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Q: What is the affect of the protection policy to the aboriginal people?
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Was aboriginals treated poorly during the great depression?

1930's - during the 1930s the plight of Aboriginal Australians became worse. During the Depression many lost their family endowment payments, unemployed were refused access to relief work. Aboriginal Protection Board forced them back onto reserves, which became overcrowded.- policy of removing children from their families to aid assimilation gained momentum. This issue later became known as the "stolen generations'. Many of these children suffered abuse in their foster homes or in the institutions that they were placed.Assimilation was government policy - this meant that Aboriginal people were forced to give up their culture and traditions and adopt mainstream Australians values and culture.


What is the most influential event that led to the HHS Policy for Protection of Human Research Subjects?

The syphilis study at Tuskegee was the influential event that led to the HHS Policy for Protection of Human Subjects.


What is the definition of demand side policy?

Policies designed to affect aggregate demand: fiscal policy and monetary policy.


What was the Aboriginal Assimilation Policy?

The aboriginal Assimilation Policy focussed on assimilating Aborigines into white society, and expecting the Aborigines to embrace white beliefs and values. The Assimilation policy, which was introduced in the 1950s (and actively pursued by the Federal Minister for territories, Paul Hasluck, from 1951 onwards), forced Aborigines off the reserves where they at least were protected to some degree (this was the policy of protectionism), and into the cities where they had to adopt White Australia values to survive. It was expected that such integration would improve their way of life. However, the Assimilation Policy did not improve conditions for the Aborigines, and they were denied the most basic of rights - that of being accepted as Australian citizens unless they applied for a "certificate". Applying for a certificate meant denying one's aboriginal heritage and severing all ties with one's own indigenous community.


What was the impact of government policy on Native Americans?

You are asking the wrong question. It should be how did American policy affect Native Americans.

Related questions

How did changes in government policy in the 20th century affect the rights and freedoms of aboriginal people?

1901


What was the policy of integration and How was it different to assimilation?

The policy of integration allowed Aboriginal people to practice their culture and religion while living amongst people of other cultures and religions. Assimilation on the other hand was a policy to absorb Aboriginal people into white society.


Changes in government policy towards aboriginal people over time?

research it you head


What is the Assimilation policy aboriginals?

Integration was a policy which said Aboriginal people could continue their cultural beliefs and live alongside others of different cultures. the Integration policy was introduced, supposedly to give Aboriginal people more control over their lives and society.


What is the protecting policy?

The Aboriginal Protection Policy was a policy set up in Australia to help "protect" aboriginals. It was felt that Aboriginals were a dying race in Australia and so they needed to be treated like children. The act of treating them like children is referred to as paternalism. This policy of Protection followed on from Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, it was felt that they had not evolved up to the standard of the white Australians. Under this policy Aboriginals were placed on "reserves" where they were to eat, stay and sleep. They had to gain permission to leave the reserve at any point. Children were also placed in Missions, where the church taught Aboriginal children


What is the Aboriginal Protection Policy?

The Aborigines Protection Board reffers to the people in charge of implementing the legislation and laws introduced by the Aborigines Protection Act 1909. This act enabled the board the power to taken Aboriginal children away from their familys and place them in institutions (on missions, reserves and stations) under the guise of 'protection' that is the British government was 'protecting' these children from their families, culture, heritage, lifestyle etc. The act was amended in 1915, the amendments allowed for even more control over the Aboriginal population. The Board no longer needed parental consent to remove children, they were free to come at any time and forcable remove children from their families. The removal of children was not the only thing that the Board (though it was one that had a very large and lasting legacy in the form of many displaced people who retain the scars of a terrorised past, ie 'The Stolen Generation') the board did, they had controll over many other aspects of Aboriginal peoples lives, they controlled peoples wages, marrage, freedom of movement and so on.


How did the white Australia policy affect aboriginal australians or Tasmania aborigines?

It Kept Australia a basicaly European Christian culture until the present day.


Government policy on removal between the years 1920-1960?

The governments policy was to eliminate the aboriginal race by making aboriginal children marry white Australians when they get older. Due to this they thought that the aboriginal "gene" would eventually die out.


What country has the best child protection policy?

germany, comes up as having the best child protection policy, why


The defining characteristics of a public policy are that it must affect many people and be created through a political process.?

The defining characteristics of a public policy are that it must affect many people and be created through a political process to be accepted as legitimate. (


When the government says sorry what is it saying sorry for?

The government is saying sorry to the aboriginal people (on behalf of) previous governments that had a policy of removing a lot of aboriginal babies and young children from their home settlements to be relocated with white Australian families for raising (as white children).


Was aboriginals treated poorly during the great depression?

1930's - during the 1930s the plight of Aboriginal Australians became worse. During the Depression many lost their family endowment payments, unemployed were refused access to relief work. Aboriginal Protection Board forced them back onto reserves, which became overcrowded.- policy of removing children from their families to aid assimilation gained momentum. This issue later became known as the "stolen generations'. Many of these children suffered abuse in their foster homes or in the institutions that they were placed.Assimilation was government policy - this meant that Aboriginal people were forced to give up their culture and traditions and adopt mainstream Australians values and culture.