Aboriginal Embassy, 1972
Abstract
The Aboriginal Embassy of 1972 is discussed in
the thesis as a climax to changes in Aboriginal political
consciousness and government policy over the decade which
preceded its nine months of protest activity. The adoption of
creative, non-violent methods of protest by the Embassy is
detailed in contrast with other options considered during the
period.
Although the question of the appropriate means
of protest, and the efficacy of protest action in a democracy are
the essential questions addressed by the thesis, an analysis of the
ideology of land rights is a secondary area of investigation. The
demand for land rights is viewed here as a relatively non-specific,
yet powerful, set of ideas which assumed an antithetical position
to the government's policy of assimilation.
Despite failure to achieve many of its aims, the
Embassy is viewed as successful in having placed the land rights
issue on the agenda of the major Australian political parties. The
Embassy, it is concluded, is an example of the successful use of
symbolic protest, and the relative accomplishment of an
indigenous minority in attracting the attention of, and demanding
redress from, the dominant culture.
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