Aborigines essay topics

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  • Number Of The Aboriginal Rituals And Ceremonies
    1,837 words
    The Aborigines had, and still have, a complex belief in creation, spirits and culture, that gives a definite distinctiveness from any other religion in the world. Thousands of years ago, Australian Aboriginal people were living in accordance with their dreamtime beliefs- today, a majority of the Aboriginal community profess allegiance to Christianity, and only 3% still adhere to traditional beliefs. These beliefs have provided the Aboriginal people with guidance and perspective on all aspects of...
  • Constitutional Affirmation Of Aboriginal And Treaty Rights
    2,978 words
    Did the Constitution Act, 1982 help to resolve the nature of aboriginal people rights in Canada Through a brief historical approach of the courts and recent decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada, this paper intends to demonstrate how these decisions have substantially changed the landscape of aboriginal and treaty rights. This paper will also concentrate on issues of Treaty rights, aboriginal rights and title, reserved lands, harvesting rights, as well as self-government to further illustrate...
  • Sentencing Circle As The Alternative To Incarceration
    2,945 words
    Through the many inquires which have been made over the past decades in to the Canadian justice system (Brizinski, 1993,395) it has over and over again been stated that the present justice system has and is failing Aboriginal people. It is not suited for their cultural needs and does nothing to rehabilitate offenders but rather does the offender more harm then good. It does not address the underlying conditions causing criminal behavior or in assessing what specific needs must be addressed to re...
  • Of The Aborigine Groups
    3,028 words
    Until this paper, I never even knew there was such a word as "Aborigine" let alone it being a race of people dating back to the prehistoric times. I thought that all Australians were of Anglo decent, but I was wrong about that assumption. The Aborigines were the first and only inhabitants of Australia, until the late 18th century when European settlers came. Because of the Europeans, the Aborigines lives would change drastically. In this paper, I am going to talk about the Aborigines, describing...
  • Social Problems In Many Aboriginal Communities
    2,929 words
    The Aboriginal peoples of Canada were the first ones to occupy the land and establish lives for themselves and they were the sole inhabitants for many years before European contact. Aboriginal people are distinguished from others by their culture, language and legal status and there are over six hundred recognized bands in the country. Status Indians are registered under the Indian Act and belong to a band that has signed a treaty or other federal government document. Non-Status Indians identify...
  • Reuniting Of Meehan With Her Birth Mother
    778 words
    The Generations of Aboriginal people who were stolen from their families between 1910 and 1970 make up a group of people who are not only rejected from white society as being inferior and socially unacceptable, but who are also shunned by their indigenous kinsmen for much the same reasons. The article "A passage home", by Elizabeth Scott of 'Alive' magazine, describes the struggle of one such person, Donna Meehan. Meehan was a "stolen child". As a young child, she was taken away from her Aborigi...
  • Exclusion Of The Aborigines From Tasmania
    297 words
    b London, 1767; d Hobart, Tasmania, 11 July 1851). English painter, printmaker and sculptor, active in Australia. In London he exhibited six portraits at the Royal Academy (1817-23) and three genre paintings at the British Institution and engraved two colour plates for George Morland, before moving to Hobart, Tasmania, in 1832. At the Hobart Mechanics' Institute in 1833 he delivered the first lecture in Australia on the subject of painting. In 1849 he contributed the paper 'The School of Athens ...
  • Item Of Graffiti Racist To Aboriginals
    468 words
    Blacky is racist. Do you agree? Gary Black, or Blacky, was a fair and compassionate young man with strength. He never prejudiced anyone and even befriended an Aboriginal teenager, even though strong racism against Aboriginals was common in the area he lived in. Suggesting that Blacky is racist against Aboriginals, therefore, is suggesting that John Howard detests Americans. Blacky did not think that one race is superior to another, especially between whites and Aboriginals, and was certainly not...
  • Lives Of Five Aboriginal Children
    1,878 words
    The tragedy of the "stolen generation" Stolen, directed by Wesley Enoch, written by Jane Harrison By Gabriela Not aras 25 July 2000 Use this version to print Stolen is an honest and compassionate work that traces the lives of five Aboriginal children removed from their families in the 1960's under official Australian government policy. Written by Jane Harrison, the play dramatists the fear, persecution and desolation felt by the children and their families, and demonstrates the ongoing physical ...
  • Respect For The Non White Community
    1,218 words
    In what different ways was racial prejudice at work in the story? Compare these instances with your own beliefs, ideas and experiences of racial prejudice. In the story of The Divine Wind, Garry Disher explores the complexities of racial prejudice, which was one of the main themes of the novel. Prejudice is 'a pre-conceived opinion'; which is simply discrimination, and judging people before knowing them. Racial prejudice is judging people on their race, (e.g. The Aboriginals). During the time in...

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