Irish women, Aboriginal people, and the law in colonial Australia: race, power and the struggle for inclusion
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Irish women, Aboriginal people, and the law in colonial Australia: race, power and the struggle for inclusion |
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Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | McClaughlin, Trevor (Author) and Connors, Libby (Author) |
Editors | de Paor, Louis, O'Connor, Maureen and Reece, Bob |
Journal or Proceedings Title | Australian Journal of Irish Studies |
Australasian Journal of Irish Studies | |
Journal Citation | 4, pp. 135-143 |
Number of Pages | 9 |
Year | 2004 |
Place of Publication | Perth, Australia |
ISSN | 1444-5409 |
1837-1094 | |
Web Address (URL) of Paper | http://wwwsoc.murdoch.edu.au/cfis/journal4.html |
Conference/Event | 12th Irish Australian Conference: From Youghal Harbour to Moreton Bay: Remembered Nations, Imagined Republics |
Event Details | 12th Irish Australian Conference: From Youghal Harbour to Moreton Bay: Remembered Nations, Imagined Republics Event Date 19 to end of 22 Jun 2002 Event Location Galway, Ireland |
Abstract | This essay describes a research project under way that will provide a social history of the law based on the experiences and interaction of indigenous Australians and Irish women with the law in nineteenth-century Australia. There are a number of reasons for choosing these two groups. The colonial state and society often saw them as 'problems'. Irish women and Aboriginal people were 'present' throughout the sholewhole of the colonial period and therefore represent 'constraints' in the Australian colonial experience. They also provide raw material for some interesting comparisons and contrasts in the way the law worked both as an agency of repression and as an instrument of protection for the powerless. Equally, they can provide insights into the complexities of colonialism in a settler society, the ways in which minorities and individuals were able to use the law to protect themselves, and how those in authority regularly reinvented racial and ethnic stereotypes. |
Keywords | Irish; women; aboriginals; law; colonial Australia; race; power; inclusion |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 450107. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history |
430302. Australian history | |
441013. Sociology of migration, ethnicity and multiculturalism | |
Public Notes | Files associated with this item cannot be displayed due to copyright restrictions. |
Byline Affiliations | Macquarie University |
School of Humanities and Communication |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/9y32y/irish-women-aboriginal-people-and-the-law-in-colonial-australia-race-power-and-the-struggle-for-inclusion
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