On average their health is poorer than that of many white people this is the result ofthe original stock that they come from having a poor resistance to the illnesses and the diet that the white man has introduced. in the outback there is also a problem with substance abuse effecting not only the abuser but in some cases the unborn. add to this that unemployment is very high giving many of the people nothing to do or look forward to and an extremely poor health service and you end up with a people that has a poor health record.
Well, it benfited the aboriginal peoples because then they did it.
what tools did the aboriginal people use to build their homes
They are called First Nations peoples.
Three countries that have indigenous or aboriginal peoples are Australia, Canada, and the United States. In Australia, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are the original inhabitants. Canada has First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples, and in the United States, there are various Native American tribes and Alaska Native peoples.
The Inuit people
The Aboriginal peoples of the African country Kenya, live in igloos.
Account for the change in government policy towards aboriginal peoples over time.
identify two communication issues that exist when communicating with aboriginal and Torres strait islander peoples
by recognising them as a aboriginal people of Canada and giving them aboriginal rights. These aboriginal rights protect the activities, practice, or traditions that are integral to the distinctive culture of the aboriginal peoples
Australia's indigenous people are properly known as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.
The Indian Act is a legal document and a set of laws that was first passed by the Canadian Government in 1876 and is still enforced today. This set of laws gave the government complete control over the lives of Aboriginal peoples. Historically, control over Aboriginals had been a British responsibility, which was then passed to Canada. Once the fur trade ended, Aboriginal peoples had no role to play, and they became a barrier to government plans for the settlement of western Canada. The Government called it the Indian problem. The government responded to this "problem" by creating the Indian Act which had to objectives: 1. Control over Aboriginal peoples. Aboriginal peoples couldn't leave reserves, own land, or do business without permission. 2. Assimilation. Eventually Aboriginal peoples were to enfranchise and receive all the benefits of any other Canadian).The Indian Act:placed complete control over Aboriginal politics, culture, education, and personal lives in the hands of the federal governmentestablished rules that dictated who was Indian and who was not (status/non-status)located all financial control of Aboriginal peoples with the federal governmentdid not allow Aboriginal people to own landforced a new form of education on Aboriginal peoplesdid not allow aboriginal people to vote in a federal election until 1960Some Pro'sThe Indian Act is the only government document to recognize Aboriginal peoples. Without it, aboriginal peoples would not have any special status. It allows for certain rights including health services, education, subsidized housing and exemption from certain taxes but all in exchange for land and other rights. Some amendments have been made to the Indian Act including lifting of the ban on ceremonies and fundraising, permission to vote, Bill C-31 to re-establish some Aboriginal peoples' status.
How does culture shock impact on the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people