Australia
World Atlas
Country Overview
Targeted Groups | Perpetrators | Alert Status | Genocide Stage(s) |
---|---|---|---|
|
| Watch | Stage 3: Discrimination |
Details
In 1788, the British began to colonize Australia, disrupting the lives and culture of the Aboriginal people. The colonizers brought disease--smallpox--with them and took the indigenous land and food sources. There was also a common practice of raping indigenous women and capturing many for slavery. Later, there was a large campaign for assimilation in which children were separated from their families. The Frontier Wars and Genocide was a movement to kill off the indigenous resistance. Reports have stated that 40,000-65,000 indigenous people were killed for over a century. Some are even higher. Over the decades, the Aboriginal people faced racist policies--similar to Jim Crow-era laws and became impoverished. Reform began in the late sixties, but, today, indigenous groups are still fighting policies that disregard their cultural heritage and their history.
Resources
Staying strong: Responding to racism
Australia: Aboriginal peoples
Discrimination against Indigenous Australians has risen dramatically, survey finds