our staff and services make a difference in the community (L-R) Athlone Riches, Cody Faulkner, Katie Vullo, Sally Henning, Lauren Sullivan, Janelle White, Kevin Sweeney, Jennifer Vardanega. Not pictured: Glen Boyd, Byron Williams, Kathy Piper, Amanda Fletcher Hunter Primary Care acknowledges the diversity of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures across Australia, and the importance of providing culturally sensitive services that meet community and individual needs. We believe that reconciliation is an important step towards creating a more inclusive and respectful nation – where the contribution of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and their cultures are valued, and they can participate in opportunities afforded to all Australians. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples should be aware that this document may contain images or names of people who have since passed away. 3 Message Hunter Primary Care wishes to acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the land that from the we live and work on, and pay our respects to Elders past and present and to emerging Chair and community leaders. We acknowledge the important role of Aboriginal and Torres Strait CEO Islander peoples within Hunter Primary Care and the communities we work with.
    [Show full text]
  • Indigenous Australians and Land in New South Wales
    NSW PARLIAMENTARY LIBRARY RESEARCH SERVICE Indigenous Australians and Land in New South Wales by Talina Drabsch Briefing Paper No 9/04 RELATED PUBLICATIONS • Aborigines, Land and National Parks in New South Wales by Stewart Smith, Briefing Paper No 2/97 • The Native Title Debate: Background and Current Issues by Gareth Griffith, Briefing Paper No 15/98 • Indigenous Issues in NSW by Talina Drabsch, Background Paper No 2/04 ISSN 1325-4456 ISBN 0 7313 1764 5 July 2004 © 2004 Except to the extent of the uses permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means including information storage and retrieval systems, without the prior written consent from the Librarian, New South Wales Parliamentary Library, other than by Members of the New South Wales Parliament in the course of their official duties. Indigenous Australians and Land in New South Wales by Talina Drabsch NSW PARLIAMENTARY LIBRARY RESEARCH SERVICE David Clune (MA, PhD, Dip Lib), Manager..............................................(02) 9230 2484 Gareth Griffith (BSc (Econ) (Hons), LLB (Hons), PhD), Senior Research Officer, Politics and Government / Law .........................(02) 9230 2356 Talina Drabsch (BA, LLB (Hons)), Research Officer, Law ......................(02) 9230 2768 Rowena Johns (BA (Hons), LLB), Research Officer, Law........................(02) 9230 2003 Lenny Roth (BCom, LLB), Research Officer, Law ...................................(02) 9230 3085 Stewart Smith (BSc (Hons), MELGL), Research
    [Show full text]
  • Yurunnhang Bungil Nyumba: Infusing Aboriginal Ways of Being Into Teaching Practice in Australia
    The University of Notre Dame Australia ResearchOnline@ND Theses 2020 Yurunnhang Bungil Nyumba: Infusing Aboriginal ways of being into teaching practice in Australia Lisa Buxton The University of Notre Dame Australia Follow this and additional works at: https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/theses Part of the Education Commons COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further copying or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. Do not remove this notice. Publication Details Buxton, L. (2020). Yurunnhang Bungil Nyumba: Infusing Aboriginal ways of being into teaching practice in Australia (Doctor of Education). University of Notre Dame Australia. https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/theses/248 This dissertation/thesis is brought to you by ResearchOnline@ND. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of ResearchOnline@ND. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Yurunnhang Bungil Nyumba: Infusing Aboriginal ways of being into teaching practice in Australia Lisa Maree Buxton MPhil, MA, GDip Secondary Ed, GDip Aboriginal Ed, BA. Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Doctor of Education School of Education Sydney Campus January, 2020 Acknowledgement of Country Protocols The protocol for introducing oneself to other Indigenous people is to provide information about one’s cultural location, so that connection can be made on political, cultural and social grounds and relations established. (Moreton-Robinson, 2000, pp. xv) I would like firstly to acknowledge with respect Country itself, as a knowledge holder, and the ancients and ancestors of the country in which this study was conducted, Gadigal, Bidjigal and Dharawal of Eora Country.
    [Show full text]
  • Indigenous Knowledge in the Built Environment a Guide for Tertiary Educators
    Indigenous Knowledge in The Built Environment A Guide for Tertiary Educators David S Jones, Darryl Low Choy, Richard Tucker, Scott Heyes, Grant Revell & Susan Bird Support for the production of this publication has been 2018 provided by the Australian Government Department of Education and Training. The views expressed in this report do ISBN not necessarily reflect the views of the Australian Government 978-1-76051-164-7 [PRINT], Department of Education and Training. 978-1-76051-165-4 [PDF], With the exception of the Commonwealth Coat of Arms, and 978-1-76051-166-1 [DOCX] where otherwise noted, all material presented in this document is provided under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 Citation: International License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ Jones, DS, D Low Choy, R Tucker, SA Heyes, G Revell & S Bird by-sa/4.0/ (2018), Indigenous Knowledge in the Built Environment: A Guide The details of the relevant licence conditions are available on for Tertiary Educators. Canberra, ACT: Australian Government the Creative Commons website (accessible using the links Department of Education and Training. provided) as is the full legal code for the Creative Commons Attribution- ShareAlike 4.0 International License http:// Warning: creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are warned that the following document may contain images and names of Requests and inquiries concerning these rights should be deceased persons. addressed to: Office for Learning and Teaching A Note on the Project’s Peer Review Process: Department of Education The content of this teaching guide has been independently GPO Box 9880, peer reviewed by five Australian academics that specialise Location code N255EL10 in the teaching of Indigenous knowledge systems within the Sydney NSW 2001 built environment professions, two of which are Aboriginal [email protected] academics and practitioners.
    [Show full text]