Colonisation, Impacts on First Nations Peoples in Australia - Year 9 Big Ideas

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Colonisation, Impacts on First Nations Peoples in Australia - Year 9 Big Ideas

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have a shared history of colonisation and forced removal of their children. To be culturally competent, we must acknowledge and tell the truth about Australian history and its ongoing impact for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, and we should understand how the past continues to shape lives today.

Before colonisation, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people lived in small family groups linked into larger language groups with distinct territorial boundaries. These groups had complex kinship systems and rules for social interaction; they had roles relating to law, education, spiritual development and resource management; they had language, ceremonies, customs and traditions and extensive knowledge of their environment. In other words, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures were strong and well developed, Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander communities were self-determining, and Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander children were nurtured and protected.

European colonisation had a devastating impact on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and cultures. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were subjected to a range of injustices, including mass killings or being displaced from their traditional lands and relocated on missions and reserves in the name of protection. Cultural practices were denied, and subsequently many were lost. For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, colonisation meant massacre, violence, disease and loss.

Victorian Public Sector Commission 2024, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and history, VPSC, 12 January, retrieved 18 April, https://vpsc.vic.gov.au/workforce-programs/aboriginal-cultural-capability-toolkit/aboriginal-culture-and-history/ 

Essay Task Document

Click here to access the essay task document. You are to research the immediate impacts of British colonisation of Australia on First Nations peoples in preparation for writing an in-class essay.


Invasion

To fully understand the impacts of colonisation on the First Nations people of Australia, you need first to be aware of both the multiple perspectives in play, and also the European historical context of the "Age of Discovery".

History of Invasion
Doctrine
Exploration
Terra Nullius
First Fleet

History of Invasion

Doctrine of Discovery

In 1493, Pope Alexander VI issued a decree titled the Doctrine of Discovery, or the Discovery Doctrine and later also known as The Law of Nations, which stated that any lands not discovered by Christians, or rather where no Christians lived, were considered as uninhabited and legally available to be claimed by Christians as their own. According to the Church, and European law, this gave Christians the right to control that land and any non-Christian people who lived there, and to exploit the land's resources as they saw fit, as long as they worked to spread Christianity... by any means necessary.

Early European Exploration

Europeans first encountered Australia in 1606, when Dutch navigators landed at Cape York. Spanish ships also sailed through the Torres Strait Islands later that same year. Numerous other Dutch, French and then British navigators ventured to Australia over the next 150 years, including James Cook, who in 1770 claimed possession of the East coast of Australia in the name of the British Empire.

Terra Nullius

Terra nullius, meaning land belonging to no-one, was the legal concept used by the British government to justify the settlement of Australia, based on the "right" originally granted by the Doctrine of Discovery and ingrained into British thought and culture due to the growth of the Empire. In January 1788 the First Fleet landed near the border between the Eora and Dharawal lands at Botany Bay, before moving on to Port Jackson, now Sydney, at the centre of Eora country.

Doctrine

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Terra Nullius

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Specific Impacts of Colonisation

European Settlement
Conflict
Massacres
Disease
Loss of Land
Loss of Culture
Native Police

European Settlement

European Settlement

European settlement of Australia started with the arrival of the First Fleet in the British colony of New South Wales in 1788, followed in 1793 by the first free settlers. European settlement quickly expanded into Tasmania, South Australia, Queensland and Victoria.

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Conflict

Conflict

The Indigenous peoples of Australia suffered greatly during this time, with some estimates suggesting at least 20,000 Aboriginal deaths from violence during the expansion of the European frontier. In contrast, between 2,000-2,500 settler deaths were the result of frontier conflict during the same period. This eventually escalated into the Australian Frontier Wars in the period between 1800 and the 1930s, including the 1830s conflicts in Western Australia, the Black War in Tasmania, a number of massacres of Aboriginal Australians and more.

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Massacres

Massacres

Between 1776 and 1930 there were 421 massacres of First Nations people in Australia, killing 11,257 Australian aboriginals. These numbers show only those killings for which there is substantial evidence, meaning that the actual number is likely significantly higher.

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Disease

Disease

European introduced diseases, such as smallpox, influenza, measles, tuberculosis and sexually transmitted diseases, ravaged the Indigenous populations of the Australian continent. Australian Aboriginals had no immune resistance to these diseases.

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Loss of Land

Loss of Land

The concept of Country is hugely important and entirely central to the culture of all indigenous Nations of Australia. Loss, or dispossession, of their land therefore amounted to no less than the active dispossession of culture and way of life for all First Nations peoples. The phrase "always was, always will be" refers to the fact that native land has always been and will always belong to Australian aboriginals.

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Loss of Culture

Loss of Culture and Language

Along with dispossession of Country, the First Nations people of Australia suffered a prolonged and traumatic campaign aimed at dispossessing them of their cultures and languages, so that they could be completely assimilated into the British Empire.

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Native Police

Native Police

The Native Police Force was a mechanism for further control and indoctrination of Australian aboriginals. The Native Police were formed in at least three states, Victoria, New South Wales, and Queensland, and were in service during the 1840s and 1850s. 

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