Indigenous Australian languages

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    Uluru - Australia’s rock of ages 1. What was Uluru called before by the Europeans? Answer: The early Europeans called Uluru for Ayers Rock. 2. Who is the area of Uluru home to? Answer: For over thirty thousand years the area were a home to the Aboriginal people who hold that land. 3. How does the guide describe the feeling of Uluru? Answer: It is like a mystical place, you feel it as you draw nearer. When you are why underneath the Rockets it’s bigger than you can possibly imagine. 4. What…

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    Multiculturalism Analysis

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    The source is written by many different authors and it is mainly edited by the 4 authors mentioned above. These authors are one of the best scholars that tackle the controversial ideas of diversity, and Canadian policies. It respectfully challenges the saint idea that multiculturalism is great for Canada, however it does not claim Multiculturalism is actually bad. It continually demonstrates the underlying capability, the conventional restraints and the miniscule disorders of the policies and…

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    9 Theme 3: The Impact of Racism on Indigenous Health Health among human populations is a multifaceted and complex phenomenon, and this is no less so for Indigenous peoples. For Indigenous peoples, unlike white Australians and Pākehā New Zealanders, racism is a fundamental driver of health. Pathways from racism to ill-health may include: reduced and unequal access to the societal resources required for health (e.g. employment, education, • housing, medical care, social…

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    is like talking about another world. I think many Australians consider the Asian lifestyle to be inferior and that Asia is still quite behind the west in ‘life style’. I also think that there is a fear of Asia having power over the rest of the world. No living human alive has been a part of world that has not be led by the West. Therefore this idea of change scares…

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    rights, social rights economic rights and cultural rights, they provide freedom and spread peace in their country so people can have rights and feel safe in their country. The Australian people have one of the best human rights in the world, and they ranked one of the safest country to live in. But for the Indigenous Australians living in remote…

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    hailed as a momentous victory by the Indigenous rights movement. 1993: On November 16, the Native Title Act is tabled in Federal Parliament in response to the Mabo ruling. After 111 hours of debate, the longest in 92 years of Senate history, the bill passes. It recognises native title in situations where Indigenous people have maintained a connection with land and waters. Examine their overall experience in the 20th century: Throughout the 20th century the Indigenous people of Australia went…

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    Eddie Mabo had great significance in the role of campaigning indigenous land rights and to help make a change of the struggle for rights and freedom of the Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander people. The Mabo case was a significant legal case held in Australia to the High court of Australia, that recognized land rights of the indigenous people. Eddie Koiki Mabo was born on the 29th of June 1936, on Murray island located in the Torres Strait. His mother had died giving birth and because of…

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    In the 1950s the Australian government approved the first national television service in Sydney called the ABC. The introduction of the television was gradual, starting in Sydney and Melbourne, then slowly reaching rural areas towards the end of the 50s decade. Televisions at this time often had built-in stands and screens that were soft at the corners. You operated them through the dials to change channels and were tuned through a wire aerial system. The 50s were an important era for…

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    Is Australia a fundamentally racist country at its core? this divulging deliberation has been at the forefront of Australian civil rights for decades. With Australia being first established by a association of convicts, delinquents and guards to hold it all together, it is not inconceivable nor insurmountable for some of the key conjectures of the prisoners to have been carried down hereditary to todays “contemporary society. However the true catalyst for Australian’s non amalgamate views on…

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    Task 1a If some new people from a different culture moves to my community, I would try to make them feel welcome and they could start their new life with another culture faster. I would try to make them join different groups. Different local sports groups if there is a sport there are interested in. That is a great way to find people with the same interest as yourself. I would try to communicate with the newcomer’s best I can, and make them know about our community. Task 1b Australia’s national…

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