Defining Australian Citizenship Selected Documents

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1995-06-13
Publisher(s): Melbourne University Press
List Price: $34.19

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Summary

During our first century as a nation, citizenship—for a majority of Australians—has meant the enjoyment of progressive political, social, economic and legal rights. Yet many groups in our society have been denied the usual benefits of citizenship, including; the vote; equality before the law; freedom of speech, religion and movement; health care; education and a minimum wage.
Unlike that of the United States of America, Australia's constitution provides no definition of the rights and obligations of its citizens. John Chesterman and Brian Galligan have searched Commonwealth and State legislation, parliamentary debates, law reports, official correspondence, United Nations conventions and works of historical scholarship, and provide surprising evidence to show that the concept of citizenship in Australia is an elusive but crucial one.
It pervades Australian politics, and has determined the course of individual lives in many different areas, including female suffrage, the White Australia Policy, compulsory voting, Aboriginal rights, equal pay, sex discrimination, wartime internment and Menzies' attempt to ban the Communist Party.
In Defining Australian Citizenship they reveal, for the first time, the complexity of Australian legislation as it has tried, over the years, to accommodate changing ideas about exactly what citizenship entails and who is, or is not, eligible for it.

Author Biography

Dr John Chesterman is a Research Fellow in the School of Indigenous Australian Studies at James Cook University. He is the author of Poverty Law and Social Change: The Story of the Fitzroy Legal Service and co-author, with Brian Galligan, of Citizens Without Rights: Aborigines and Australian Citizenship.

Professor Brian Galligan is Director of the Centre for Public Policy at the University of Melbourne. His books include Politics of the High Court and A Federal Republic.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ix
List of Documents
xi
Introduction 1(20)
Part I Formal Citizenship
Citizens by Birth
21(20)
New Citizens
41(48)
Part II Substantive Citizenship
The Vote
89(31)
Free Speech
120(17)
Freedom of Religion
137(13)
Freedom to Move
150(17)
Equal Protection of the Law
167(25)
Free Basic Health Care
192(16)
A Minimum Wage
208(21)
Social Security
229(14)
Education
243(14)
Part III Indigenous Citizenship
Indigenous Rights
257(13)
Select Bibliography 270(4)
Index 274

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