336). The publication of Bringing Them Home in 1997 was a comprehensive historical account of the qualitative effects of forcible indigenous child removal (Edney, 2003, p. 10). It produced a greater communal understanding of the consequences to government policy to indigenous people, social attitudes and racial inequality (Majchrzak-Hamilton & Hamilton, 1997, p. 28). This caused reconciliation events, including Sorry Day, Stolen Generations test cases in the courts, and N.A.D.O.C. week in primary
336). The publication of Bringing Them Home in 1997 was a comprehensive historical account of the qualitative effects of forcible indigenous child removal (Edney, 2003, p. 10). It produced a greater communal understanding of the consequences to government policy to indigenous people, social attitudes and racial inequality (Majchrzak-Hamilton & Hamilton, 1997, p. 28). This caused reconciliation events, including Sorry Day, Stolen Generations test cases in the courts, and N.A.D.O.C. week in primary