Australian Aboriginal culture

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    a phenomenlogical view is to take your blinders off and look at new things with an open mind. The Australian Aborigines were an interesting group. The Aboriginal religion shares many similarlities with other primal religions, however their differences is what makes this religion so distinctive and fascinating. Their cosmology was refined to the fact that all life existed in Autralia. The Australian Aborigines focused on their daily life with many rituals, cultural art, and saw their way of life…

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    Statement of intent I decided to do a opinion piece on the contemporary social issue of asylum seeker, and or the closure of Manus Island. The purpose of my piece was to inform the reader about the situation on Manus Island and to persuade the reader that legitimate refugees who were held on Manus Island deserve to be granted asylum. The intended target audience is young adults, 19-30 years old. As they will one day be the leaders in our society and actually have the power to create change one…

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    subjectivity in much the same way that Australian gov - ernments had denied equal treatment before the law to cer - tain classes of immigrants from the 1920s to the 1940s. In the twenty-first century the practice of granting fixed term temporary protection visas to asylum seekers in place of per - manent visas bears the very same mark of rendering a cer - tain class of immigrant bodies as potentially available to be singled out for discriminatory treatment by the Australian state as did the…

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    Brumbies In Australia

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    P1 The scientific name for the brumby is Equus caballus. They are strong horses that live in northern australia. The name brumbies came from james brumby who let his horses free rome. P2 brumbies have a lot of differences from normal horses, they also have a lot of similarities with normal horses. Brumbies are a similar size to normal horses and are usually brown but can be other colours as well like white and grey. Brumbies love to live in grasslands or shrublands that have a continuous flow…

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    The Creighton men’s tennis team lost against DePaul University, falling 6-1, but also brought home a decisive win against Western Illinois last weekend, with a 7-0 sweep against the Bulldogs. The loss and win leaves the Bluejays with a 7-9 record on the season. On Saturday, during the matches against the Blue Demons in Chicago, junior Harrison Lang, at No. 3 singles, came out with Creighton’s only singles win against DePaul. Lang captured a close 6-3, 4-6, 1-0 victory over DePaul's Alex…

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    Indigenous Australian had been living in Australia since 50,00 years ago. They lived by hunting, walking place to place, building homes, etc. But when the British came, the ritual that they’d been applying to their daily lives gone. The white people came and took away their lands and start building their own business. They took away the indigenous Australians kids and was known as the stolen generation. From that moment, that gap between indigenous and non-indigenous people increasing, from life…

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    identify a number of different strategies that can be used to specifically teach and support Aboriginal students on this journey. The suggested strategies are aligned with the NSW Department of Education and Training Aboriginal Education and Training Policy (2008) as well as the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL) standards for teaching. The specific focus areas that relate to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) students are 1.4 and 2.4 which specifies what…

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    With 4.9% of Canada’s total population consisting of Aboriginal people, their voices and rights were always ignored throughout history. Canada’s reputation with Aboriginal rights is still developing and becoming better because of the changes to the Indian Act in 1951, the creation of Bill C-31, and the suicide crisis in 2016. Firstly, the change to the Indian Act in 1951 is one of the main reasons why Canada’s reputation with Aboriginal rights is still developing towards a better reputation…

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    Fence is a book written by Doris Pilkington. That story is concerned with the journey of three young Aboriginal girls who escape from the Moore River Native Settlement and walk the 1600 kilometers home to Jigalong. The three young girls were taken from their homes in the 1930s and placed in settlements initiated by government policy which forcibly removed half caste children from their Aboriginal families. Soon after their arrival they escape and begin their long journey back to their tribal…

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    Tully's Argument Analysis

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    are that Aboriginal peoples have been treated as though they are a part of the federal-provincial institutional structure and are subject to the laws and jurisdiction of Canadian authority. This is ahistorical and counter to…

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