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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
251

The Communist Party and trade union work in Queensland in the third period: 1928-1935

Penrose, Beris Gene Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
252

From segregation to integration: The development of special education in Queensland

Swan, Geoffrey James Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
253

Spaces of Disease: the creation and management of Aboriginal health and disease in Queensland 1900-1970

Parsons, Meg January 2009 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy(PhD) / Indigenous health is one of the most pressing issues confronting contemporary Australian society. In recent years government officials, medical practitioners, and media commentators have repeatedly drawn attention to the vast discrepancies in health outcomes between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. However a comprehensive discussion of Aboriginal health is often hampered by a lack of historical analysis. Accordingly this thesis is a historical response to the current Aboriginal health crisis and examines the impact of colonisation on Aboriginal bodies in Queensland during the early to mid twentieth century. Drawing upon a wide range of archival sources, including government correspondence, medical records, personal diaries and letters, maps and photographs, I examine how the exclusion of Aboriginal people from white society contributed to the creation of racially segregated medical institutions. I examine four such government-run institutions, which catered for Aboriginal health and disease during the period 1900-1970. The four institutions I examine – Barambah Aboriginal Settlement, Peel Island Lazaret, Fantome Island lock hospital and Fantome Island leprosarium – constituted the essence of the Queensland Government’s Aboriginal health policies throughout this time period. The Queensland Government’s health policies and procedures signified more than a benevolent interest in Aboriginal health, and were linked with Aboriginal (racial) management strategies. Popular perceptions of Aborigines as immoral and diseased directly affected the nature and focus of government health services to Aboriginal people. In particular the Chief Protector of Aboriginals Office’s uneven allocation of resources to medical segregation facilities and disease controls, at the expense of other more pressing health issues, specifically nutrition, sanitation, and maternal and child health, materially contributed to Aboriginal ill health. This thesis explores the purpose and rationales, which informed the provision of health services to Aboriginal people. The Queensland Government officials responsible for Aboriginal health, unlike the medical authorities involved in the management of white health, did not labour under the task of ensuring the liberty of their subjects but rather were empowered to employ coercive technologies long since abandoned in the wider medical culture. This particularly evident in the Queensland Government’s unwillingness to relinquish or lessen its control over diseased Aboriginal bodies and the continuation of its Aboriginal-only medical isolation facilities in the second half of the twentieth century. At a time when medical professionals and government officials throughout Australia were almost universally renouncing institutional medical solutions in favour of more community-based approaches to ill health and diseases, the Queensland Government was pushing for the creation of new, and the continuation of existing, medical segregation facilities for Aboriginal patients. In Queensland the management of health involved inherently spatialised and racialised practices. However spaces of Aboriginal segregation did not arise out of an uncomplicated or consistent rationale of racial segregation. Rather the micro-histories of Fantome Island leprosarium, Peel Island Lazaret, Fantome Island lock hospital and Barambah Aboriginal Settlement demonstrate that competing logics of disease quarantine, reform, punishment and race management all influenced the ways in which the Government chose to categorise, situate and manage Aboriginal people (their bodies, health and diseases). Evidence that the enterprise of public health was, and still is, closely aligned with the governance of populations.
254

From river banks to shearing sheds: Thirty years with flying arts 1971 - 2001

England, Marilyn Irene Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
255

Gympie, "The Town That Saved Queensland": Popular Culture and the Construction of Identity in a Rural Queensland Town

Mr Robert Edwards Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
256

'Our wayward and backward sister colony': Queensland and the Australian federation movement, 1859-1901

McConnel, Katherine Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
257

Evan Mackenzie : pioneer merchant pastoralist of Moreton Bay / John H.G. Mackenzie-Smith.

Mackenzie-Smith, John Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
258

'Generic resemblances?' : women and work in Queensland, 1919-1939

Scott, Joanne, 1965- Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
259

The Queensland gold-miner in the late nineteenth century : his influence and interests

Stoodley, June. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
260

Evan Mackenzie : pioneer merchant pastoralist of Moreton Bay / John H.G. Mackenzie-Smith.

Mackenzie-Smith, John Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.

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