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History of Australia (1945–present)

The history of Australia since 1945 has seen long periods of economic prosperity and the introduction of an expanded and multi-ethnic immigration program, which has coincided with moves away from Britain in political, social and cultural terms and towards increasing engagement with the United States and Asia.

End of the 1940s edit

 
H V Evatt (left) and Ben Chifley (middle) with Clement Attlee (right) at the Dominion and British Leaders Conference, London, 1946

In 1944, the Liberal Party of Australia was formed, with Robert Menzies as its founding leader. The party would come to dominate the early decades of the post-war period. Outlining his vision for a new political movement in 1944, Menzies said:

"…[W]hat we must look for, and it is a matter of desperate importance to our society, is a true revival of liberal thought which will work for social justice and security, for national power and national progress, and for the full development of the individual citizen, though not through the dull and deadening process of socialism.[1]

In April 1945, Prime Minister John Curtin despatched an Australian delegation which included attorney-general and minister for external affairs H V Evatt to discuss formation of the United Nations. Australia played a significant mediatory role in these early years of the United Nations, successfully lobbying for an increased role for smaller and middle-ranking nations and a stronger commitment to employment rights into the U.N. Charter. Evatt was elected president of the third session of the United Nations General Assembly (September 1948 to May 1949).[2]

When Labor Prime Minister John Curtin passed away in July 1945. Frank Forde served as Prime Minister from 6–13 July, before the party elected Ben Chifley as Curtin's successor.[3] Chifley, a former railway engine driver, won the 1946 election. His government introduced national projects, including the Snowy Mountains Scheme and an assisted immigration program and pursued centralist economic policies – making the Commonwealth the collector of income tax, and seeking to nationalise the private banks. At the conference of the New South Wales Labor Party in June 1949, Chifely sought to define the labour movement as having:[4]

[A] great objective – the light on the hill – which we aim to reach by working for the betterment of mankind... [Labor would] bring something better to the people, better standards of living, greater happiness to the mass of the people’.

With an increasingly uncertain economic outlook, after his attempt to nationalise the banks and the coal strike by the Communist-dominated Miners Federation, Chifley lost office at the 1949 federal election to Menzies' newly established Liberal Party, in coalition with the Country Party.[5]

Immigration and the post-war boom edit

 
Sir Robert Menzies, founder of the Liberal Party of Australia and Prime Minister of Australia 1939–41 (UAP) and 1949–66

After World War II, Australia launched a massive immigration program, believing that having narrowly avoided a Japanese invasion, Australia must "populate or perish." As Prime Minister Ben Chifley would later declare, "a powerful enemy looked hungrily toward Australia. In tomorrow's gun flash that threat could come again. We must populate Australia as rapidly as we can before someone else decides to populate it for us."[6] Hundreds of thousands of displaced Europeans, including for the first time large numbers of Jews, migrated to Australia. More than two million people immigrated to Australia from Europe during the 20 years after the end of the war.

From the outset, it was intended that the bulk of these immigrants should be mainly from the British Isles, and that the post-war immigration scheme would preserve the British character of Australian society. Although Great Britain remained the predominant source of immigrants, the pool of source countries was expanded to include Continental European countries in order to meet Australia's ambitious immigration targets. From the late 1940s onwards, Australia received significant waves of people from countries such as Greece, Italy, Malta, Germany, Yugoslavia and the Netherlands. Australia actively sought these immigrants, with the government assisting many of them and they found work due to an expanding economy and major infrastructure projects.[7]

The Australian economy stood in sharp contrast to war-ravaged Europe, and newly arrived migrants found employment in a booming manufacturing industry and government assisted programs such as the Snowy Mountains Scheme. This hydroelectricity and irrigation complex in south-east Australia consisted of sixteen major dams and seven power stations constructed between 1949 and 1974. It remains the largest engineering project undertaken in Australia. Necessitating the employment of 100,000 people from over 30 countries, to many it denotes the birth of multicultural Australia.[7]

In 1949 the 1941–1949 Labor government (led by Ben Chifley after John Curtin's death in 1945) was defeated by a LiberalNational Party Coalition government headed by Menzies. Politically, the Menzies government and the Liberal Party of Australia dominated much of the immediate post-war era, defeating the Chifley government in 1949, in part over a Labor proposal to nationalise banks[8] and following a crippling coal strike influenced by the Australian Communist Party. Menzies became the country's longest-serving Prime Minister and the Liberal party, in coalition with the rural based Country Party, won every federal election until 1972.

As in the United States in the early 1950s, allegations of communist influence in society saw tensions emerge in politics. Refugees from Soviet dominated Eastern Europe immigrated to Australia, while to Australia's north, Mao Zedong won the Chinese civil war in 1949 and in June 1950, Communist North Korea invaded South Korea. The Menzies government responded to a United States led United Nations Security Council request for military aid for South Korea and diverted forces from occupied Japan to begin Australia's involvement in the Korean War. After fighting to a bitter standstill, the UN and North Korea signed a ceasefire agreement in July 1953. Australian forces had participated in such major battles as Kapyong and Maryang San. Seventeen thousand Australians had served and casualties amounted to more than 1,500, of whom 339 were killed.[9]

 
Queen Elizabeth II inspecting sheep at Wagga Wagga on her 1954 Royal Tour. Huge crowds met the Royal party across Australia.
 
Postwar migrants arriving in Australia in 1954

During the course of the Korean War, the Menzies government attempted to ban the Communist Party of Australia, first by legislation in 1950 and later by referendum, in 1951.[10] While both attempts were unsuccessful, further international events such as the defection of minor Soviet Embassy official Vladimir Petrov, added to a sense of impending threat that politically favoured Menzies’ Liberal-CP government, as the Labor Party pushed centralist economics and split over concerns about the influence of the Communist Party over the Trade Union movement, resulting in a bitter split in 1955 and the emergence of the breakaway Democratic Labor Party (DLP). The DLP remained an influential political force, often holding the balance of power in the Senate, until 1974; its preferences supported the Liberal and Country Party.[11] The Labor party was led by H.V. Evatt after Chifley's death in 1951. Evatt retired in 1960, and Arthur Calwell succeeded him as leader, with a young Gough Whitlam as his deputy.[12]

Menzies presided over a period of sustained economic boom and the beginnings of sweeping social change – with the arrivals of rock and roll music and television in the 1950s. In 1956, television in Australia began broadcasting, Melbourne hosted the Olympics and, for the first time, performing artist Barry Humphries performed the character of Edna Everage as a parody of a house-proud housewife of staid 1950s Melbourne suburbia (the character only later morphed into a critique of self-obsessed celebrity culture). It was the first of many of his satirical stage and screen creations based around quirky Australian characters.

In 1958, Australian country music singer Slim Dusty, who would become the musical embodiment of rural Australia, had Australia's first international music chart hit with his bush ballad "Pub With No Beer",[13] while rock and roller Johnny O'Keefe's Wild One became the first local recording to reach the national charts,[14] peaking at #20.[15][16] Before sleeping through the 1960s Australian cinema produced little of its own content in the 1950s, but British and Hollywood studios produced a string of successful epics from Australian literature, featuring home grown stars Chips Rafferty and Peter Finch.

Menzies remained a staunch supporter of links to the monarchy and British Commonwealth and formalised an alliance with the United States, but also launched post-war trade with Japan, beginning a growth of Australian exports of coal, iron ore and mineral resources that would steadily climb until Japan became Australia's largest trading partner.[17]

In the early 1950s, the Menzies government saw Australia as part of a "triple alliance", in concert with both the US and traditional ally Britain.[18] At first, "the Australian leadership opted for a consistently pro-British line in diplomacy", while at the same time looking for opportunities to involve the US in South East Asia.[19] Thus, other than the Korean War, the government also committed military forces to the Malayan Emergency and hosted British nuclear tests after 1952.[20] Australia was also the only Commonwealth country to offer support to the British during the Suez Crisis.[21]

Menzies oversaw an effusive welcome to Queen Elizabeth II on the first visit to Australia by a reigning monarch, in 1954. However, as British influence declined in South East Asia, the US alliance came to have greater significance for Australian leaders and the Australian economy. British investment in Australia remained significant until the late 1970s, but trade with Britain declined through the 1950s and 1960s. In the late 1950s the Australian Army began to re-equip using US military equipment. In 1962, the US established a naval communications station at North West Cape, the first of several built over the next decade.[22][23] Most significantly, in 1962, Australian Army advisors were sent to help train South Vietnamese forces, in a developing conflict the British had no part in.

The ANZUS security treaty, which had been signed in 1951, had its origins in Australia's and New Zealand's fears of a rearmed Japan, but found new impetus through anti-communism. Its obligations on the US, Australia and New Zealand are vague, but its influence on Australian foreign policy thinking, at times significant.[24] The SEATO treaty, signed only three years later, clearly demonstrated Australia's position as a US ally in the emerging cold war. On 26 November 1967, Australia became the seventh nation to put a satellite into Earth orbit, launching WRESAT from Woomera.

When Menzies retired in January 1966, he was replaced as Liberal leader and Prime Minister by Harold Holt. The Holt government increased Australian commitment to the growing War in Vietnam; oversaw conversion to decimal currency and faced Britain's withdrawal from Asia by visiting and hosting many Asian leaders and by expanding ties to the United States, hosting the first visit to Australia by an American president, his friend Lyndon Johnson. Significantly, Holt's government introduced the Migration Act 1966, which effectively dismantled the vestigial mechanisms of the White Australia Policy and increased access to non-European migrants, including refugees fleeing the Vietnam War. Holt also called the 1967 Referendum which removed the discriminatory clause in the Australian Constitution which excluded Aboriginal Australians from being counted in the census – the referendum was one of the few to be overwhelmingly endorsed by the Australian electorate (over 90% voted 'yes').[25]

Holt won the 1967 election with the largest parliamentary majority in 65 years, but Holt drowned while swimming at a surf beach in December 1967 and was replaced by John Gorton (1968–1971). The Gorton government began winding down Australia's commitment to Vietnam, increased funding for the arts, standardised rates of pay between the men and women and continued moving Australian trade closer to Asia. The Liberals suffered a decline in voter support at the 1969 election and internal party division saw Gorton replaced by William McMahon (1971–1972) and, facing a reinvigorated Australian Labor Party led by Gough Whitlam, the Liberals entered their final stretch in office of a record 23 straight years period.[26]

1960s and 1970s: The "Australian New Wave" edit

 
"Australian to the bootheels": Prime Minister John Gorton established government support for Australian cinema.
 
The Sydney Opera House was officially opened in 1973.

From the mid-1960s, evidence of a new and more independent sense of national pride and identity began to emerge in Australia. In the early 1960s, the National Trust of Australia began to be active in preserving Australia's natural, cultural and historic heritage. Australian TV, while always dependent on US and British imports, saw locally made dramas and comedies appear, and programs such as Homicide developed strong local loyalty while Skippy the Bush Kangaroo became a global phenomenon. Liberal Prime Minister John Gorton, a battle scarred former fighter pilot, described himself as "Australian to the bootheels" and the Gorton government established the Australian Council for the Arts, the Australian Film Development Corporation and the National Film and Television Training School.[26]

The late 1960s and early 1970s are often associated with a flowering of Australian culture. Indigenous Australians achieved greater rights, immigration restrictions and censorship laws were swept aside, theatre and opera companies were established across the country, and Australian rock music blossomed. The 1971 Springbok rugby tour was influential in raising awareness of Aboriginal injustice in Australia and also led Australia to become the first Western nation to cut sporting ties with South Africa.[citation needed] In a significant move against South Africa's apartheid regime, many Australians (including Wallabies) demonstrated against tours by the racially selected South African team.[27] The Australian media tycoon Kerry Packer altered the traditionalist ethos of the game of cricket in the 1970s, inventing World Series Cricket from which have evolved many aspects of the various modern international forms of the game.

The iconic Sydney Opera House finally opened in 1973 after numerous delays. In the same year, Patrick White became the first Australian to win a Nobel Prize for Literature.[28] Australian History had begun to appear on school curriculums by the 1970s[29] and from the early 1970s, the Australian cinema began to produce the Australian New Wave of feature films based on uniquely Australian themes. Film funding began under the Gorton government, but it was the South Australian Film Corporation that took the lead in supporting filmmaking and among their great successes were quintessential Australian films Sunday Too Far Away (1974) Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975), Breaker Morant (1980) and Gallipoli (1981). The national funding body, the Australian Film Commission, was established in 1975.

Significant changes also occurred to Australia's censorship laws after the new Liberal Minister for Customs and Excise, Don Chipp, was appointed in 1969. In 1968, Barry Humphries and Nicholas Garland's cartoon book featuring the larrikin character Barry McKenzie was banned. Yet only a few years later, the book had been made as a film, partly with the support of government funding.[30] Anne Pender suggests that the Barry Mckenzie character both celebrated and parodied Australian nationalism. Historian Richard White also argues that "while many of the plays, novels and films produced in the 1970s were intensely critical of aspects of Australian life, they were absorbed by the ‘new nationalism’ and applauded for their Australianness."[31]

Australia and the Vietnam War edit

 
Personnel and aircraft of RAAF Transport Flight Vietnam arrive in South Vietnam in August 1964

The Menzies government despatched the first small contingent of Australian military training personnel to aid South Vietnam in 1962, so beginning Australia's decade long involvement in the Vietnam War. Ngô Đình Diệm, the leader of the government in South Vietnam, had requested security assistance from the US and its allies. The Australian government supported the commitment as part of global effort to stem the spread of communism in Europe and Asia.

 
Pháp Hoa Temple, a Vietnamese Buddhist temple in Adelaide. Thousands of Vietnamese refugees were resettled in Australia following the communist victory in Vietnam.

Initially popular, Australia's participation in Vietnam, and particularly the use of conscription, later became politically contentious and saw massive protests, though they were for the most part peaceful. The United States launched a major escalation of the war in 1965 and the Holt government which succeeded Menzies, increased Australia's military commitment to the conflict. Holt won a massive majority in the 1967 Election.[25] By 1969 however, anti-war protests were gathering momentum and opposition to conscription was growing, with more people believing the war could not be won. The Gorton government (returned with a reduced majority at the 1969 Election) ceased to replace Australian personnel from 1970.[32] There were large Moratorium marches in 1970 and 1971 and Australia's troop commitment continued to wind down through 1971 with the last battalion leaving Nui Dat in November. The election of the Whitlam government in 1972 brought Australia's small remaining involvement in the war to an official close in June 1973 with the withdrawal of the last platoon guarding the Australian Embassy in Saigon. Australian forces were largely based at Nui Dat, Phước Tuy Province, and participated in such notable battles as the Battle of Long Tan against the Viet Cong in 1966 and defending against the 1968 Tet Offensive. Almost 60,000 Australians had served in Vietnam and 521 had died as a result of the war. As the war became unpopular, protestors and conscienscious objectors became prominent and soldiers often met a hostile reception on their return home in the later stages of the conflict.[33]

In early 1975 the communists launched a major offensive resulting in the fall of Saigon on 30 April. The Royal Australian Airforce assisted in final humanitarian evacuations.[33] In the aftermath of the communist victory, Australia assisted in re-settlement of Vietnamese refugees, with thousands making their way to Australia through the 1970s and 1980s.[34]

Papua New Guinea and Nauru independence edit

Australia had administered Papua New Guinea and Nauru for much of the 20th century. British New Guinea (Papua) had passed to Australia in 1906. German New Guinea was captured by Australia during the First World War, becoming a League of Nations mandate after the war. Following the bitter New Guinea campaign of World War II which saw occupation of half the island by Imperial Japan, the Territory of Papua and New Guinea was established by an administrative union between the Australian-administered Territory of Papua and Territory of New Guinea in 1949. Under Liberal Minister for External Territories Andrew Peacock, Papua and New Guinea adopted self-government in 1972 and on 15 September 1975, during the term of the Whitlam government in Australia, the Territory became the independent nation of Papua New Guinea.[35][36]

Australia had captured the island of Nauru from the German Empire in 1914. After Japanese occupation during World War II, it became a UN Trust Territory under Australia and remained so until achieving independence in 1968. In 1989 Nauru sued Australia in the International Court of Justice in The Hague for damages caused by mining. Australia settled the case out of court agreeing to a lump sum settlement of A$107 million and an annual stipend of the equivalent of A$2.5 million toward environmental rehabilitation.[37]

Whitlam, Fraser and the dismissal edit

 
Gough Whitlam during the 1972 federal election.

Elected in December 1972 after 23 years in opposition, Labor won office under Gough Whitlam and introduced a significant program of social change and reform. Whitlam said before the election: "our program has three great aims. They are – to promote equality; to involve the people of Australia in … decision making…; and to liberate the talents and uplift the horizons of the Australian people."[38]

Whitlam's actions were immediate and dramatic. Within a few weeks the last milichlentary advisors in Vietnam were recalled, and national service ended. The People's Republic of China was recognised (Whitlam had visited China while Opposition Leader in 1971) and the embassy in Taiwan closed.[39][40] Over the next few years, university fees were abolished and a national health care scheme established. Significant changes were made to school funding, something Whitlam regarded as "the most enduring single achievement" of his government.[41] Divorce and family law was liberalised.

Whitlam's radical and imperious style eventually alienated many voters, and some of the state governments were openly hostile to his government. As it did not control the senate, much of its legislation was rejected or amended. The Queensland Country Party government of Joh Bjelke-Petersen had particularly bad relations with the Federal government. Even after it was re-elected at elections in May 1974, the Senate remained an obstacle to its political agenda. At the only joint sitting of parliament, in August 1974, six keys pieces of legislation wering passed.

 
Government House, Canberra, also known as "Yarralumla". It was here that Sir John Kerr dismissed Gough Whitlam as Prime Minister of Australia on 11 November 1975 — the culmination of the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis.

In 1974, Whitlam selected John Kerr, a former member of the Labor Party and presiding Chief Justice of New South Wales to serve as Governor-General. The Whitlam government was re-elected with a decreased majority in the lower house in the 1974 Election. In 1974–75 the government thought about borrowing US$4 billion in foreign loans. Minister Rex Connor conducted secret discussions with a loan broker from Pakistan, and the Treasurer, Jim Cairns, misled parliament over the issue.[42] Arguing the government was incompetent following the Loans affair, the opposition Liberal-Country Party Coalition delayed passage of the government's money bills in the Senate, until the government would promise a new election. Whitlam refused, Malcolm Fraser, leader of the Opposition insisted. The deadlock came to an end when the Whitlam government was dismissed by the Governor-General, John Kerr on 11 November 1975 and Fraser was installed as caretaker Prime Minister, pending an election. The "reserve powers" granted to the Governor General by the Australian Constitution, had allowed an elected government to be dismissed without warning by a representative of the Monarch.[43]

At elections held in late 1975, Malcolm Fraser and the Coalition were elected in a landslide victory.[citation needed]

 
Malcolm Fraser and U.S. President Jimmy Carter (1977)

The Fraser government won two subsequent elections. Fraser maintained some of the social reforms of the Whitlam era, while seeking increased fiscal restraint. His government included the first Aboriginal federal parliamentarian, Neville Bonner, and in 1976, Parliament passed the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1976, which, while limited to the Northern Territory, affirmed "inalienable" freehold title to some traditional lands. Fraser established the multicultural broadcaster SBS, welcomed Vietnamese boat people refugees, opposed minority white rule in Apartheid South Africa and Rhodesia and opposed Soviet expansionism. A significant program of economic reform however was not pursued and, by 1983, the Australian economy was in recession, amidst the effects of a severe drought. Fraser had promoted "states’ rights" and his government refused to use Commonwealth powers to stop the construction of the Franklin Dam in Tasmania in 1982.[44] A Liberal minister, Don Chipp had split off from the party to form a new social liberal party, the Australian Democrats in 1977 and the Franklin Dam proposal contributed to the emergence of an influential Environmental movement in Australia, with branches including the Australian Greens, a political party which later emerged from Tasmania to pursue environmentalism as well as left-wing social and economic policies.[45]

1980s and 1990s edit

 
The new Parliament House in Canberra was opened in 1988.

Bob Hawke, a less polarising Labor leader than Whitlam, defeated Fraser at the 1983 Election. The new government stopped the Franklin Dam project via the High Court of Australia. The 1980s saw severe concerns about Australia's future economic health take hold, with severe current account deficits and high unemployment at times. Hawke, together with treasurer Paul Keating undertook micro-economic and industrial relations reform designed to increase efficiency and competitiveness. After the initial failure of the Whitlam model and partial dismantling under Fraser, Hawke re-established a new, universal system of health insurance called Medicare. Hawke and Keating abandoned traditional Labor support for tariffs to protect industry and jobs. They moved to deregulate Australia's financial system and ‘floated’ the Australian dollar.[46] An agreement was reached with trade unions to moderate wage demands and accept more flexible working condition arrangements by accepting tax cuts in return. Ultimately, many of the reforms, continued by successive governments, appear to have been successful in pushing the economy along.

The Australian Bicentenary was celebrated in 1988 along with the opening of a new Parliament House in Canberra. The following year the Australian Capital Territory achieved self-government and Jervis Bay became a separate territory administered by the Minister for Territories.

A supporter of the US alliance, Hawke committed Australian naval forces to the Gulf War, following the 1990 invasion of Kuwait by Iraq. After four successful elections, but amid a deteriorating Australian economy and rising unemployment, the intense rivalry between Hawke and Keating led the Labor Party to replace Hawke as leader and Paul Keating became Prime Minister in 1991.[46]

Unemployment reached 11.4% in 1992 – the highest since the Great Depression. The Liberal-National Opposition had proposed an ambitious plan of economic reform to take to the 1993 Election, including the introduction of a goods and services tax. Keating shuffled treasurers and campaigned strongly against the tax and won the 1993 Election. During his time in office, Keating emphasised links to the Asia Pacific region, co-operating closely with the Indonesian President, Suharto, and campaigned to increase the role of APEC as a major forum for economic co-operation. Keating was active in indigenous affairs and the High Court of Australia's historic Mabo decision in 1992 required a legislative response to recognition of Indigenous title to land, culminating in the Native Title Act 1993 and the Land Fund Act 1994. In 1993, Keating established a Republic Advisory Committee, to examine options for Australia becoming a republic. With foreign debt, interest rates and unemployment still high, and after a series of ministerial resignations, Keating lost the 1996 Election to the Liberals' John Howard.[47]

Full sovereignty from the United Kingdom edit

The Australia Act 1986 led to the severing of nearly all constitutional ties between Australia and the UK. This was achieved by the passing of the which removed the right of the British Parliament to make laws for Australia and ended any British role in the government of the Australian States.[48] It also removed the right of appeal from Australian courts to the British Privy Council in London. Most important, the Act transferred into Australian hands full control of all Australia's constitutional documents.[49]

Indigenous Australia edit

Campaigns for indigenous rights in Australia have a long history. In the modern era, 1938 was an important year. With the participation of leading indigenous activists like Douglas Nicholls, the Australian Aborigines Advancement League organised a protest "Day of Mourning" to mark the 150th anniversary of the arrival of the First Fleet of British in Australia and launched its campaign for full citizenship rights for all Aborigines. In the 1940s, the conditions of life for Aborigines could be very poor. A permit system restricted movement and work opportunities for many Aboriginal people. In the 1950s, the government pursued a policy of "assimilation" which sought to achieve full citizenship rights for Aborigines but also wanted them to adopt the mode of life of other Australians (which very often was assumed to require suppression of cultural identity).[50]

 
Picture of Albert Namatjira at the Albert Namatjira Gallery, Alice Springs. Aboriginal art and artists became increasingly prominent in Australian cultural life during the second half of the 20th century.
 
From left: Ian Thorpe, Cathy Freeman and Jeff McMullen were among some of the speakers at the Close the Gap launch in 2007. The campaign aims to achieve health equality between indigenous and non-indigenous Australia.
 
Noel Pearson is an Aboriginal lawyer, rights activist and essayist.

From the 1950s onwards, Australians began to rethink their attitudes towards racial issues. An Aboriginal rights movement was founded and supported by many liberal white Australians and a campaign against the White Australia policy was also launched. The 1967 referendum was held and overwhelmingly approved to amend the Constitution, removing discriminatory references and giving the national parliament the power to legislate specifically for Indigenous Australians. Contrary to frequently repeated mythology, this referendum did not cover citizenship on Aboriginal people, nor did it give them the vote: they already had both. However, transferring this power away from the State parliaments did bring an end to the system of Indigenous Australian reserves which existed in each state, which allowed Indigenous people to move more freely, and exercise many of their citizenship rights for the first time. From the late 1960s a movement for Indigenous land rights also developed.

Various groups and individuals were active in the pursuit of equality and social justice from the 1960s. In the mid-1960s, one of the earliest Aboriginal graduates from the University of Sydney, Charles Perkins, helped organise freedom rides into parts of Australia to expose discrimination and inequality. In 1966, the Gurindji people of Wave Hill station (owned by the Vestey Group) commenced strike action led by Vincent Lingiari in a quest for equal pay and recognition of land rights.[51]

Indigenous Australians began to take up representation in Australian parliaments during the 1970s. In 1971 Neville Bonner of the Liberal Party was appointed by the Queensland Parliament to replace a retiring senator, becoming the first Aborigine in Federal Parliament. Bonner was returned as a Senator at the 1972 election and remained until 1983. Hyacinth Tungutalum of the Country Liberal Party in the Northern Territory and Eric Deeral of the National Party of Queensland, became the first Indigenous people elected to territory and state legislatures in 1974. In 1976, Sir Douglas Nicholls was appointed Governor of South Australia, becoming the first Aborigine to hold vice-regal office in Australia. Aiden Ridgway of the Australian Democrats served as a senator during the 1990s, but No indigenous person was elected to the House of Representatives, until West Australian Liberal Ken Wyatt, in August 2010.[52]

In 1984, a group of Pintupi people who were living a traditional hunter-gatherer desert-dwelling life were tracked down in the Gibson Desert in Western Australia and brought in to a settlement. They are believed to be the last uncontacted tribe in Australia.[53] In 1985, the Hawke government returned ownership of Uluru (formerly known as Ayers Rock) to the local Pitjantjatjara Aboriginal people.

In 1992, the High Court of Australia handed down its decision in the Mabo Case, declaring the previous legal concept of terra nullius to be invalid. That same year, Prime Minister Paul Keating said in his Redfern Park Speech that European settlers were responsible for the difficulties Australian Aboriginal communities continued to face: ‘We committed the murders. We took the children from their mothers. We practiced discrimination and exclusion. It was our ignorance and our prejudice’. In 1999 Parliament passed a Motion of Reconciliation drafted by Prime Minister John Howard and Aboriginal Senator Aden Ridgeway naming mistreatment of Indigenous Australians as the most "blemished chapter in our national history".[54]

A great many indigenous Australians have been prominent in sport and the arts. Several styles of Aboriginal art have developed in modern times, including the watercolour paintings of Albert Namatjira's Hermannsburg School, and the acrylic Papunya Tula "dot art" movement. The Western Desert Art Movement became a globally renowned 20th-century art movement. Oodgeroo Noonuccal (1920–1995) was a famous Aboriginal poet, writer and rights activist credited with publishing the first Aboriginal book of verse: We Are Going (1964).[55] Sally Morgan's novel My Place was considered a breakthrough memoir in terms of bringing indigenous stories to wider notice. Leading Aboriginal intellectuals Marcia Langton (First Australians, 2008) and Noel Pearson ("Up From the Mission", 2009) are active contemporary contributors to Australian literature. 1955's Jedda, was the first Australian feature film to star Aboriginal actors in lead roles and the first to be entered at the Cannes Film Festival.[56] 1976's The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith directed by Fred Schepisi was an award-winning historical drama from a book by Thomas Keneally about the tragic story of an Aboriginal Bushranger. The canon of films related to Indigenous Australians also increased over the period of the 1990s and early 21st century. In 2006, Rolf de Heer's Ten Canoes became the first major feature film to be shot in an indigenous language and the film was recognised at Cannes and elsewhere. In sport Evonne Goolagong Cawley became the world number-one ranked tennis player in 1971 and won 14 Grand Slam titles during her career. In 1973 Arthur Beetson became the first Indigenous Australian to captain his country in any sport when he first led the Australian National rugby league team, the Kangaroos.[57] In 1982, Mark Ella became Captain of the Australian National rugby union team, the Wallabies.[58] Olympic gold medalist Cathy Freeman lit the Olympic flame at the 2000 Summer Olympics opening ceremony in Sydney.[59]

In the early 21st century, much of indigenous Australia continued to suffer lower standards of health and education than non-indigenous Australia. In 2007, the Close the Gap campaign was launched by Olympic champions Cathy Freeman and Ian Thorpe with the aim of achieving Indigenous health equality within 25 years.[60] In 2007, Prime Minister John Howard and Indigenous Affairs Minister Mal Brough launched the Northern Territory National Emergency Response. In response to the Little Children are Sacred Report into allegations of child abuse among indigenous communities in the Territory, the government banned alcohol in prescribed communities in the Northern Territory; quarantined a percentage of welfare payments for essential goods purchasing; despatched additional police and medical personnel to the region; and suspended the permit system for access to indigenous communities.[61]

During much of the twentieth century, Australian governments had removed many aboriginal children from their families. This practice did great damage to the Aboriginal people, culturally and emotionally, giving rise to the term stolen generation to describe these families. Since the publication in 1997 of a federal government report, Bringing Them Home all state governments have followed the recommendation of the report in issuing formal apologies for their past practices to the Aboriginal people, as have many local governments. The Howard government refused to make such an apology on behalf of the federal government, despite pleas from the Aboriginal people and from many sections of the wider community, saying that it implied intergenerational guilt on modern non-indigenous Australia. However, the new government under Kevin Rudd led a formal bi-partisan apology on 13 February 2008.

Republicanism edit

In the early 21st century, Australia remains a constitutional monarchy under the Australian Constitution adopted in 1901, with the duties of the monarch performed by a Governor-General selected by the Australian Government. Australian republicanism which had been a feature of the 1890s faded away during the First World War.[62] Support for the Monarchy in Australia peaked during the Menzies years with the wildly successful 1954 tour by Queen Elizabeth II. Prince Charles attended school in Australia during the 1960s. The issue of a republic did not arise again until the 1970s. In the 1990s it was brought to the forefront of national debate by Prime Minister Paul Keating, who promised in 1993 to introduce an "Australian federal republic" by the centenary of Federation in 2001.

The Howard government called a Constitutional Convention to examine the issue in 1998. Delegates included appointees and elected representatives representing republicans, monarchists and neutral parties. The Convention proposed a republican model and a referendum was called for the approval of the Australian electorate. The referendum held on 6 November 1999 failed to achieve the support of either a majority of voters or a majority of states. The national vote of the electors in favour of Australia becoming a republic was 45.13%, with 54.87% against.[63]

The Australian Labor Party advocated for the republic, while the Liberals permitted members to campaign for either side. Notable campaigners for the republic included all the living former Labor Prime Ministers and former Liberal Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser and incumbent Treasurer Peter Costello. Notable Monarchists included Prime Minister John Howard, Justice Michael Kirby of the High Court of Australia, former Labor opposition leader Bill Hayden and Liberal Aboriginal elder Neville Bonner.[64] Future leaders of the Liberal Party Malcolm Turnbull who led the Australian Republic Movement and Tony Abbott who supported Australians for Constitutional Monarchy took opposing views.[65]

Justice Michael Kirby (a monarchist and leading figure in progressive Australian jurisprudence) ascribed the failure of the republic referendum to ten factors: lack of bi-partisanship; undue haste; a perception that the republic was supported by big city elites; a "denigration" of monarchists as "unpatriotic" by republicans; the adoption of an inflexible republican model by the convention; concerns about the specific model proposed (chiefly the ease with which a Prime Minister could dismiss a president); a republican strategy of using big "names" attached to the Whitlam era to promote their cause; strong opposition to the proposal in the smaller states; a counter-productive pro-republican bias in the media; and an instinctive caution among the Australian electorate regarding Constitutional change.[63]

Some republicans blamed the conservative and monarchist Prime Minister John Howard (elected in 1996), whose leadership certainly did not aid the republican cause.[citation needed] But there were other significant factors, including a split between "minimalist" republicans who wanted an Australian president to be chosen by the federal Parliament (as happens in, for example, Germany), and more "radical" republicans who wanted a directly elected president, as in the Irish Republic. Public opinion suggested that a republic would only be acceptable if a president was directly elected.[citation needed] Since the referendum proposal was for an indirectly elected president, many radicals opposed it.

The Gillard Labor government which took power in a hung parliament following the 2010 Australian Election has indicated an intention not to revisit the issue of a vote for an Australian republic during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II, while the Opposition Liberal-National Coalition is led by Tony Abbott, a supporter of the constitutional monarchy.[66] Cultural interest in the Royal Family endures, with 7 million Australians (one third of the population) tuning in to watch the Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton in April 2011.[67]

In 2011, Australian public support for a republic fell to its lowest level since March 1994.[68] Support for a republic outright was 41%,[68] with support rising to 48 per cent of respondents in a scenario with Charles on the throne and his wife, Camilla, as princess consort.[68]

Military engagements in the late twentieth century edit

 
Major General Peter Cosgrove (right) Australian commander of the United Nations backed peace keeping operation (INTERFET) to East Timor.

Following the Vietnam War, Australian military forces were largely kept at home through the rest of the 1970s and 1980s, other than service in United Nations peacekeeping missions. RAAF helicopters operated in the Sinai; and Australian forces assisted in a British Commonwealth operation when Zimbabwe won its independence; as well as a similar operation in Namibia.[69]

Bob Hawke was Prime Minister at the time of the Fall of the Berlin Wall and end of the Cold War which ushered in a new era of international relations. Royal Australian Navy warships were deployed to the Gulf War by the Hawke government in 1991 and remained in the region to enforce UN-imposed sanctions against Iraq.[69]

Peacekeeping edit

Australian forces were very active in UN peacekeeping through the 1990s. In 1993, Foreign Minister Gareth Evans was active in the search for a settlement to ongoing troubles in Cambodia in the aftermath of the genocidal 1970s Pol Pot regime. Australia contributed the force commander and the operation's communications component to the UN operation. In the ultimately unsuccessful Somalia intervention, a battalion-level Australian contingent was employed to aid in the delivery of humanitarian aid in the Baidoa area. In 1994, Australia deployed medical staff to the UN force in Rwanda sent to deal with the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide. A UN Peacekeeping engagement in Bougainville began in 1997, to aid in resolving the long-running conflict between the Papua New Guinea government Bougainville separatists.[69]

There have been a number of other peacekeeping and stabilisation operations: notably in Bougainville, including Operation Bel Isi (1998–2003); as well as Operation Helpem Fren and the Australian led Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) in the early 2000s; and the 2006 East Timorese crisis[70]

East Timor edit

Australia led an important international military mission to East Timor in 1999. Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975 and annexed the former Portuguese colony.[71] Successive Australian governments, concerned to maintain good relations with Indonesia, had accepted Indonesia control of the territory, however the fall of Indonesian President Suharto and a shift in Australian policy by the Howard government in 1998 precipitated a proposal for a referendum on the question of independence.[72] New Indonesian President B. J. Habibie was prepared to consider a change of status for East Timor. In late 1998, Australian Prime Minister John Howard with Foreign Minister Alexander Downer drafted a letter Indonesia setting out a major change in Australian policy, suggesting that the East Timor be given a chance to vote on independence within a decade. The letter upset President Habibie, who saw it as implying Indonesia was a "colonial power" and he decided in response to announce a snap referendum.[72] A UN sponsored referendum held in August 1999 showed overwhelming approval for independence. After the result was announced, violent clashes, instigated by a suspected anti-independence militia, sparked a humanitarian and security crisis in the region.

John Howard consulted UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and lobbied U. S. President Bill Clinton to support an Australian led peace keeper force to end the violence. Australia, who contributed 5,500 personnel and the force commander, Major General Peter Cosgrove, to the UN-backed International Force East Timor and began deploying on 20 September 1999 and successfully restored order. The operation had been politically and militarily tense. Australia re-deployed frontline combat aircraft northward and detected an Indonesian submarine within the vicinity of Dili Harbour as INTERFET forces approached. While the intervention was ultimately successful, Australian-Indonesian relations would take several years to recover.[69][72]

Al-Qaeda edit

 
Australian and Afghan soldiers patrol the poppy fields in the Baluchi Valley Region, April 2010

In 1998, a wealthy dissident Saudi Islamist, Osama bin Laden, declared a fatwa calling for the killing of "Americans and their allies -- civilians and military... in any country in which it is possible to do it" in order to bring to an end the ongoing enforcement of the sanctions against Iraq and presence of US troops in the Arabian Peninsula, thus bringing Australians into the line of fire in what would latterly grow to be defined as the War on Terror.[73] Following the 11 September terrorist attacks by Al-Qaeda in 2001, On 14 September 2001, the Australian Government cited the terrorist attacks against the US as sufficient basis for invoking the mutual-defence clauses of the ANZUS Treaty. This was the first time the Treaty's clauses on acting to meet a common danger had been invoked since it was enacted in 1952.[74]

The Howard government committed troops to the Afghanistan War (with bi-partisan support) and the Iraq War (meeting with the disapproval of other political parties). SAS troops formed the most high-profile part of Operation Slipper, Australia's contribution to the invading force in the 2001 United States war in Afghanistan. A small number of Australians, including David Hicks, were captured in and around the Afghan Theatre having spent time training or fighting with Al-Qaeda aligned Islamist paramilitaries.[75] Islamists following the Al-Qaeda modus operandi bombed a nightclub in Bali in 2002 and killed 88 Australian civilians.[76] The following year, the Iraq War was launched by a U.S.-British led coalition to overthrow the Saddam Hussein government of Iraq for its non-compliance with the 1991 Gulf War Peace Treaty. Australian contribution to the 2003 invasion of Iraq lasted until 2009 and was highly controversial. Following the death of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden at the hands of US forces in May 2011, Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced that Australian forces would remain in Afghanistan and said that Bin Laden's death offered a "small measure of justice" to the families of the 105 Australians who been killed in Al-Qaeda attacks in New York, Bali, London and Mumbai since the commencement of the conflict.[77] As of May 2011, a further 24 Australian military personnel had been killed while serving in the Afghanistan conflict (including one with the British Armed Forces).[78]

Australia in the 21st century edit

 
Olympic colours on the Sydney Harbour Bridge in 2000
 
World leaders with Prime Minister John Howard in Sydney for the 2007 APEC conference
 
Julia Gillard (left) and Kevin Rudd deliver their first press conference as leaders of the Australian Labor Party, 4 December 2006. Rudd won the 2007 election and was replaced by Gillard in 2010.

John Howard served as Prime Minister from 1996 until 2007, the second-longest prime ministerial term after Robert Menzies. One of the first programs instigated by the Howard government was a nationwide gun control scheme, following a mass shooting at Port Arthur. The government sought to reduce Australia's government deficit and introduced industrial relations reforms, particularly as regards efficiency on the waterfront. After the 1996 election, Howard and treasurer Peter Costello proposed a goods and services tax (GST) which they successfully took to the electorate in 1998. In 1999, Australia led a United Nations force into East Timor to help establish democracy and independence for that nation, following political violence.[79]

The government also accelerated the pace of privatisation, beginning with the government-owned telecommunications corporation, Telstra. Howard's government continued some elements of the foreign policy of its predecessors, based on relations with four key countries: the United States, Japan, China, and Indonesia. The Howard administration strongly supported US engagement in the Asia-Pacific region.

Australia hosted the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney to great international acclaim. The Opening Ceremony featured a host of iconic Australian imagery and history and the flame ceremony honoured women athletes, including swimmer Dawn Fraser, with Aboriginal runner Cathy Freeman lit the Olympic flame. At the Closing Ceremony, President of the International Olympic Committee, Juan Antonio Samaranch, declared:[80]

"I am proud and happy to proclaim that you have presented to the world the best Olympic Games ever."

Few international tourists came to Melbourne in 1956 for the Olympics that year, but Sydney gained global attention for a well-attended, efficiently organised world-class event. Prince Philip, representing Queen Elizabeth II opened the 1956 games but neither was invited in 2000, as the spirit of republicanism was too strong.[81] In the long run, as Toohey (2008) reports, many of the hoped-for benefits failed to materialize. Nationwide levels of participation in physical activity and sport did not rise, although passive spectatorship (such as TV watching) did increase. Many of the costly facilities built for the games remained underutilized in their wake.[82]

 
Aftermath of the devastating 2009 Victorian bushfires which killed 173 people
 
Suburban Toowoomba during the summer 2010–11 Queensland floods

Sydney played host to other important world events over the decade including the 2003 Rugby World Cup, the APEC Leaders conference of 2007 and Catholic World Youth Day 2008. Melbourne hosted the 2006 Commonwealth Games.

In 2001, Australia celebrated its Centenary of Federation, with a program of events, including the creation of the Centenary Medal to honour people who have made a contribution to Australian society or government.

The Howard government expanded immigration overall but instituted often controversial tough immigration laws to discourage unauthorised arrivals of boat people. While Howard was a strong supporter of traditional links to the Commonwealth and to the United States alliance, trade with Asia, particularly China, continued to increase dramatically, and Australia endured an extended period of prosperity.[83] Howard's term in office coincided with the 2001 11 September attacks. In the aftermath of this event, the government committed troops to the Afghanistan War (with bi-partisan support) and the Iraq War (meeting with the disapproval of other political parties).[79]

Southern Australia was affected by a very severe drought, through much of the first decade of the 21st century. By late 2006 water storage throughout southern Australia were at record low levels. Severe restrictions on urban water usage were put in place in every state capital city (except Hobart and Darwin) in 2005–06, and irrigation in the Murray–Darling basin was heavily curtailed.[citation needed] Consequently, issues relating to fresh water supply became an important topic for political discussion, though the economic impact of the drought was felt most keenly only in Australia's sparsely populated agricultural areas.[citation needed]

Howard lost his substantial majority at the 1998 Federal election, improved on it at the 2001 Federal election and at the 2004 election against Labor's Mark Latham. The government however resoundingly lost the 2007 Federal election to the Labor Party led by Kevin Rudd with a wave of support for change and a slogan for "new leadership" for the country.[84]

Kevin Rudd held the office until June 2010, when he was replaced following internal Labor Party coup by his colleague and deputy Julia Gillard. Rudd used his term in office to symbolically ratify the Kyoto Protocol and lead an historic parliamentary apology to the Stolen Generation (those Indigenous Australians who had been removed from their parents by the state during the early 20th century to the 1960s). The mandarin Chinese speaking former diplomat also pursued energetic foreign policy and initially sought to instigate a price on carbon in the Australian economy to combat global warming. His prime ministership coincided with the initial phases of the Financial crisis of 2007–2010, to which his government responded through a large package of economic stimulus – the management of which later proved to be controversial.[85]

The Black Saturday bushfires struck Victoria on and around Saturday 7 February 2009. The fires occurred during extreme bushfire-weather conditions, and resulted in Australia's highest ever loss of life from a bushfire;[86] 173 people died[87][88] and 414 were injured as a result of the fires.

Amidst increasing controversy on management of stimulus spending over policy directions on taxation, immigration and climate change, the Labor Party replaced Rudd with Julia Gillard, who became the first woman Prime Minister of Australia and narrowly retained office against the Liberal-National Coalition led by Tony Abbott, at the 2010 Federal election by securing the support of independent members of the first hung parliament in Australia since the 1940 election.[89]

 
ISS image of the smoke produced from the 2019–20 Australian bushfire season, 4 January 2020

The drought was broken definitively by severe flooding associated with the La Niña weather effect in the summer of 2010–2011. Queensland in particular suffered dramatic flooding which swept through parts of the capital city of Brisbane and caused some deaths and serious financial loss. Soon after tropical cyclone Yasi struck the already beleaguered coast.

Following two and half decades of economic reform and amidst booming trade with Asia, Australia—in stark contrast to most other Western nations—avoided recession following the 2008 collapse of financial markets.[90] Following the 2010 election, the Gillard government entered an alliance with the Australian Greens and was destabilized by breaking an election promise not to introduce a carbon tax, by leadership rivalry and by lacking the numbers to push some controversial legislation through the Parliament. Nevertheless, the cross-bench alliance continued to operate and though facing declining poll support and firm opposition from the Liberal-National Coalition, in October the government successfully passed its Clean Energy Bill 2011 aimed to restructure the Australian economy in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions associated with global warming by increasing costs to industry for carbon emissions.[91] A carbon tax was introduced in Australia on 1 July 2012. Kevin Rudd was reinstated as prime minister in a Labor leadership spill on 27 June 2013. After the 2013 Australian General Election, Rudd lost the role of Prime Minister to Tony Abbott, the Liberal Leader. On 15 December 2013, 95% of the Australian military had withdrawn from Afghanistan with the remaining 5% presently training locals in Kabul.[92] The Clean Energy Bill 2011 was repealed by the Abbott government on 17 July 2014, backdated to 1 July 2014. Malcolm Turnbull of the Liberal Party of Australia was elected as Tony Abbott's successor and served as Prime Minister from 2015 until 2018 where he resigned and was replaced by Scott Morrison.

The last months of 2019 and into early 2020 were marked by intense bushfires on the east coast that became known as the "Black Summer".[93] The fires directly killed 34 people.[94] Approximately 9,352 buildings were destroyed. The fires are very likely Australia's costliest natural disaster at about A$100 billion.[95] They were also notable for the smoke that enveloped areas within Australia well away from the fires for months, and even places 12,000 km (7,500 mi) overseas, reaching as far as South America.[96] Air quality dropped to hazardous levels in all southern and eastern states.[97][98][99] Health researcher's modelling indicated that 80 per cent of Australians were affected by bushfire smoke at some point over the fire season. 445 people may have died indirectly from smoke inhalation.[100]

Late January 2020 was also notable for the first local infections of a new virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). This led into the world-wide COVID-19 pandemic, and the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia that by the end of 2020 had killed 909 in Australia, but as of 5 February 2021, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) had caused more than 2.29 million deaths world-wide.

In the early morning hours of 9 September 2022 Australia Eastern Standard Time, Queen Elizabeth II died. The Queen was succeeded by her eldest son, King Charles III, who now reigns as the King of Australia.

See also edit

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Further reading edit

References edit

  • Bambrick, Susan ed. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Australia (1994)
  • Basset, Jan. The Oxford Illustrated Dictionary of Australian History (1998)
  • Davison, Graeme, John Hirst, and Stuart Macintyre, eds. The Oxford Companion to Australian History (2001) online at many academic libraries; also excerpt and text search
  • Day, David. Claiming a Continent: A New History of Australia (2001);
  • Dennis, Peter, Jeffrey Grey, Ewan Morris, and Robin Prior. The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History. 1996
  • Jupp, James, ed. The Australian People: An Encyclopedia of the Nation, its People and their Origins (2nd ed. 2002) 960pp excerpt and text search
  • Macintyre, Stuart. A Concise History of Australia. (2009) excerpt and text search
  • O'Shane, Pat et al. Australia: The Complete Encyclopedia (2001)
  • Robinson GM, Loughran RJ, and Tranter PJ. Australia and New Zealand: economy, society and environment.(2000)
  • Shaw, John, ed. Collins Australian Encyclopedia (1984)
  • Welsh, Frank. Australia: A New History of the Great Southern Land (2008)

History edit

  • Bennett, Bruce et al. The Oxford Literary History of Australia (1999)
  • Bennett, Tony, and David Carter. Culture in Australia: Policies, Publics and Programs (2001) excerpt and text search
  • Bolton, Geoffrey. The Oxford History of Australia: Volume 5: 1942–1995. The Middle Way (2005)
  • Bramble, Tom. Trade Unionism in Australia: A History from Flood to Ebb Tide (2008) excerpt and text search
  • Bridge, Carl ed., Munich to Vietnam: Australia's Relations with Britain and the United States since the 1930s, Melbourne University Press 1991
  • Carey, Hilary. Believing in Australia: A Cultural History of Religions (1996)
  • Edwards, John. Curtin's Gift: Reinterpreting Australia's Greatest Prime Minister, (2005) online edition
  • Firth, Stewart. Australia in International Politics: An Introduction to Australian Foreign Policy (2005) online edition
  • Grant, Ian. A Dictionary of Australian Military History – from Colonial Times to the Gulf War (1992)
  • Hearn, Mark, Harry Knowles, and Ian Cambridge. One Big Union: A History of the Australian Workers Union 1886–1994 (1998)
  • Hutton, Drew, and Libby Connors. History of the Australian Environment Movement (1999) excerpt and text search
  • Kelly, Paul. The End of Certainty: Power, Politics and Business in Australia, (1994), history of the 1980s
  • Kleinert, Sylvia. and Margo Neale. The Oxford Companion to Aboriginal Art and Culture (2001)
  • Lee, David. Search for Security: The Political Economy of Australia's Postwar Foreign and Defence Policy (1995)
  • Lowe, David. Menzies and the 'Great World Struggle': Australia's Cold War 1948–54 (1999) online edition
  • Martin, A. W. Robert Menzies: A Life (2 vol 1993–99), online at ACLS e-books
  • McIntyre, Stuart. The History Wars (2nd ed. 2004), historiography
  • McLachlan, Noel. Waiting for the Revolution: A History of Australian Nationalism (1989)
  • McLean, David. "Australia in the Cold War: a Historiographical Review." International History Review (2001) 23(2): 299–321. ISSN 0707-5332
  • McLean, David. "From British Colony to American Satellite? Australia and the USA during the Cold War", Australian Journal of Politics & History (2006) 52 (1), 64–79. Rejects satellite model. online at Blackwell-Synergy
  • Megalogenis, George. The Longest Decade (2nd ed. 2009), politics 1990–2008
  • Moran, Albert. Historical Dictionary of Australian Radio and Television (2007)
  • Moran, Anthony. Australia: Nation, Belonging, and Globalization Routledge, 2004 online edition
  • Murphy, John. Harvest of Fear: A History of Australia's Vietnam War (1993)
  • Watt, Alan. The Evolution of Australian Foreign Policy 1938–1965, Cambridge University Press, 1967
  • Webby, Elizabeth, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Australian Literature (2006)

history, australia, 1945, present, history, australia, since, 1945, seen, long, periods, economic, prosperity, introduction, expanded, multi, ethnic, immigration, program, which, coincided, with, moves, away, from, britain, political, social, cultural, terms, . The history of Australia since 1945 has seen long periods of economic prosperity and the introduction of an expanded and multi ethnic immigration program which has coincided with moves away from Britain in political social and cultural terms and towards increasing engagement with the United States and Asia Contents 1 End of the 1940s 2 Immigration and the post war boom 3 1960s and 1970s The Australian New Wave 4 Australia and the Vietnam War 5 Papua New Guinea and Nauru independence 6 Whitlam Fraser and the dismissal 7 1980s and 1990s 7 1 Full sovereignty from the United Kingdom 8 Indigenous Australia 9 Republicanism 10 Military engagements in the late twentieth century 10 1 Peacekeeping 10 2 East Timor 10 3 Al Qaeda 11 Australia in the 21st century 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 14 1 References 14 2 HistoryEnd of the 1940s editMain article Chifley government nbsp H V Evatt left and Ben Chifley middle with Clement Attlee right at the Dominion and British Leaders Conference London 1946In 1944 the Liberal Party of Australia was formed with Robert Menzies as its founding leader The party would come to dominate the early decades of the post war period Outlining his vision for a new political movement in 1944 Menzies said W hat we must look for and it is a matter of desperate importance to our society is a true revival of liberal thought which will work for social justice and security for national power and national progress and for the full development of the individual citizen though not through the dull and deadening process of socialism 1 In April 1945 Prime Minister John Curtin despatched an Australian delegation which included attorney general and minister for external affairs H V Evatt to discuss formation of the United Nations Australia played a significant mediatory role in these early years of the United Nations successfully lobbying for an increased role for smaller and middle ranking nations and a stronger commitment to employment rights into the U N Charter Evatt was elected president of the third session of the United Nations General Assembly September 1948 to May 1949 2 When Labor Prime Minister John Curtin passed away in July 1945 Frank Forde served as Prime Minister from 6 13 July before the party elected Ben Chifley as Curtin s successor 3 Chifley a former railway engine driver won the 1946 election His government introduced national projects including the Snowy Mountains Scheme and an assisted immigration program and pursued centralist economic policies making the Commonwealth the collector of income tax and seeking to nationalise the private banks At the conference of the New South Wales Labor Party in June 1949 Chifely sought to define the labour movement as having 4 A great objective the light on the hill which we aim to reach by working for the betterment of mankind Labor would bring something better to the people better standards of living greater happiness to the mass of the people With an increasingly uncertain economic outlook after his attempt to nationalise the banks and the coal strike by the Communist dominated Miners Federation Chifley lost office at the 1949 federal election to Menzies newly established Liberal Party in coalition with the Country Party 5 Immigration and the post war boom editMain article Menzies government 1949 1966 nbsp Sir Robert Menzies founder of the Liberal Party of Australia and Prime Minister of Australia 1939 41 UAP and 1949 66After World War II Australia launched a massive immigration program believing that having narrowly avoided a Japanese invasion Australia must populate or perish As Prime Minister Ben Chifley would later declare a powerful enemy looked hungrily toward Australia In tomorrow s gun flash that threat could come again We must populate Australia as rapidly as we can before someone else decides to populate it for us 6 Hundreds of thousands of displaced Europeans including for the first time large numbers of Jews migrated to Australia More than two million people immigrated to Australia from Europe during the 20 years after the end of the war From the outset it was intended that the bulk of these immigrants should be mainly from the British Isles and that the post war immigration scheme would preserve the British character of Australian society Although Great Britain remained the predominant source of immigrants the pool of source countries was expanded to include Continental European countries in order to meet Australia s ambitious immigration targets From the late 1940s onwards Australia received significant waves of people from countries such as Greece Italy Malta Germany Yugoslavia and the Netherlands Australia actively sought these immigrants with the government assisting many of them and they found work due to an expanding economy and major infrastructure projects 7 The Australian economy stood in sharp contrast to war ravaged Europe and newly arrived migrants found employment in a booming manufacturing industry and government assisted programs such as the Snowy Mountains Scheme This hydroelectricity and irrigation complex in south east Australia consisted of sixteen major dams and seven power stations constructed between 1949 and 1974 It remains the largest engineering project undertaken in Australia Necessitating the employment of 100 000 people from over 30 countries to many it denotes the birth of multicultural Australia 7 In 1949 the 1941 1949 Labor government led by Ben Chifley after John Curtin s death in 1945 was defeated by a Liberal National Party Coalition government headed by Menzies Politically the Menzies government and the Liberal Party of Australia dominated much of the immediate post war era defeating the Chifley government in 1949 in part over a Labor proposal to nationalise banks 8 and following a crippling coal strike influenced by the Australian Communist Party Menzies became the country s longest serving Prime Minister and the Liberal party in coalition with the rural based Country Party won every federal election until 1972 As in the United States in the early 1950s allegations of communist influence in society saw tensions emerge in politics Refugees from Soviet dominated Eastern Europe immigrated to Australia while to Australia s north Mao Zedong won the Chinese civil war in 1949 and in June 1950 Communist North Korea invaded South Korea The Menzies government responded to a United States led United Nations Security Council request for military aid for South Korea and diverted forces from occupied Japan to begin Australia s involvement in the Korean War After fighting to a bitter standstill the UN and North Korea signed a ceasefire agreement in July 1953 Australian forces had participated in such major battles as Kapyong and Maryang San Seventeen thousand Australians had served and casualties amounted to more than 1 500 of whom 339 were killed 9 nbsp Queen Elizabeth II inspecting sheep at Wagga Wagga on her 1954 Royal Tour Huge crowds met the Royal party across Australia nbsp Postwar migrants arriving in Australia in 1954During the course of the Korean War the Menzies government attempted to ban the Communist Party of Australia first by legislation in 1950 and later by referendum in 1951 10 While both attempts were unsuccessful further international events such as the defection of minor Soviet Embassy official Vladimir Petrov added to a sense of impending threat that politically favoured Menzies Liberal CP government as the Labor Party pushed centralist economics and split over concerns about the influence of the Communist Party over the Trade Union movement resulting in a bitter split in 1955 and the emergence of the breakaway Democratic Labor Party DLP The DLP remained an influential political force often holding the balance of power in the Senate until 1974 its preferences supported the Liberal and Country Party 11 The Labor party was led by H V Evatt after Chifley s death in 1951 Evatt retired in 1960 and Arthur Calwell succeeded him as leader with a young Gough Whitlam as his deputy 12 Menzies presided over a period of sustained economic boom and the beginnings of sweeping social change with the arrivals of rock and roll music and television in the 1950s In 1956 television in Australia began broadcasting Melbourne hosted the Olympics and for the first time performing artist Barry Humphries performed the character of Edna Everage as a parody of a house proud housewife of staid 1950s Melbourne suburbia the character only later morphed into a critique of self obsessed celebrity culture It was the first of many of his satirical stage and screen creations based around quirky Australian characters In 1958 Australian country music singer Slim Dusty who would become the musical embodiment of rural Australia had Australia s first international music chart hit with his bush ballad Pub With No Beer 13 while rock and roller Johnny O Keefe s Wild One became the first local recording to reach the national charts 14 peaking at 20 15 16 Before sleeping through the 1960s Australian cinema produced little of its own content in the 1950s but British and Hollywood studios produced a string of successful epics from Australian literature featuring home grown stars Chips Rafferty and Peter Finch Menzies remained a staunch supporter of links to the monarchy and British Commonwealth and formalised an alliance with the United States but also launched post war trade with Japan beginning a growth of Australian exports of coal iron ore and mineral resources that would steadily climb until Japan became Australia s largest trading partner 17 In the early 1950s the Menzies government saw Australia as part of a triple alliance in concert with both the US and traditional ally Britain 18 At first the Australian leadership opted for a consistently pro British line in diplomacy while at the same time looking for opportunities to involve the US in South East Asia 19 Thus other than the Korean War the government also committed military forces to the Malayan Emergency and hosted British nuclear tests after 1952 20 Australia was also the only Commonwealth country to offer support to the British during the Suez Crisis 21 Menzies oversaw an effusive welcome to Queen Elizabeth II on the first visit to Australia by a reigning monarch in 1954 However as British influence declined in South East Asia the US alliance came to have greater significance for Australian leaders and the Australian economy British investment in Australia remained significant until the late 1970s but trade with Britain declined through the 1950s and 1960s In the late 1950s the Australian Army began to re equip using US military equipment In 1962 the US established a naval communications station at North West Cape the first of several built over the next decade 22 23 Most significantly in 1962 Australian Army advisors were sent to help train South Vietnamese forces in a developing conflict the British had no part in The ANZUS security treaty which had been signed in 1951 had its origins in Australia s and New Zealand s fears of a rearmed Japan but found new impetus through anti communism Its obligations on the US Australia and New Zealand are vague but its influence on Australian foreign policy thinking at times significant 24 The SEATO treaty signed only three years later clearly demonstrated Australia s position as a US ally in the emerging cold war On 26 November 1967 Australia became the seventh nation to put a satellite into Earth orbit launching WRESAT from Woomera When Menzies retired in January 1966 he was replaced as Liberal leader and Prime Minister by Harold Holt The Holt government increased Australian commitment to the growing War in Vietnam oversaw conversion to decimal currency and faced Britain s withdrawal from Asia by visiting and hosting many Asian leaders and by expanding ties to the United States hosting the first visit to Australia by an American president his friend Lyndon Johnson Significantly Holt s government introduced the Migration Act 1966 which effectively dismantled the vestigial mechanisms of the White Australia Policy and increased access to non European migrants including refugees fleeing the Vietnam War Holt also called the 1967 Referendum which removed the discriminatory clause in the Australian Constitution which excluded Aboriginal Australians from being counted in the census the referendum was one of the few to be overwhelmingly endorsed by the Australian electorate over 90 voted yes 25 Holt won the 1967 election with the largest parliamentary majority in 65 years but Holt drowned while swimming at a surf beach in December 1967 and was replaced by John Gorton 1968 1971 The Gorton government began winding down Australia s commitment to Vietnam increased funding for the arts standardised rates of pay between the men and women and continued moving Australian trade closer to Asia The Liberals suffered a decline in voter support at the 1969 election and internal party division saw Gorton replaced by William McMahon 1971 1972 and facing a reinvigorated Australian Labor Party led by Gough Whitlam the Liberals entered their final stretch in office of a record 23 straight years period 26 1960s and 1970s The Australian New Wave edit nbsp Australian to the bootheels Prime Minister John Gorton established government support for Australian cinema nbsp The Sydney Opera House was officially opened in 1973 From the mid 1960s evidence of a new and more independent sense of national pride and identity began to emerge in Australia In the early 1960s the National Trust of Australia began to be active in preserving Australia s natural cultural and historic heritage Australian TV while always dependent on US and British imports saw locally made dramas and comedies appear and programs such as Homicide developed strong local loyalty while Skippy the Bush Kangaroo became a global phenomenon Liberal Prime Minister John Gorton a battle scarred former fighter pilot described himself as Australian to the bootheels and the Gorton government established the Australian Council for the Arts the Australian Film Development Corporation and the National Film and Television Training School 26 The late 1960s and early 1970s are often associated with a flowering of Australian culture Indigenous Australians achieved greater rights immigration restrictions and censorship laws were swept aside theatre and opera companies were established across the country and Australian rock music blossomed The 1971 Springbok rugby tour was influential in raising awareness of Aboriginal injustice in Australia and also led Australia to become the first Western nation to cut sporting ties with South Africa citation needed In a significant move against South Africa s apartheid regime many Australians including Wallabies demonstrated against tours by the racially selected South African team 27 The Australian media tycoon Kerry Packer altered the traditionalist ethos of the game of cricket in the 1970s inventing World Series Cricket from which have evolved many aspects of the various modern international forms of the game The iconic Sydney Opera House finally opened in 1973 after numerous delays In the same year Patrick White became the first Australian to win a Nobel Prize for Literature 28 Australian History had begun to appear on school curriculums by the 1970s 29 and from the early 1970s the Australian cinema began to produce the Australian New Wave of feature films based on uniquely Australian themes Film funding began under the Gorton government but it was the South Australian Film Corporation that took the lead in supporting filmmaking and among their great successes were quintessential Australian films Sunday Too Far Away 1974 Picnic at Hanging Rock 1975 Breaker Morant 1980 and Gallipoli 1981 The national funding body the Australian Film Commission was established in 1975 Significant changes also occurred to Australia s censorship laws after the new Liberal Minister for Customs and Excise Don Chipp was appointed in 1969 In 1968 Barry Humphries and Nicholas Garland s cartoon book featuring the larrikin character Barry McKenzie was banned Yet only a few years later the book had been made as a film partly with the support of government funding 30 Anne Pender suggests that the Barry Mckenzie character both celebrated and parodied Australian nationalism Historian Richard White also argues that while many of the plays novels and films produced in the 1970s were intensely critical of aspects of Australian life they were absorbed by the new nationalism and applauded for their Australianness 31 Australia and the Vietnam War editMain article Military history of Australia during the Vietnam War nbsp Personnel and aircraft of RAAF Transport Flight Vietnam arrive in South Vietnam in August 1964The Menzies government despatched the first small contingent of Australian military training personnel to aid South Vietnam in 1962 so beginning Australia s decade long involvement in the Vietnam War Ngo Đinh Diệm the leader of the government in South Vietnam had requested security assistance from the US and its allies The Australian government supported the commitment as part of global effort to stem the spread of communism in Europe and Asia nbsp Phap Hoa Temple a Vietnamese Buddhist temple in Adelaide Thousands of Vietnamese refugees were resettled in Australia following the communist victory in Vietnam Initially popular Australia s participation in Vietnam and particularly the use of conscription later became politically contentious and saw massive protests though they were for the most part peaceful The United States launched a major escalation of the war in 1965 and the Holt government which succeeded Menzies increased Australia s military commitment to the conflict Holt won a massive majority in the 1967 Election 25 By 1969 however anti war protests were gathering momentum and opposition to conscription was growing with more people believing the war could not be won The Gorton government returned with a reduced majority at the 1969 Election ceased to replace Australian personnel from 1970 32 There were large Moratorium marches in 1970 and 1971 and Australia s troop commitment continued to wind down through 1971 with the last battalion leaving Nui Dat in November The election of the Whitlam government in 1972 brought Australia s small remaining involvement in the war to an official close in June 1973 with the withdrawal of the last platoon guarding the Australian Embassy in Saigon Australian forces were largely based at Nui Dat Phước Tuy Province and participated in such notable battles as the Battle of Long Tan against the Viet Cong in 1966 and defending against the 1968 Tet Offensive Almost 60 000 Australians had served in Vietnam and 521 had died as a result of the war As the war became unpopular protestors and conscienscious objectors became prominent and soldiers often met a hostile reception on their return home in the later stages of the conflict 33 In early 1975 the communists launched a major offensive resulting in the fall of Saigon on 30 April The Royal Australian Airforce assisted in final humanitarian evacuations 33 In the aftermath of the communist victory Australia assisted in re settlement of Vietnamese refugees with thousands making their way to Australia through the 1970s and 1980s 34 Papua New Guinea and Nauru independence editAustralia had administered Papua New Guinea and Nauru for much of the 20th century British New Guinea Papua had passed to Australia in 1906 German New Guinea was captured by Australia during the First World War becoming a League of Nations mandate after the war Following the bitter New Guinea campaign of World War II which saw occupation of half the island by Imperial Japan the Territory of Papua and New Guinea was established by an administrative union between the Australian administered Territory of Papua and Territory of New Guinea in 1949 Under Liberal Minister for External Territories Andrew Peacock Papua and New Guinea adopted self government in 1972 and on 15 September 1975 during the term of the Whitlam government in Australia the Territory became the independent nation of Papua New Guinea 35 36 Australia had captured the island of Nauru from the German Empire in 1914 After Japanese occupation during World War II it became a UN Trust Territory under Australia and remained so until achieving independence in 1968 In 1989 Nauru sued Australia in the International Court of Justice in The Hague for damages caused by mining Australia settled the case out of court agreeing to a lump sum settlement of A 107 million and an annual stipend of the equivalent of A 2 5 million toward environmental rehabilitation 37 Whitlam Fraser and the dismissal editMain article 1975 Australian constitutional crisis nbsp Gough Whitlam during the 1972 federal election Elected in December 1972 after 23 years in opposition Labor won office under Gough Whitlam and introduced a significant program of social change and reform Whitlam said before the election our program has three great aims They are to promote equality to involve the people of Australia in decision making and to liberate the talents and uplift the horizons of the Australian people 38 Whitlam s actions were immediate and dramatic Within a few weeks the last milichlentary advisors in Vietnam were recalled and national service ended The People s Republic of China was recognised Whitlam had visited China while Opposition Leader in 1971 and the embassy in Taiwan closed 39 40 Over the next few years university fees were abolished and a national health care scheme established Significant changes were made to school funding something Whitlam regarded as the most enduring single achievement of his government 41 Divorce and family law was liberalised Whitlam s radical and imperious style eventually alienated many voters and some of the state governments were openly hostile to his government As it did not control the senate much of its legislation was rejected or amended The Queensland Country Party government of Joh Bjelke Petersen had particularly bad relations with the Federal government Even after it was re elected at elections in May 1974 the Senate remained an obstacle to its political agenda At the only joint sitting of parliament in August 1974 six keys pieces of legislation wering passed nbsp Government House Canberra also known as Yarralumla It was here that Sir John Kerr dismissed Gough Whitlam as Prime Minister of Australia on 11 November 1975 the culmination of the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis In 1974 Whitlam selected John Kerr a former member of the Labor Party and presiding Chief Justice of New South Wales to serve as Governor General The Whitlam government was re elected with a decreased majority in the lower house in the 1974 Election In 1974 75 the government thought about borrowing US 4 billion in foreign loans Minister Rex Connor conducted secret discussions with a loan broker from Pakistan and the Treasurer Jim Cairns misled parliament over the issue 42 Arguing the government was incompetent following the Loans affair the opposition Liberal Country Party Coalition delayed passage of the government s money bills in the Senate until the government would promise a new election Whitlam refused Malcolm Fraser leader of the Opposition insisted The deadlock came to an end when the Whitlam government was dismissed by the Governor General John Kerr on 11 November 1975 and Fraser was installed as caretaker Prime Minister pending an election The reserve powers granted to the Governor General by the Australian Constitution had allowed an elected government to be dismissed without warning by a representative of the Monarch 43 At elections held in late 1975 Malcolm Fraser and the Coalition were elected in a landslide victory citation needed nbsp Malcolm Fraser and U S President Jimmy Carter 1977 The Fraser government won two subsequent elections Fraser maintained some of the social reforms of the Whitlam era while seeking increased fiscal restraint His government included the first Aboriginal federal parliamentarian Neville Bonner and in 1976 Parliament passed the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1976 which while limited to the Northern Territory affirmed inalienable freehold title to some traditional lands Fraser established the multicultural broadcaster SBS welcomed Vietnamese boat people refugees opposed minority white rule in Apartheid South Africa and Rhodesia and opposed Soviet expansionism A significant program of economic reform however was not pursued and by 1983 the Australian economy was in recession amidst the effects of a severe drought Fraser had promoted states rights and his government refused to use Commonwealth powers to stop the construction of the Franklin Dam in Tasmania in 1982 44 A Liberal minister Don Chipp had split off from the party to form a new social liberal party the Australian Democrats in 1977 and the Franklin Dam proposal contributed to the emergence of an influential Environmental movement in Australia with branches including the Australian Greens a political party which later emerged from Tasmania to pursue environmentalism as well as left wing social and economic policies 45 1980s and 1990s edit nbsp The new Parliament House in Canberra was opened in 1988 Bob Hawke a less polarising Labor leader than Whitlam defeated Fraser at the 1983 Election The new government stopped the Franklin Dam project via the High Court of Australia The 1980s saw severe concerns about Australia s future economic health take hold with severe current account deficits and high unemployment at times Hawke together with treasurer Paul Keating undertook micro economic and industrial relations reform designed to increase efficiency and competitiveness After the initial failure of the Whitlam model and partial dismantling under Fraser Hawke re established a new universal system of health insurance called Medicare Hawke and Keating abandoned traditional Labor support for tariffs to protect industry and jobs They moved to deregulate Australia s financial system and floated the Australian dollar 46 An agreement was reached with trade unions to moderate wage demands and accept more flexible working condition arrangements by accepting tax cuts in return Ultimately many of the reforms continued by successive governments appear to have been successful in pushing the economy along The Australian Bicentenary was celebrated in 1988 along with the opening of a new Parliament House in Canberra The following year the Australian Capital Territory achieved self government and Jervis Bay became a separate territory administered by the Minister for Territories A supporter of the US alliance Hawke committed Australian naval forces to the Gulf War following the 1990 invasion of Kuwait by Iraq After four successful elections but amid a deteriorating Australian economy and rising unemployment the intense rivalry between Hawke and Keating led the Labor Party to replace Hawke as leader and Paul Keating became Prime Minister in 1991 46 Unemployment reached 11 4 in 1992 the highest since the Great Depression The Liberal National Opposition had proposed an ambitious plan of economic reform to take to the 1993 Election including the introduction of a goods and services tax Keating shuffled treasurers and campaigned strongly against the tax and won the 1993 Election During his time in office Keating emphasised links to the Asia Pacific region co operating closely with the Indonesian President Suharto and campaigned to increase the role of APEC as a major forum for economic co operation Keating was active in indigenous affairs and the High Court of Australia s historic Mabo decision in 1992 required a legislative response to recognition of Indigenous title to land culminating in the Native Title Act 1993 and the Land Fund Act 1994 In 1993 Keating established a Republic Advisory Committee to examine options for Australia becoming a republic With foreign debt interest rates and unemployment still high and after a series of ministerial resignations Keating lost the 1996 Election to the Liberals John Howard 47 Full sovereignty from the United Kingdom edit The Australia Act 1986 led to the severing of nearly all constitutional ties between Australia and the UK This was achieved by the passing of the which removed the right of the British Parliament to make laws for Australia and ended any British role in the government of the Australian States 48 It also removed the right of appeal from Australian courts to the British Privy Council in London Most important the Act transferred into Australian hands full control of all Australia s constitutional documents 49 Indigenous Australia editCampaigns for indigenous rights in Australia have a long history In the modern era 1938 was an important year With the participation of leading indigenous activists like Douglas Nicholls the Australian Aborigines Advancement League organised a protest Day of Mourning to mark the 150th anniversary of the arrival of the First Fleet of British in Australia and launched its campaign for full citizenship rights for all Aborigines In the 1940s the conditions of life for Aborigines could be very poor A permit system restricted movement and work opportunities for many Aboriginal people In the 1950s the government pursued a policy of assimilation which sought to achieve full citizenship rights for Aborigines but also wanted them to adopt the mode of life of other Australians which very often was assumed to require suppression of cultural identity 50 nbsp Picture of Albert Namatjira at the Albert Namatjira Gallery Alice Springs Aboriginal art and artists became increasingly prominent in Australian cultural life during the second half of the 20th century nbsp From left Ian Thorpe Cathy Freeman and Jeff McMullen were among some of the speakers at the Close the Gap launch in 2007 The campaign aims to achieve health equality between indigenous and non indigenous Australia nbsp Noel Pearson is an Aboriginal lawyer rights activist and essayist From the 1950s onwards Australians began to rethink their attitudes towards racial issues An Aboriginal rights movement was founded and supported by many liberal white Australians and a campaign against the White Australia policy was also launched The 1967 referendum was held and overwhelmingly approved to amend the Constitution removing discriminatory references and giving the national parliament the power to legislate specifically for Indigenous Australians Contrary to frequently repeated mythology this referendum did not cover citizenship on Aboriginal people nor did it give them the vote they already had both However transferring this power away from the State parliaments did bring an end to the system of Indigenous Australian reserves which existed in each state which allowed Indigenous people to move more freely and exercise many of their citizenship rights for the first time From the late 1960s a movement for Indigenous land rights also developed Various groups and individuals were active in the pursuit of equality and social justice from the 1960s In the mid 1960s one of the earliest Aboriginal graduates from the University of Sydney Charles Perkins helped organise freedom rides into parts of Australia to expose discrimination and inequality In 1966 the Gurindji people of Wave Hill station owned by the Vestey Group commenced strike action led by Vincent Lingiari in a quest for equal pay and recognition of land rights 51 Indigenous Australians began to take up representation in Australian parliaments during the 1970s In 1971 Neville Bonner of the Liberal Party was appointed by the Queensland Parliament to replace a retiring senator becoming the first Aborigine in Federal Parliament Bonner was returned as a Senator at the 1972 election and remained until 1983 Hyacinth Tungutalum of the Country Liberal Party in the Northern Territory and Eric Deeral of the National Party of Queensland became the first Indigenous people elected to territory and state legislatures in 1974 In 1976 Sir Douglas Nicholls was appointed Governor of South Australia becoming the first Aborigine to hold vice regal office in Australia Aiden Ridgway of the Australian Democrats served as a senator during the 1990s but No indigenous person was elected to the House of Representatives until West Australian Liberal Ken Wyatt in August 2010 52 In 1984 a group of Pintupi people who were living a traditional hunter gatherer desert dwelling life were tracked down in the Gibson Desert in Western Australia and brought in to a settlement They are believed to be the last uncontacted tribe in Australia 53 In 1985 the Hawke government returned ownership of Uluru formerly known as Ayers Rock to the local Pitjantjatjara Aboriginal people In 1992 the High Court of Australia handed down its decision in the Mabo Case declaring the previous legal concept of terra nullius to be invalid That same year Prime Minister Paul Keating said in his Redfern Park Speech that European settlers were responsible for the difficulties Australian Aboriginal communities continued to face We committed the murders We took the children from their mothers We practiced discrimination and exclusion It was our ignorance and our prejudice In 1999 Parliament passed a Motion of Reconciliation drafted by Prime Minister John Howard and Aboriginal Senator Aden Ridgeway naming mistreatment of Indigenous Australians as the most blemished chapter in our national history 54 A great many indigenous Australians have been prominent in sport and the arts Several styles of Aboriginal art have developed in modern times including the watercolour paintings of Albert Namatjira s Hermannsburg School and the acrylic Papunya Tula dot art movement The Western Desert Art Movement became a globally renowned 20th century art movement Oodgeroo Noonuccal 1920 1995 was a famous Aboriginal poet writer and rights activist credited with publishing the first Aboriginal book of verse We Are Going 1964 55 Sally Morgan s novel My Place was considered a breakthrough memoir in terms of bringing indigenous stories to wider notice Leading Aboriginal intellectuals Marcia Langton First Australians 2008 and Noel Pearson Up From the Mission 2009 are active contemporary contributors to Australian literature 1955 s Jedda was the first Australian feature film to star Aboriginal actors in lead roles and the first to be entered at the Cannes Film Festival 56 1976 s The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith directed by Fred Schepisi was an award winning historical drama from a book by Thomas Keneally about the tragic story of an Aboriginal Bushranger The canon of films related to Indigenous Australians also increased over the period of the 1990s and early 21st century In 2006 Rolf de Heer s Ten Canoes became the first major feature film to be shot in an indigenous language and the film was recognised at Cannes and elsewhere In sport Evonne Goolagong Cawley became the world number one ranked tennis player in 1971 and won 14 Grand Slam titles during her career In 1973 Arthur Beetson became the first Indigenous Australian to captain his country in any sport when he first led the Australian National rugby league team the Kangaroos 57 In 1982 Mark Ella became Captain of the Australian National rugby union team the Wallabies 58 Olympic gold medalist Cathy Freeman lit the Olympic flame at the 2000 Summer Olympics opening ceremony in Sydney 59 In the early 21st century much of indigenous Australia continued to suffer lower standards of health and education than non indigenous Australia In 2007 the Close the Gap campaign was launched by Olympic champions Cathy Freeman and Ian Thorpe with the aim of achieving Indigenous health equality within 25 years 60 In 2007 Prime Minister John Howard and Indigenous Affairs Minister Mal Brough launched the Northern Territory National Emergency Response In response to the Little Children are Sacred Report into allegations of child abuse among indigenous communities in the Territory the government banned alcohol in prescribed communities in the Northern Territory quarantined a percentage of welfare payments for essential goods purchasing despatched additional police and medical personnel to the region and suspended the permit system for access to indigenous communities 61 During much of the twentieth century Australian governments had removed many aboriginal children from their families This practice did great damage to the Aboriginal people culturally and emotionally giving rise to the term stolen generation to describe these families Since the publication in 1997 of a federal government report Bringing Them Home all state governments have followed the recommendation of the report in issuing formal apologies for their past practices to the Aboriginal people as have many local governments The Howard government refused to make such an apology on behalf of the federal government despite pleas from the Aboriginal people and from many sections of the wider community saying that it implied intergenerational guilt on modern non indigenous Australia However the new government under Kevin Rudd led a formal bi partisan apology on 13 February 2008 Republicanism editIn the early 21st century Australia remains a constitutional monarchy under the Australian Constitution adopted in 1901 with the duties of the monarch performed by a Governor General selected by the Australian Government Australian republicanism which had been a feature of the 1890s faded away during the First World War 62 Support for the Monarchy in Australia peaked during the Menzies years with the wildly successful 1954 tour by Queen Elizabeth II Prince Charles attended school in Australia during the 1960s The issue of a republic did not arise again until the 1970s In the 1990s it was brought to the forefront of national debate by Prime Minister Paul Keating who promised in 1993 to introduce an Australian federal republic by the centenary of Federation in 2001 The Howard government called a Constitutional Convention to examine the issue in 1998 Delegates included appointees and elected representatives representing republicans monarchists and neutral parties The Convention proposed a republican model and a referendum was called for the approval of the Australian electorate The referendum held on 6 November 1999 failed to achieve the support of either a majority of voters or a majority of states The national vote of the electors in favour of Australia becoming a republic was 45 13 with 54 87 against 63 The Australian Labor Party advocated for the republic while the Liberals permitted members to campaign for either side Notable campaigners for the republic included all the living former Labor Prime Ministers and former Liberal Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser and incumbent Treasurer Peter Costello Notable Monarchists included Prime Minister John Howard Justice Michael Kirby of the High Court of Australia former Labor opposition leader Bill Hayden and Liberal Aboriginal elder Neville Bonner 64 Future leaders of the Liberal Party Malcolm Turnbull who led the Australian Republic Movement and Tony Abbott who supported Australians for Constitutional Monarchy took opposing views 65 Justice Michael Kirby a monarchist and leading figure in progressive Australian jurisprudence ascribed the failure of the republic referendum to ten factors lack of bi partisanship undue haste a perception that the republic was supported by big city elites a denigration of monarchists as unpatriotic by republicans the adoption of an inflexible republican model by the convention concerns about the specific model proposed chiefly the ease with which a Prime Minister could dismiss a president a republican strategy of using big names attached to the Whitlam era to promote their cause strong opposition to the proposal in the smaller states a counter productive pro republican bias in the media and an instinctive caution among the Australian electorate regarding Constitutional change 63 Some republicans blamed the conservative and monarchist Prime Minister John Howard elected in 1996 whose leadership certainly did not aid the republican cause citation needed But there were other significant factors including a split between minimalist republicans who wanted an Australian president to be chosen by the federal Parliament as happens in for example Germany and more radical republicans who wanted a directly elected president as in the Irish Republic Public opinion suggested that a republic would only be acceptable if a president was directly elected citation needed Since the referendum proposal was for an indirectly elected president many radicals opposed it The Gillard Labor government which took power in a hung parliament following the 2010 Australian Election has indicated an intention not to revisit the issue of a vote for an Australian republic during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II while the Opposition Liberal National Coalition is led by Tony Abbott a supporter of the constitutional monarchy 66 Cultural interest in the Royal Family endures with 7 million Australians one third of the population tuning in to watch the Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton in April 2011 67 In 2011 Australian public support for a republic fell to its lowest level since March 1994 68 Support for a republic outright was 41 68 with support rising to 48 per cent of respondents in a scenario with Charles on the throne and his wife Camilla as princess consort 68 Military engagements in the late twentieth century editMain article Military history of Australia nbsp Major General Peter Cosgrove right Australian commander of the United Nations backed peace keeping operation INTERFET to East Timor Following the Vietnam War Australian military forces were largely kept at home through the rest of the 1970s and 1980s other than service in United Nations peacekeeping missions RAAF helicopters operated in the Sinai and Australian forces assisted in a British Commonwealth operation when Zimbabwe won its independence as well as a similar operation in Namibia 69 Bob Hawke was Prime Minister at the time of the Fall of the Berlin Wall and end of the Cold War which ushered in a new era of international relations Royal Australian Navy warships were deployed to the Gulf War by the Hawke government in 1991 and remained in the region to enforce UN imposed sanctions against Iraq 69 Peacekeeping edit Australian forces were very active in UN peacekeeping through the 1990s In 1993 Foreign Minister Gareth Evans was active in the search for a settlement to ongoing troubles in Cambodia in the aftermath of the genocidal 1970s Pol Pot regime Australia contributed the force commander and the operation s communications component to the UN operation In the ultimately unsuccessful Somalia intervention a battalion level Australian contingent was employed to aid in the delivery of humanitarian aid in the Baidoa area In 1994 Australia deployed medical staff to the UN force in Rwanda sent to deal with the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide A UN Peacekeeping engagement in Bougainville began in 1997 to aid in resolving the long running conflict between the Papua New Guinea government Bougainville separatists 69 There have been a number of other peacekeeping and stabilisation operations notably in Bougainville including Operation Bel Isi 1998 2003 as well as Operation Helpem Fren and the Australian led Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands RAMSI in the early 2000s and the 2006 East Timorese crisis 70 East Timor edit Australia led an important international military mission to East Timor in 1999 Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975 and annexed the former Portuguese colony 71 Successive Australian governments concerned to maintain good relations with Indonesia had accepted Indonesia control of the territory however the fall of Indonesian President Suharto and a shift in Australian policy by the Howard government in 1998 precipitated a proposal for a referendum on the question of independence 72 New Indonesian President B J Habibie was prepared to consider a change of status for East Timor In late 1998 Australian Prime Minister John Howard with Foreign Minister Alexander Downer drafted a letter Indonesia setting out a major change in Australian policy suggesting that the East Timor be given a chance to vote on independence within a decade The letter upset President Habibie who saw it as implying Indonesia was a colonial power and he decided in response to announce a snap referendum 72 A UN sponsored referendum held in August 1999 showed overwhelming approval for independence After the result was announced violent clashes instigated by a suspected anti independence militia sparked a humanitarian and security crisis in the region John Howard consulted UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and lobbied U S President Bill Clinton to support an Australian led peace keeper force to end the violence Australia who contributed 5 500 personnel and the force commander Major General Peter Cosgrove to the UN backed International Force East Timor and began deploying on 20 September 1999 and successfully restored order The operation had been politically and militarily tense Australia re deployed frontline combat aircraft northward and detected an Indonesian submarine within the vicinity of Dili Harbour as INTERFET forces approached While the intervention was ultimately successful Australian Indonesian relations would take several years to recover 69 72 Al Qaeda edit nbsp Australian and Afghan soldiers patrol the poppy fields in the Baluchi Valley Region April 2010In 1998 a wealthy dissident Saudi Islamist Osama bin Laden declared a fatwa calling for the killing of Americans and their allies civilians and military in any country in which it is possible to do it in order to bring to an end the ongoing enforcement of the sanctions against Iraq and presence of US troops in the Arabian Peninsula thus bringing Australians into the line of fire in what would latterly grow to be defined as the War on Terror 73 Following the 11 September terrorist attacks by Al Qaeda in 2001 On 14 September 2001 the Australian Government cited the terrorist attacks against the US as sufficient basis for invoking the mutual defence clauses of the ANZUS Treaty This was the first time the Treaty s clauses on acting to meet a common danger had been invoked since it was enacted in 1952 74 The Howard government committed troops to the Afghanistan War with bi partisan support and the Iraq War meeting with the disapproval of other political parties SAS troops formed the most high profile part of Operation Slipper Australia s contribution to the invading force in the 2001 United States war in Afghanistan A small number of Australians including David Hicks were captured in and around the Afghan Theatre having spent time training or fighting with Al Qaeda aligned Islamist paramilitaries 75 Islamists following the Al Qaeda modus operandi bombed a nightclub in Bali in 2002 and killed 88 Australian civilians 76 The following year the Iraq War was launched by a U S British led coalition to overthrow the Saddam Hussein government of Iraq for its non compliance with the 1991 Gulf War Peace Treaty Australian contribution to the 2003 invasion of Iraq lasted until 2009 and was highly controversial Following the death of Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden at the hands of US forces in May 2011 Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced that Australian forces would remain in Afghanistan and said that Bin Laden s death offered a small measure of justice to the families of the 105 Australians who been killed in Al Qaeda attacks in New York Bali London and Mumbai since the commencement of the conflict 77 As of May 2011 a further 24 Australian military personnel had been killed while serving in the Afghanistan conflict including one with the British Armed Forces 78 Australia in the 21st century edit nbsp Olympic colours on the Sydney Harbour Bridge in 2000 nbsp World leaders with Prime Minister John Howard in Sydney for the 2007 APEC conference nbsp Julia Gillard left and Kevin Rudd deliver their first press conference as leaders of the Australian Labor Party 4 December 2006 Rudd won the 2007 election and was replaced by Gillard in 2010 John Howard served as Prime Minister from 1996 until 2007 the second longest prime ministerial term after Robert Menzies One of the first programs instigated by the Howard government was a nationwide gun control scheme following a mass shooting at Port Arthur The government sought to reduce Australia s government deficit and introduced industrial relations reforms particularly as regards efficiency on the waterfront After the 1996 election Howard and treasurer Peter Costello proposed a goods and services tax GST which they successfully took to the electorate in 1998 In 1999 Australia led a United Nations force into East Timor to help establish democracy and independence for that nation following political violence 79 The government also accelerated the pace of privatisation beginning with the government owned telecommunications corporation Telstra Howard s government continued some elements of the foreign policy of its predecessors based on relations with four key countries the United States Japan China and Indonesia The Howard administration strongly supported US engagement in the Asia Pacific region Australia hosted the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney to great international acclaim The Opening Ceremony featured a host of iconic Australian imagery and history and the flame ceremony honoured women athletes including swimmer Dawn Fraser with Aboriginal runner Cathy Freeman lit the Olympic flame At the Closing Ceremony President of the International Olympic Committee Juan Antonio Samaranch declared 80 I am proud and happy to proclaim that you have presented to the world the best Olympic Games ever Few international tourists came to Melbourne in 1956 for the Olympics that year but Sydney gained global attention for a well attended efficiently organised world class event Prince Philip representing Queen Elizabeth II opened the 1956 games but neither was invited in 2000 as the spirit of republicanism was too strong 81 In the long run as Toohey 2008 reports many of the hoped for benefits failed to materialize Nationwide levels of participation in physical activity and sport did not rise although passive spectatorship such as TV watching did increase Many of the costly facilities built for the games remained underutilized in their wake 82 nbsp Aftermath of the devastating 2009 Victorian bushfires which killed 173 people nbsp Suburban Toowoomba during the summer 2010 11 Queensland floodsSydney played host to other important world events over the decade including the 2003 Rugby World Cup the APEC Leaders conference of 2007 and Catholic World Youth Day 2008 Melbourne hosted the 2006 Commonwealth Games In 2001 Australia celebrated its Centenary of Federation with a program of events including the creation of the Centenary Medal to honour people who have made a contribution to Australian society or government The Howard government expanded immigration overall but instituted often controversial tough immigration laws to discourage unauthorised arrivals of boat people While Howard was a strong supporter of traditional links to the Commonwealth and to the United States alliance trade with Asia particularly China continued to increase dramatically and Australia endured an extended period of prosperity 83 Howard s term in office coincided with the 2001 11 September attacks In the aftermath of this event the government committed troops to the Afghanistan War with bi partisan support and the Iraq War meeting with the disapproval of other political parties 79 Southern Australia was affected by a very severe drought through much of the first decade of the 21st century By late 2006 water storage throughout southern Australia were at record low levels Severe restrictions on urban water usage were put in place in every state capital city except Hobart and Darwin in 2005 06 and irrigation in the Murray Darling basin was heavily curtailed citation needed Consequently issues relating to fresh water supply became an important topic for political discussion though the economic impact of the drought was felt most keenly only in Australia s sparsely populated agricultural areas citation needed Howard lost his substantial majority at the 1998 Federal election improved on it at the 2001 Federal election and at the 2004 election against Labor s Mark Latham The government however resoundingly lost the 2007 Federal election to the Labor Party led by Kevin Rudd with a wave of support for change and a slogan for new leadership for the country 84 Kevin Rudd held the office until June 2010 when he was replaced following internal Labor Party coup by his colleague and deputy Julia Gillard Rudd used his term in office to symbolically ratify the Kyoto Protocol and lead an historic parliamentary apology to the Stolen Generation those Indigenous Australians who had been removed from their parents by the state during the early 20th century to the 1960s The mandarin Chinese speaking former diplomat also pursued energetic foreign policy and initially sought to instigate a price on carbon in the Australian economy to combat global warming His prime ministership coincided with the initial phases of the Financial crisis of 2007 2010 to which his government responded through a large package of economic stimulus the management of which later proved to be controversial 85 The Black Saturday bushfires struck Victoria on and around Saturday 7 February 2009 The fires occurred during extreme bushfire weather conditions and resulted in Australia s highest ever loss of life from a bushfire 86 173 people died 87 88 and 414 were injured as a result of the fires Amidst increasing controversy on management of stimulus spending over policy directions on taxation immigration and climate change the Labor Party replaced Rudd with Julia Gillard who became the first woman Prime Minister of Australia and narrowly retained office against the Liberal National Coalition led by Tony Abbott at the 2010 Federal election by securing the support of independent members of the first hung parliament in Australia since the 1940 election 89 nbsp ISS image of the smoke produced from the 2019 20 Australian bushfire season 4 January 2020The drought was broken definitively by severe flooding associated with the La Nina weather effect in the summer of 2010 2011 Queensland in particular suffered dramatic flooding which swept through parts of the capital city of Brisbane and caused some deaths and serious financial loss Soon after tropical cyclone Yasi struck the already beleaguered coast Following two and half decades of economic reform and amidst booming trade with Asia Australia in stark contrast to most other Western nations avoided recession following the 2008 collapse of financial markets 90 Following the 2010 election the Gillard government entered an alliance with the Australian Greens and was destabilized by breaking an election promise not to introduce a carbon tax by leadership rivalry and by lacking the numbers to push some controversial legislation through the Parliament Nevertheless the cross bench alliance continued to operate and though facing declining poll support and firm opposition from the Liberal National Coalition in October the government successfully passed its Clean Energy Bill 2011 aimed to restructure the Australian economy in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions associated with global warming by increasing costs to industry for carbon emissions 91 A carbon tax was introduced in Australia on 1 July 2012 Kevin Rudd was reinstated as prime minister in a Labor leadership spill on 27 June 2013 After the 2013 Australian General Election Rudd lost the role of Prime Minister to Tony Abbott the Liberal Leader On 15 December 2013 95 of the Australian military had withdrawn from Afghanistan with the remaining 5 presently training locals in Kabul 92 The Clean Energy Bill 2011 was repealed by the Abbott government on 17 July 2014 backdated to 1 July 2014 Malcolm Turnbull of the Liberal Party of Australia was elected as Tony Abbott s successor and served as Prime Minister from 2015 until 2018 where he resigned and was replaced by Scott Morrison The last months of 2019 and into early 2020 were marked by intense bushfires on the east coast that became known as the Black Summer 93 The fires directly killed 34 people 94 Approximately 9 352 buildings were destroyed The fires are very likely Australia s costliest natural disaster at about A 100 billion 95 They were also notable for the smoke that enveloped areas within Australia well away from the fires for months and even places 12 000 km 7 500 mi overseas reaching as far as South America 96 Air quality dropped to hazardous levels in all southern and eastern states 97 98 99 Health researcher s modelling indicated that 80 per cent of Australians were affected by bushfire smoke at some point over the fire season 445 people may have died indirectly from smoke inhalation 100 Late January 2020 was also notable for the first local infections of a new virus severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 SARS CoV 2 This led into the world wide COVID 19 pandemic and the COVID 19 pandemic in Australia that by the end of 2020 had killed 909 in Australia but as of 5 February 2021 coronavirus disease 2019 COVID 19 had caused more than 2 29 million deaths world wide In the early morning hours of 9 September 2022 Australia Eastern Standard Time Queen Elizabeth II died The Queen was succeeded by her eldest son King Charles III who now reigns as the King of Australia See also editHistory of broadcasting in AustraliaReferences edit Our History Liberal Party of Australia Liberal org au 16 October 1944 Retrieved 9 November 2011 G C Bolton Evatt Herbert Vere Bert 1894 1965 Biography Herbert Vere Bert Evatt Australian Dictionary of Biography Adbonline anu edu au Retrieved 9 November 2011 Francis Forde Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 In office Ben Chifley Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 Ben Chifley Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au 13 June 1951 Retrieved 9 November 2011 AUSTRALIA S NEED OF POPULATION The Morning Bulletin Rockhampton Qld 6 December 1948 p 1 Retrieved 23 April 2011 via National Library of Australia a b The Snowy Mountains Scheme Cultureandrecreation gov au 20 March 2008 Archived from the original on 30 August 2007 Retrieved 9 November 2011 Jan Bassett 1986 p 18 Korean War 1950 53 Australian War Memorial Awm gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 See Menzies in Frank Crowley 1973 Modern Australia in Documents 1939 1970 p 222 226 Wren Publishing Melbourne ISBN 978 0 85885 032 3 Jan Bassett 1986 p 75 6 Before office Gough Whitlam Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 Laing Dave 20 September 2003 Slim Dusty The Guardian London O Keefe John Michael Johnny 1935 1978 O Keefe John Michael Johnny National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 28 May 2008 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Kent David 2005 Australian Chart Book 1940 1970 Turramurra N S W Australian Chart Book 2005 ISBN 978 0 646 44439 0 Long Way to the Top ABC Archived from the original on 30 May 2008 Retrieved 28 May 2008 updated 30 April 2010 ABC The Drum Conviction Clever Kevin is no Pig Iron Bob Abc net au Retrieved 9 November 2011 Glen Barclay and Joseph Siracusa 1976 Australian American Relations Since 1945 p 35 49 Holt Rinehart and Winston Sydney ISBN 978 0 03 900122 3 Glen Barclay and Joseph Siracusa 1976 p 35 See Adrian Tame and F P J Robotham 1982 Maralinga British A Bomb Australian legacy p 179 Fontana Books Melbourne ISBN 0 00 636391 1 E M Andrews 1979 A History of Australian Foreign Policy P 144 Longman Cheshire Melbourne ISBN 978 0 582 68253 5 Glen Barclay and Joseph Siracusa 1976 p 63 Also see Desmond Ball 1980 A suitable piece of real estate American Installations in Australia Hale and Iremonger Sydney ISBN 978 0 908094 47 9 See discussion on the role of ANZUS in Australia s commitment to the Vietnam War in Paul Ham 2007 Vietnam The Australian War p 86 7 Harper Collins Publishers Sydney ISBN 978 0 7322 8237 0 a b In office Harold Holt Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 a b In office John Gorton Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 rugby com au MANDELA TO HONOUR ANTI APARTHEID WALLABIES OF 71 Aru rugby com au Archived from the original on 14 September 2006 Retrieved 29 January 2011 Geoffrey Bolton 1990 p 229 230 Richard White 1981 Inventing Australia Images and Identity 1688 1980 p 169 George Allen and Unwin Sydney ISBN 978 0 86861 035 1 Anne Pender March 2005 The Australian Journal of Politics and History The Mythical Australian Barry Humphries Gough Whitlam and new nationalism The Mythical Australian Barry Humphries Gough Whitlam and new nationalism Australian Journal of Politics and History The Find Articles at BNET Richard White 1981 p 170 John Gorton Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 a b Vietnam War 1962 75 Australian War Memorial Awm gov au 11 January 1973 Retrieved 9 November 2011 4102 0 Australian Social Trends 1994 Abs gov au 27 May 1994 Retrieved 9 November 2011 Peacock made bird of paradise chief News ninemsn com au Archived from the original on 4 December 2007 Retrieved 9 November 2011 In office Gough Whitlam Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Archived from the original on 19 April 2013 Retrieved 9 November 2011 Nauru State gov 31 August 2011 Retrieved 9 November 2011 Gough Whitlam Bankstown Speech 13 November 1972 Cited in Sally Warhaft Ed 2004 Well may we say The Speeches that made Australia p 178 9 Blac Inc Melbourne ISBN 978 1 86395 277 4 Geoffrey Bolton 1990 p 215 216 Jan Bassett 1986 p273 4 Gough Whitlam 1985 p 315 In office Gough Whitlam Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Archived from the original on 19 April 2013 Retrieved 9 November 2011 There are numerous books on the Whitlam dismissal For example see Paul Kelly s November 1975 The Inside Story of Australia s Greatest Political Crisis St Leonards NSW Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 86373 987 0 In office Malcolm Fraser Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 Senator Bob Brown Abc net au Archived from the original on 28 June 2011 Retrieved 9 November 2011 a b In office Robert Hawke Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 In office Paul Keating Australia s PMs Australia s Prime Ministers Primeministers naa gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 Twomey Anne May 2007 The De Colonisation of the Australian States Paper No 07 19 Sydney Law School Research SSRN 984994 the Australian States remained self governing colonial dependencies of the British Crown until the Australia Acts 1986 came into force Australia Act 1986 Australasian Legal Information Institute Archived from the original on 4 January 2012 Retrieved 17 June 2010 The First Australians A Fair Deal for a Dark Race par SBS TV 2008 Geoffrey Bolton 1990 p 193 and 195 Electoral Milestone Timetable for Indigenous Australians Australian Electoral Commission Aec gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 Colliding worlds first contact in the western desert 1932 1984 Recollections nma gov au Retrieved 12 October 2009 The History of Apologies Down Under Thinking Faith the online journal of the British Jesuits Thinkingfaith org Archived from the original on 2 December 2014 Retrieved 12 October 2009 We Are Going Poems OCLC OCLC 450856 Festival de Cannes From 16 to 27 may 2012 Festival cannes com Archived from the original on 18 January 2012 Retrieved 9 November 2011 Arthur Beetson OAM PDF Archived from the original PDF on 20 January 2012 Retrieved 3 March 2010 The International Rugby Hall of Fame Rugbyhalloffame com 9 October 2007 Archived from the original on 10 September 2012 Retrieved 12 October 2009 Cathy Freeman Lights Flame At Olympic Games Opening Ceremony September 15 2000 Australianpolitics com Retrieved 9 November 2011 Behind the News 09 03 2010 Close the Gap Abc net au 9 March 2010 Retrieved 9 November 2011 One policy two camps the takeover rift Sydney Morning Herald 27 October 2007 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Mark McKenna Captive Republic A History of Republicanism in Australia 1788 1996 1997 a b http www michaelkirby com au images stories speeches 2000s vol46 2000 1670 Lessons from the Republic Referendum pdf bare URL PDF Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 8 January 2011 Retrieved 22 February 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Turnbull dumped Abbott new leader The West Australian 1 December 2009 Retrieved 9 November 2011 via Yahoo News Gillard handed a royal audience The Sydney Morning Herald 30 April 2011 Kaila Jon 1 May 2011 Wills and Kate s day watched by all serving a blow to the republican movement Herald Sun Retrieved 9 November 2011 a b c Republic support lowest in 17 years The Australian 25 April 2011 a b c d Australians and Peacekeeping Australian War Memorial Awm gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 Official History of Peacekeeping Humanitarian and Post Cold War Operations Australian War Memorial Awm gov au Retrieved 9 November 2011 by Irena Cristalis East Timor A Nation s Bitter Dawn 2009 a b c Diplomat critical of Timor referendum course abc net au ABC 17 September 1999 Retrieved 31 August 2017 Al Qaeda s 1998 Fatwa PBS NewsHour Feb 23 1998 PBS Retrieved 9 November 2011 Australian involvement in Afghanistan Australia s military involvement in Afghanistan since 2001 A chronology Archived from the original on 17 February 2012 Retrieved 14 January 2013 David Hicks Australian Taleban BBC News 20 May 2007 Bin Laden voices new threat to Australia The Age Melbourne 14 November 2002 War against terrorism not over Gillard ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Afghanistan Australian Broadcasting Corporation Abc net au Retrieved 9 November 2011 a b Australia s Prime Ministers John Howard In office National Archives of Australia Retrieved 9 November 2011 Longman Jere 2 October 2000 Sydney 2000 Closing Ceremony A Fond Farewell from Australia New York Times Retrieved 31 August 2017 Helen Jefferson Lenskyj Sydney 2000 Olympic Sport and the Australian Media Journal of Australian Studies 1999 pp 76 online Kristine Toohey The Sydney Olympics Striving for Legacies Overcoming Short Term Disappointments and Long Term Deficiencies International Journal of the History of Sport 2008 25 14 pp 1953 1971 Downwonder The Economist Sydney 29 March 2007 Retrieved 31 August 2017 Voters thought Howard government out of touch Liberal director PM ABC 19 December 2007 Retrieved 9 November 2011 Australia s Prime Ministers Kevin Rudd In office National Archives of Australia Retrieved 9 November 2011 Huxley John 11 February 2009 Horrific but not the worst we ve suffered Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 11 February 2009 Victoria Police Press conference Bushfires death toll revised to 173 Release date Mon 30 March 2009 Bushfire death toll revised down News Limited 30 March 2009 Archived from the original on 2 April 2009 Retrieved 30 March 2009 Voters leave Australia hanging ABC News 21 August 2010 Australia Economy 2011 CIA World Factbook Theodora Retrieved 9 November 2011 Carbon Tax Bill Passes House Of Representatives Sydney Morning Herald 12 October 2011 Retrieved 9 November 2011 Home Afghanistan Department of Defence www defence gov au 19 September 2019 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Morrison Scott 20 February 2020 National Royal Commission into Black Summer bushfires established Press release Prime Minister of Australia Retrieved 5 February 2021 Nelson Janice 16 June 2020 Geoscience Australia s Oliver Discusses Use of Landsat during Country s Historic Fires United States Geological Survey Retrieved 5 February 2021 Reed Paul Denniss Richard 17 January 2020 With costs approaching 100 billion the fires are Australia s costliest natural disaster The Conversation Retrieved 5 February 2021 Australia bushfire smoke travels 12 000 kms sic to Chile Dateline Special Broadcasting Service 7 January 2020 Retrieved 5 February 2021 Australia s bushfire smoke spreads to NZ as Canberra s air quality goes off the scale www abc net au Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1 January 2020 Retrieved 5 February 2021 Poor air quality caused by bushfire smoke posing serious risk for healthy people too health experts warn ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 7 January 2020 Retrieved 5 February 2021 Melbourne air quality drops to hazardous levels as bushfire smoke lingers over Victoria ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 14 January 2020 Retrieved 5 February 2021 Hitch Georgia 26 May 2020 Bushfire royal commission hears that Black Summer smoke killed nearly 450 people www abc net au Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 5 February 2021 Associate Professor Fay Johnston from the Menzies Institute for Medical Research at the University of Tasmania said her team estimated around 445 people died as a result of the smoke over 3 000 people were admitted to hospital for respiratory problems and 1 700 people presented for asthma Further reading editReferences edit Bambrick Susan ed The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Australia 1994 Basset Jan The Oxford Illustrated Dictionary of Australian History 1998 Davison Graeme John Hirst and Stuart Macintyre eds The Oxford Companion to Australian History 2001 online at many academic libraries also excerpt and text search Day David Claiming a Continent A New History of Australia 2001 Dennis Peter Jeffrey Grey Ewan Morris and Robin Prior The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History 1996 Jupp James ed The Australian People An Encyclopedia of the Nation its People and their Origins 2nd ed 2002 960pp excerpt and text search Macintyre Stuart A Concise History of Australia 2009 excerpt and text search O Shane Pat et al Australia The Complete Encyclopedia 2001 Robinson GM Loughran RJ and Tranter PJ Australia and New Zealand economy society and environment 2000 Shaw John ed Collins Australian Encyclopedia 1984 Welsh Frank Australia A New History of the Great Southern Land 2008 History edit Bennett Bruce et al The Oxford Literary History of Australia 1999 Bennett Tony and David Carter Culture in Australia Policies Publics and Programs 2001 excerpt and text search Bolton Geoffrey The Oxford History of Australia Volume 5 1942 1995 The Middle Way 2005 Bramble Tom Trade Unionism in Australia A History from Flood to Ebb Tide 2008 excerpt and text search Bridge Carl ed Munich to Vietnam Australia s Relations with Britain and the United States since the 1930s Melbourne University Press 1991 Carey Hilary Believing in Australia A Cultural History of Religions 1996 Edwards John Curtin s Gift Reinterpreting Australia s Greatest Prime Minister 2005 online edition Firth Stewart Australia in International Politics An Introduction to Australian Foreign Policy 2005 online edition Grant Ian A Dictionary of Australian Military History from Colonial Times to the Gulf War 1992 Hearn Mark Harry Knowles and Ian Cambridge One Big Union A History of the Australian Workers Union 1886 1994 1998 Hutton Drew and Libby Connors History of the Australian Environment Movement 1999 excerpt and text search Kelly Paul The End of Certainty Power Politics and Business in Australia 1994 history of the 1980s Kleinert Sylvia and Margo Neale The Oxford Companion to Aboriginal Art and Culture 2001 Lee David Search for Security The Political Economy of Australia s Postwar Foreign and Defence Policy 1995 Lowe David Menzies and the Great World Struggle Australia s Cold War 1948 54 1999 online edition Martin A W Robert Menzies A Life 2 vol 1993 99 online at ACLS e books McIntyre Stuart The History Wars 2nd ed 2004 historiography McLachlan Noel Waiting for the Revolution A History of Australian Nationalism 1989 McLean David Australia in the Cold War a Historiographical Review International History Review 2001 23 2 299 321 ISSN 0707 5332 McLean David From British Colony to American Satellite Australia and the USA during the Cold War Australian Journal of Politics amp History 2006 52 1 64 79 Rejects satellite model online at Blackwell Synergy Megalogenis George The Longest Decade 2nd ed 2009 politics 1990 2008 Moran Albert Historical Dictionary of Australian Radio and Television 2007 Moran Anthony Australia Nation Belonging and Globalization Routledge 2004 online edition Murphy John Harvest of Fear A History of Australia s Vietnam War 1993 Watt Alan The Evolution of Australian Foreign Policy 1938 1965 Cambridge University Press 1967 Webby Elizabeth ed The Cambridge Companion to Australian Literature 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Australia 1945 present amp oldid 1195291296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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