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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.
241

New relationships, old certainties : Australia's reconciliation and treaty-making in British Colombia

De Costa, Ravindra Noel John, decosta@mcmaster.ca January 2002 (has links)
This thesis investigates the search for new relationships between indigenous and settler peoples in Australia and Canada. Both reconciliation and the treaty-making process in British Columbia are understood as attempts to build such relationships. Yetthese are policies that have arisen in response to the persistence of indigenous claims for recognition of rights and respect for identity. Consequently, I consider what the purpose of new relationships might be: is the creation of new relationships to be the means by which settlers recognise and respect indigenous rights and identities, or is there some other goal? To answer this, I analyse the two policies as the opening of negotiations over indigenous claims for recognition. That is, the opening of new political spaces in which indigenous people�s voices and claims may be heard. Reconciliation opened a space to rethink Australian attitudes to history and culture, to renegotiate Australian identity. Treaties in British Columbia primarily seek to renegotiate ownership and control of lands and resources. Both policies attempt to relegitimise the polities in which they operate, by making new relationships that provide for mutual recognition. However, the thesis establishes that these new spaces are not nearly as expansive or inclusive as they are made out to be. They are in fact defined by the internal struggles of settler society to make life more certain: to resume identities that are secure and satisfying, and to restore territorial control and economic security. This takes place with little regard for the legitimate claims of indigenous peoples to be recognised as people and to enjoy dynamic, flourishing identities of their own. Building new relationships becomes the path to entrenching old certainties.
242

Construction of the savage : western intellectual responses to the Maori and Aborigine, first contact to 1850

Wybrow, Vernon, n/a January 2002 (has links)
This thesis is a comparative study of the West�s intellectual responses to the indigenous inhabitants of Australia and New Zealand from the period of first contact through until 1850. The thesis does not attempt a comprehensive history of the West�s encounters with Australasia nor does it attempt to discuss the role of the indigene within these encounters. The thesis does, however, discuss the formulation and expression of those intellectual traditions that informed the Western response to the Maori and Aborigine. Specifically, each chapter addresses a particular aspect of the West�s interaction with the indigenous peoples of Australasia in order demonstrate how the Western narratives of exploration, travel and settlement were informed by the wider discourse of colonialism. Amongst some of the themes addressed in the course of this thesis are: the ideal of the �Good Savage�, the shifting notion of a �Great Chain of Being�, the rise of natural history as a system for classifying human difference and the importance of ideas of savagery in framing the colonial response to the Maori and Aborigine were characterised by similarities and continuities as much as by the more commonly acknowledged differences and discontinuities.
243

Anatomy and biology of tooth dislocation and wear in the pre-European Maori and Australian Aborigine : with supporting publications.

Taylor, R. M. S. (Richard Morris Stovin), n/a January 1991 (has links)
Summary: Some 250 Australian aboriginal skulls were studied to ascertain differences in tooth dislocation and wear in this ethnic group as compared with those manifested in the pre-European Maori, with consideration of the differences in cultural and botanical background as contributing factors. Other features were studied, including the crowding of anterior teeth, the incidence of caries and abscesses, and of mottled enamel and tooth fracture. Aspects of physical anthropology and biology were found to be relevant to this study, since they offered explanations for some previously unsolved problems such as edge-to-edge bite, and crowding of incisors in well-formed jaws. The work is supported by 28 illustrations of the dentition selected from various sources, and described in the text. Reprints of 18 other published papers reporting various dental studies of relevance to the above major publication are included in this presentation.
244

[Original research papers presented for M.D. degree] / [F.J. Fenner] / Thesis by F.J. Fenner / Anthropometric observations on South Australian Aborigines of the Diamantina and Cooper Creek regions : Adelaide University Field Anthropology, Central Australia, no. 13 / Some Australian Aboriginal scaphocephalic skulls / Australian Aboriginal skull: its non-metrical morphological characters / Observations of the mandibular torus The Australian Aboriginal skull: its non-metrical morphological characters / Fossil human skull fragments of probable Pleistocene age from Aitape, New Guinea / Pigmentation of the oral mucous membranes of Australian and New Guinea natives / Occurrence of juxtaarticular nodules in Australia / Local implantation of sulphanilamide for the prevention and treatment of gas gangrene in heavily contaminated wounds: a suggested treatment for war wounds

Fenner, Frank, 1914- January 1942 (has links)
Collective title supplied by cataloguer. / Lacks contents and abstract. / Includes bibliographical references. / 8 v. : / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Collection of journal articles and reprints presented by the author (either by; or, co-authored by the author) for admission to the degree / Thesis (M.D.)--University of Adelaide, 1942
245

An argument on culture safety in health service delivery: towards better health outcomes for Aboriginal peoples

Jackson Pulver, Lisa Rae January 2003 (has links)
The bureaucratic measure of health service, health performance indicators, suggest that we are not effective in our legislative responsibility to deliver suitable health care to some of the populations we are meant to serve. Debate has raged over the years as to the reasons for this, with no credible explanation accepted by those considered stakeholders. One thing is clear though, we have gone from being a culture believing that the needs of the many far outweigh those of the few, to one where we are barely serving the needs of the 'any'. This is most evident in the care delivered to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people of Australia.
246

An imaginary dominion : the representation and treatment of Aborigines in South Australia, 1834-1911 / Robert Foster

Foster, Robert K. G. January 1993 (has links)
Bibliography : leaves 351-380 / xxii, 380 [37] leaves : ill., map ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of History, 1994?
247

Benevolence, belonging and the repression of white violence.

Riggs, Damien Wayne January 2005 (has links)
Research on racism in Australia by white psychologists is often fraught with tensions surrounding a) accounting for privilege, b) the depiction of particular racial minorities, and c) how individual acts of racism are understood. Nowhere is this more evident than in research that focuses on the relationship between Indigenous and white Australians. Such research, as this thesis will demonstrate, has at times failed to provide an account of the ongoing acts of racism that shape the discipline of psychology, and which thus inform how white psychologists in Australia write about Indigenous people. As a counter to this, I outline in this thesis an alternate approach to understanding racism in Australia, one that focuses on the ways in which racism is foundational to white subjectivities in Australia, and one that understands white violence against Indigenous people as an ongoing act. In order to explicate these points, and to examine what they mean in relation to white claims to belonging in Australia, I employ psychoanalytic concepts within a framework of critical psychology in order to develop an account of racism which, whilst drawing on the insights afforded by social constructionist approaches to racism and subjectivity, usefully extends such approaches in order to understand their import for examining racism in Australia. More specifically, I demonstrate how racism in Australia displays what Hook (2005) refers to as a 'psychic life of colonial power', one that implicates all people in histories of racism, and one that highlights the collective psychical nature of racism, rather than understanding it as an individual act. In the analyses that follow from this framework I demonstrate how white privilege and its corollary - the disavowal of Indigenous sovereignty - are warranted by white Australians. To do this, I engage in a textual analysis of empirical data, focusing on both the everyday talk of white Australians as gathered via focus groups and a speech by Prime Minister Howard. In particular, I highlight how claims by white Australians to 'doing good' for Indigenous people (what I refer to as 'benevolence') may in fact be seen to evidence one particular moment where the originary violence of colonisation is yet again played out in the name of the white nation. More specifically, and following Ahmed (2004), I suggest that claims to 'anti-racism' may be seen as 'non-performatives' - they do not require white Australians to actually challenge our unearned privilege, nor to examine how we are located within racialised networks of power. In contrast to this, I sketch out an approach to examining racism, both within the discipline of psychology and beyond, that is accountable for ongoing histories of colonial violence, which acknowledges the role that the discipline often continues to play in the legitimation of race, and which is willing to address the relationship that white Australians are already in with Indigenous Australians. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--School of Psychology, 2005.
248

The Bunganditj : European invasion and the economic basis of social collapse

Foster, R. K. (Robert Kenneth) January 1983 (has links) (PDF)
Bibliograpahy: leaves 175-187.
249

Adaptation in the masticatory system : descriptive and correlativestudies of a pre-contemporary Australian population

Richards, Lindsay Clem. January 1983 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
250

The story of indigenous Australians : the role of categorisation shifts in inter-group conflict resolution and collective action for social change /

Quinn, Emerald. January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (B.Sc.(Hons.)) - University of Queensland, 2006. / Includes bibliography.

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