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Australian of the Year

The Australian of the Year is a national award conferred on an Australian citizen by the National Australia Day Council, a not-for-profit Australian Government-owned social enterprise. Similar awards are also conferred at the state and territory level.

Australian of the Year
Awarded forContributing to positive change in Australia
Sponsored byAustralia Post
Date25 January
CountryAustralia
Presented byNational Australia Day Council
MottoReflect. Respect. Celebrate.
First awarded1960; 63 years ago (1960)
Latest recipientTaryn Brumfitt
Websiteaoty.org.au
Television/radio coverage
NetworkABC TV
← 2020 · 2021 · 2022 →

History Edit

Since 1960 the award for the Australian of the Year has been bestowed as part of the celebrations surrounding Australia Day, during which time it has grown steadily in significance to become one of the nation's pre-eminent awards. The Australian of the Year announcement has become a notable part of the annual Australia Day celebrations. The official announcement has grown to become a public event, and the Canberra ceremony is televised nationally. The award offers an insight into Australian identity, reflecting the nation's evolving relationship with world, the role of sport in Australian culture, the impact of multiculturalism, and the special status of Indigenous Australians. It has also provoked spirited debate about the fields of endeavour that are most worthy of public recognition.

The award program promotes active citizenship and seeks to elevate certain people as role models. Three companion awards have been introduced, recognising both Young and Senior Australians, and proclaiming the efforts of those who work at a grass roots level through the "Australia's Local Hero" award.

Sponsorship Edit

The Australian of the Year award receives substantial sponsorship from private companies, including a relationship in excess of thirty years with the Commonwealth Bank. The close relationship with the Australian Government ensures that the award's profile and reputation is significantly enhanced.

Awards history, by decade Edit

1960s Edit

During the 1960s, a network of state-based organisations worked hard to increase the profile of Australia Day. The most active and best resourced of these was the Victorian Australia Day Council, which had grown out of the Australian Natives' Association. In January 1960 the council's chairman, the unabashed patriot Sir Norman Martin, announced the introduction of a new annual award for the 'Australian of the Year'. He explained that Australia Day was a fitting occasion on which to give proper recognition to a leading citizen, whose contribution to the nation's culture, economy, sciences or arts was particularly outstanding.

 
The first Australian of the Year Sir Macfarlane Burnet, Australian of the Year 1960

For the first two decades the Australian of the Year was chosen by a panel of five, which included the Victorian Premier, the Anglican Archbishop of Melbourne, the Vice-Chancellor of Melbourne University, the Lord Mayor of Melbourne and the President of the National Council for Women. Although the panel was certainly distinguished, it would in time become too closely associated with Melbourne to be appropriate for a national award. The panel's first choice of Nobel Prize winning immunologist Sir Macfarlane Burnet gained general approval. The editors of The Age proclaimed the new honour was symptomatic of Australia's growing confidence as a nation: 'We are beginning to count for something in the world and we should be intensely proud of this fact.'[1][2]

 
Sir Robert Helpmann, Australian of the Year 1965

International achievement remained a key criterion during the award's first decade. Several sporting heroes were honoured, from America's Cup skipper Jock Sturrock and swimmer Dawn Fraser, to world champion motor racer Sir Jack Brabham and boxer Lionel Rose. The pioneering neurologist Sir John Eccles followed Burnet's example, becoming the second of five Australians to take out the Nobel Prize/Australian of the Year double. Achievers in the artistic realm were also well represented, including opera singer Joan Sutherland, renowned dancer and choreographer Robert Helpmann and the four members of the chart-topping singing group The SeekersJudith Durham, Athol Guy, Keith Potger and Bruce Woodley. The focus on international achievement reflected the philosophy of the award organisers, who described the Australian of the Year as 'the person who has brought the greatest honour to Australia in the year under review.'[3]

1970s and 1980s Edit

During its first two decades, the Australian of the Year award grew steadily in national prominence, but it increasingly suffered from its close association with the Victorian Australia Day Council. A competing Australian of the Year award was established by newspaper The Australian in 1971.[4] In 1975 the newly formed Canberra Australia Day Council also began to name a rival Australian of the Year. The Canberra council was run by a vibrant group of local inhabitants, who pursued a more progressive agenda than their Victorian counterparts. In particular, the Canberra council was sympathetic to the emerging republican movement, while the Victorian council was staunchly committed to constitutional ties with Britain. The Victorian council also battled a common perception that it was an exclusive organisation that represented the Melbourne Establishment. Australia's turbulent political climate nourished this division, and the Australian of the Year award was embroiled in a wider debate about Australian nationalism.

Between 1975 and 1979, the Canberra Australia Day Council named four Australians of the Year. Prime Minister Gough Whitlam lent his support to the Canberra award when he presented the inaugural honour to Major General Alan Stretton, the commander of the emergency response to Cyclone Tracy. The Canberra council also made good use of the federal parliamentary press boxes to promote its award to the national media. The Victorian council was singularly unimpressed that a rival Australia Day organisation had copied its idea – in 1977 it described its own winner, Dame Raigh Roe, as 'the real Australian of the Year'. The impasse was only resolved when the Fraser government created the National Australia Day Council (NADC) in 1979. The Victorian council willingly transferred responsibility for its award to the new national body, while the Canberra council agreed to discontinue its rival program. In 1982, the Victorian council was further sidelined when that state's Australian Labor Party government led by John Cain created a new Victorian Australia Day Committee within the Premier's Department, which joined the NADC's official national network.

The NADC made immediate changes to the selection process, appointing an independent panel of ten leading Australians from diverse fields. Despite this rigorous approach, the panel's first choice of historian Manning Clark did not please conservative politicians, as Clark had been critical of the Fraser government's social policy. If nothing else, the controversy was a clear sign that the award had become a prominent and valued feature of the Australia Day celebrations. In time the selection of the annual winner fell to the board of the NADC itself, whose members are appointed by the Prime Minister of the day. Former NADC chairman Phillip Adams recalls that heated debates were common. Typically the Australian of the Year was chosen at a special two-day board meeting, which Adams likened to the election of a Pope: 'We would go into conclave, there would be lots of hot air, then a puff of smoke.'[5]

The Australian has continued to publish its own annual award, which sometimes coincides with the choice of the National Australia Day Council.[6]

During the 1980s, there was an expectation that corporate sponsorship would replace Government funding and that the NADC would become self-sufficient. The list of former Australians of the Year provides circumstantial evidence of this shift towards a more popular imperative. Economist Sir John Crawford and judge Sir Edward Williams thoroughly deserved their awards, but were perhaps not well placed to promote the importance of Australia Day to mainstream Australia, or to secure corporate sponsorship for the NADC. Subsequent winners included marathon runner Robert de Castella, comedian and actor Paul Hogan, singer John Farnham and cricketer Allan Border, who were far more likely to attract public attention. In 1988, the editor of the Sydney Morning Herald expressed concern at this development: 'One worrying trend with the award is its attachment to ratings. This year's candidates appear to have been people who held high public profiles.'[7] Yet the steadily rising numbers of nominations indicated that the award was capturing the public imagination.

 
John Farnham was Australian of the Year in 1987
 
Recognising the role of Aboriginal Australians, Mandawuy Yunupingu, frontman of Yothu Yindi, was Australian of the Year in 1992

1990s Edit

During the 1990s, the Australian of the Year award intersected noticeably with the politics of national identity. In its attempt to encourage unified national celebrations, the NADC was a strong promoter of both multiculturalism and reconciliation. The council was also linked to the growing republican movement and the campaign to change the national flag. Australians of the Year in this period included Yothu Yindi lead singer and prominent Aboriginal identity Mandawuy Yunupingu; environmentalist and republican Ian Kiernan; and Chinese-Australian paediatrician John Yu. Yunupingu's award continued a strong tradition of honouring Indigenous Australians. The first Aboriginal winner was boxer Lionel Rose, who quipped: "One hundred and eighty-two years ago one of my mob would have been a dead cert' for this."[8] Since then a further seven Indigenous people have been named Australian of the Year, for achievements in sport, music, politics, law, public service and academia. Many have played a role in Indigenous advocacy and some have raised concerns about the celebration of Australia Day on 26 January, most notably the 1985 recipient Lowitja O'Donoghue.

Prior to 1994 the award was given for the outstanding Australian of the previous year; that is, the 1992 Australian of the Year was announced on Australia Day in 1993. From 1994 onward the award became one for the year ahead, so that the 1994 Australian of the Year was announced on Australia Day in 1994. This resulted in there being no Australian of the Year for 1993.[9]

2000s onwards Edit

 
Fiona Stanley, Australian of the Year 2003, running with Summer Olympic Torch 2008
 
Ita Buttrose, Australian of the Year 2013

Debates about the Australian of the Year award often revolve around the relative balance between sport, science and the arts. Fourteen winners have excelled in sports as diverse as cricket, swimming, athletics, sailing, tennis, boxing and motor racing. A recurring criticism that sport features too regularly peaked in 2004, when Steve Waugh was the fourth sporting winner in seven years and the third Test Cricket captain to be honoured. Despite the perception of an over-emphasis on sport, the list of past winners reveals a strong endorsement for scientific achievement; as of 2009 thirteen Australian scientists have received the honour, including ten from the medical sciences. A long-term view also reveals that Australia's talented artists have not been neglected; ten winners have excelled in creative pursuits, including six musicians, a dancer, a painter, a comedian and a Nobel Prize-winning novelist.

 
Dame Joan Sutherland, Australian of the Year 1961

Many Australians of the Year do not fit neatly into categories such as sport, science and the arts. Phillip Adams once described the past winners as "an eclectic collection of people who reflect the diversity of achievement in this country".[10] Australians of the Year have also excelled in public administration, the military, social and community work, business enterprise, academia, religious leadership and philanthropy. There has been relatively little public debate about the gender balance of past winners. In 1961 several news outlets incorrectly referred to Sir Macfarlane Burnet as 'Man of the Year'; the mistake was not allowed to continue, as Joan Sutherland took out the second award, but it is certainly true that women are under-represented. By 2009, 11 winners out of a total of 56 were women.

In 2016, Miranda Devine of The Daily Telegraph criticised the selection process, with the national selection panel having to choose from the eight candidates appointed by variously structured, state-based selection panels. Devine also said, "the award, which ought to reflect and unite this great nation, has evolved into a mere plaything of social engineers", noting also that three of the eight finalists were jointly involved in the same events.[11][12] Concern has also been raised as to how a person who has not lived in a state "for 40-something years" (Cate McGregor) could be nominated as that state's representative.[13] Following criticism of both the award process and the priorities of the 2016 recipient David Morrison, an editorial in The Sydney Morning Herald said, "The Herald knows the selection board will look closely at the 2016 process and work to improve public confidence in the awards in time for a better Australia Day in 2017".[14]

While the selection of a single Australian of the Year is bound to stimulate debate, the awards program as a whole recognises a much wider range of achievement. In 1979 the NADC named its first 'Young Australian of the Year', community service volunteer Julie Sochacki. Twenty years later the veteran country music star Slim Dusty received the inaugural 'Senior Australian of the Year' award. In 2003 the NADC introduced an award for 'Australia's Local Hero', which honours outstanding contributions to local communities. With four award categories and a system of state and national finals, the NADC now recognises a total of 128 inspiring Australian role models every year.

Young Australian of the Year Edit

For the first twenty years of the Australian of the Year Awards there was no specific honour reserved for younger Australia. This period several young sports stars won the main award, including Dawn Fraser, Shane Gould, Lionel Rose and Evonne Goolagong. Gould remains the youngest person to be named Australian of the Year.

Shortly after the formation of the NADC in October 1979, the Northern Territory representative Dr. Ella Stack convinced her fellow board members to introduce a new award that focussed specifically on the achievements of younger Australians. The inaugural winner, youth unemployment worker Julie Sochacki, was named Young Australian of the Year in January 1980. The NADC coordinated the announcement with the Victorian Australia Day Council, which chose the Australian of the Year for the last time. The following year, the NADC assumed responsibility for both awards.

In 1996, at the invitation of Phillip Adams, the then chairman of the NADC, the Young Australian of the Year Awards was facilitated and coordinated nationally by Awards Australia under the leadership of Jeffrey J Hopp. Mr Hopp and his team ran the awards nationally, working closely with the Australia Day Councils in every state, and NADC Chairmain Kevin Gosper and Lisa Curry until the awards were handed back to the NADC in 2003.

During that period, the awards recognised, Rebecca Chambers, Nova Peris-Kneebone, Tan Le, Bryan Gaensler, Ian Thorpe, James Fitzpatrick, Scott Hocknull And Lleyton Hewitt.

Senior Australian of the Year Edit

 
Slim Dusty, Australian Senior of the Year
 
Maggie Beer, Senior Australian of the Year 2010

The Senior Australian of the Year award initially had no connection with the NADC. When the United Nations declared 1999 the 'International Year of Older Persons,' the Minister for Aged Care Bronwyn Bishop approached National Seniors Australia with a plan to increase the prominence of the award. The Department of Health and Ageing took over responsibility for the program and Prime Minister John Howard presented the award to veteran country music star Slim Dusty in October 1999. Bishop arranged for the NADC to administer the program on behalf of the Department of Health and Ageing, but the award continued to be presented in October, with no discernible link to Australia Day. Three years later the NADC streamlined its awards programs. The council was running three separate awards, as even the Young Australian of the Year was announced earlier in January and had a separate nominations process. The Senior Australian of the Year announcement moved from October to January (skipping 2002 altogether) and joined the other two awards. By integrating the various programs, the NADC increased the prominence of the companion awards by announcing them at the same function as the Australian of the Year. Since then, many remarkable Senior Australians have been honoured on a national stage on Australia Day Eve.

Australia's Local Hero Edit

In 2003, the NADC addressed calls to recognise ordinary, lesser-known people who work for the benefit of their fellow citizens, by introducing a fourth award category known as the "Local Hero Award". The new award was part of a shift in thinking at the NADC towards the key goal of promoting good citizenship.[citation needed]

Choosing the winners Edit

The process of choosing the Australian of the Year has evolved considerably over half a century, including both the make-up of the selection committee and the system of nominations. In the 1960s Sir Norman Martin usually insisted that the decision of the small Victorian selection committee was unanimous. If this is true, then it is in stark contrast to the selection process in the 1990s, when Phillip Adams recalls that heated debates were common. In 1980 the NADC had formed an independent panel to decide the award, but eventually the selection fell to the NADC board itself. Typically the matter was considered at a special two-day board meeting, which Adams likened to the election of a new Pope: 'We would go into conclave, there would be lots of hot air, then a puff of smoke.'[5][15]

The most significant change in the selection procedure has been expansion of the nomination process. In the 1960s and 1970s, the committee usually chose the winner from a relatively small list of nominees; for example, in 1971 Evonne Goolagong edged out only 18 other nominees.[16] At a meeting in 1982, the directors of the NADC and its state based affiliates identified low nominee numbers as a cause for concern.[17] The problem persisted and board members were regularly encouraged to spread the word and encourage nominations.[18] A public relations report commissioned in 1989 recommended greater community involvement in the nominations process: 'Allow the "ordinary" citizens of Australia a chance to vote for, or in some way have a say in, who should be Australian of the Year.'[19] During the 1990s glossy brochures calling for nominations were distributed well in advance of the awards deadline.

More recently, the NADC has realised that the nominations process is important not only to the integrity of its various awards, but is also a crucial means of engaging with the Australian community. In 2004 NADC Chair Lisa Curry-Kenny proudly reported that nominations had doubled from the previous year: 'This is a key indication that increasing numbers of Australians of all walks of life are actively engaging with the awards program.'[20] Public interest in the awards serves a much broader purpose, as NADC Chief Executive Warren Pearson explains: 'The awards program is not primarily about choosing four national recipients; it is about engaging with Australians about citizenship.'[21] The introduction of the Local Hero award was directed towards this goal, as were various other changes made in 2004. Most importantly, the NADC introduced a new selection process based around state finals. This approach meant a more prominent role for the state-based Australia Day councils and committees, which now oversee the selection of the finalists and host official functions to announce the contenders in November each year. The NADC board now only chooses between the eight state and territory finalists in each category and organises the national announcement in January.

Statistical profiles Edit

Award by category Edit

1960–69 1970–79 1980–89 1990–99 2000–09 2010–19 2020–29 Total
Science (non-medical) 1 2 0 0 2 1 0 6
Arts 3 2 2 1 1 1 0 10
Medical science 1 0 0 3 3 2 1 10
Indigenous affairs 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 5
Religion 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2
Community Service 0 1 0 1 0 4 2 8
Politics/Public office 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 3
Sport 4 2 3 2 2 1 1 15
Non-science academic 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2
Military service 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 3
Business 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 4

Award by gender Edit

1960–69 1970–79 1980–89 1990–99 2000–09 2010–19 2020-29 Total
Female 2 3 2 1 2 3 2 15
Male 7 11 8 8 8 8 2 51

Contemporary governance Edit

The NADC's mission statement demonstrates how the awards program fits its wider purpose:

The National Australia Day Council works with and for the people and government of Australia to:

  • Unite all Australians through celebration with a focus on Australia Day;
  • Promote the meaning of Australia Day through activity, education, reflection, discussion and debate; and
  • Promote good citizenship, values and achievement by recognising excellence and service to the communities and the nation.[22]

The third of these aims is predominantly addressed through the Australian of the Year Awards, which offer a high-profile moment for the celebration of outstanding achievement. The awards greatly assist the NADC in its central task, which is aptly summarised by its Chief Executive Warren Pearson: 'On 26 January each year, the National Australia Day Council encourages Australians to celebrate what's great about Australia and being Australian.'.[23]

Selection criteria Edit

There has also been a significant shift in the criteria for the Australian of the Year award in fifty years. Initially the focus was on awarding the person who had 'brought the greatest honour to Australia'.[24] This emphasis on international acclaim was gradually relaxed and Australian-based achievement was recognised more often from the 1970s onwards. The official criteria have usually been suitably broad in their scope, so changes in approach are largely attributable to the membership of the NADC board and the political climate of the time. In the mid-1980s there was a notable shift towards high-profile winners, while in the 1990s some of those honoured reflected the prominent political issues of republicanism and reconciliation. Currently, the selection committees refer to three main criteria when considering nominees:

  • Demonstrated excellence in their field;
  • Significant contribution to the Australian community and nation; and
  • An inspirational role model for the Australian community.

The third of these criteria supports the NADC's key goal of encouraging good citizenship.

Announcements Edit

 
Awards Announcement, Australia Day Eve 25 January 2005

During the 1960s and 1970s, the Australian of the Year award was presented at Melbourne's Australia Day Luncheon, which was held in either the Town Hall or the Royale Ballroom. The winner was usually announced about two weeks earlier at a function that provided an opportunity to promote the upcoming Australia Day celebrations. This event was a public relations exercise that attempted to capture the imagination of the media and the nation, but in 1966 a journalist from The Age did not follow the script, preferring to poke fun at the stage-managed event:[25]

The patriotic tension in the boardroom on the 8th floor of the Australian Natives' Association building in Elizabeth Street yesterday morning was being stretched to breaking point. From four corners of the room hung Australian flags. At the Head of the long boardroom table sat Sir Norman Martin, chairman of the Australia Day Council. ...

There had been intense speculation earlier as to what the "special uniformed messenger" would be wearing when he arrived bearing a sealed envelope containing the Australian of the Year decision. ... He was made to walk from the lift door to Sir Norman twice to satisfy other television cameramen, until, rather thankfully, he at last handed the envelope over.

It was somehow an anticlimax when Sir Norman demanded: "Do you bear a message from the Premier?"

"Yes" said the messenger meekly, and as Sir Norman announced the winner to be Robert Helpmann, a shower of prepared press releases announcing the same thing landed gently on the table in front of the waiting pressmen.

— The 1966 announcement of the Australian of the Year, as reported in The Age.

Since the 1960s, the annual announcement has become progressively more sophisticated. After the NADC took over in 1980 it usually presented the award at an Australia Day concert, which moved around the nation and was often televised. In the 1990s an Australia Day breakfast at Admiralty House in Sydney was the usual venue for the announcement, but more recently the concert has been revived and is held in the national capital.

A highly memorable Australian of the Year function occurred in 1994, when the guest of honour was Charles, Prince of Wales. The Australian of the Year, environmentalist Ian Kiernan, sat on the stage after receiving his award, when a gunshot was heard and an assailant rushed toward Prince Charles. Kiernan jumped to his feet and wrestled the intruder to the ground with the assistance of New South Wales Premier John Fahey. Kiernan later recalled: 'the Premier and I lay on the stage, panting as the adrenaline began to flow, and wondering what to do next.'[26] As it turned out, the man was armed only with a toy cap pistol, but the incident was a serious security breach and somewhat upstaged Kiernan's award.

Since 2004 the award presentation has been held on Australia Day Eve in Canberra. The 32 finalists enjoy an eventful day including morning tea with the Prime Minister at The Lodge, and lunch with the Governor General at Yarralumla. The winners are announced on a specially erected stage in front of Parliament House, witnessed by a crowd of thousands and a national television audience. Specially produced video packages describe the winners in each of the four categories. The scale of the event displays a marked contrast to Sir Norman Martin's modest press conferences of the 1960s.

Medallions and trophies Edit

The various medallions and trophies that have been presented to the Australians of the Year over fifty years are, in themselves, an interesting insight into changing understandings of what it means to be Australian. Reflecting his lofty ambitions for the new award, Sir Norman Martin announced a 'worldwide competition' to design the inaugural trophy in 1960.[27] Sir Norman hoped to attract entries from the world's finest artists, but the eventual winner was Victor Greenhalgh, the head of the Arts School at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. Greenhalgh designed a bronze medallion, which reflected the prevailing mood as to the importance of Australia Day: its most prominent feature was a likeness of Governor Arthur Phillip, who was described on the medal as 'The Outstanding Australian [of] 1788.'[28] In 1961. The Age reported that Sir Macfarlane Burnet was anxious when a photographer asked him to display the medallion at the awards ceremony: 'The nervous scientist, whose hand with a pipette would be as steady as a rock, fumbled the medal and dropped it under the table.'[1]

Greenhalgh's bronze medallion was presented to winners of the Victorian-based Australian of the Year award for two decades. When the NADC assumed responsibility in 1980, it apparently overlooked the issue of a trophy, so Manning Clark received a framed certificate. For the 1986 award to Dick Smith, the NADC commissioned artist Michael Tracey to produce a more appropriate trophy, which the council described in its journal Australia Day Update: 'The trophy, symbolising achievement, incorporates a figure holding the Australian flag. The figure is made from steel and the lettering is in pewter.'[29] In the bicentenary year Tracey was asked to cast his trophy in bronze instead of steel.

In the early 1990s the NADC commissioned glass sculptor Warren Langley to create a new trophy based on the updated Australia Day logo. NADC chairman Phillip Adams had been criticised for removing the Australian flag from the logo and replacing it with a hand reaching for a star.[30] After Adams resigned his position in 1996, the NADC asked Langley to produce an alternative trophy, which featured a map of Australia.[31]

Melbourne-based artist Kristin McFarlane designed the current Australian of the Year trophy in 2004.[32] Like Langley, McFarlane works with glass, but she is also trained as a graphic designer; she combines both text and images and sets them in kilned glass to produce striking works of art. The task of designing a new trophy prompted McFarlane to think more deeply about national identity than she had before: 'It made me look at Australian identity and think about what was an Australian? Who is the archetypal Australian?' She quickly realised that an image of one person, or even a group of people, would not work, and that her images needed to be generic. She decided to use a map of Australia: 'It is one of the oldest continents in the world and it is a very recognisable form for anyone who lives here.'[33] McFarlane also chose to use the text of the Australian national anthem "Advance Australia Fair", but gave particularly prominence to the lesser-known second verse.

Australians of the Year Walk Edit

 
Australians of the Year Walk

The "Australians of the Year Walk" in Canberra was designed by the National Capital Authority[34] and comprises a series of plinths, seats and lighting. Incorporated in the pathway are five metal strips set flush in the concrete, representing the five music stave lines. The plinths are placed in musical note position to the score of the national anthem "Advance Australia Fair". Fixed to each plinth is an anodised aluminium plaque containing the names and images of an Australian of the Year, there is one plaque for each year of the award. The plaques are arranged chronologically, starting at the western end of the path near Commonwealth Avenue Bridge. The lake side is bordered by white paving stones, the land side by a white paved walkway.

 
The Australians of the Year Walk is on the shore of Lake Burley Griffin, Canberra

The walk is situated along a straight section of shoreline on Lake Burley Griffin between the National Library of Australia and the Commonwealth Avenue Bridge (35°17′42″S 149°07′44″E / 35.295°S 149.129°E / -35.295; 149.129 (Australians of the Year Walk)).

The walk was opened by the then Prime Minister of Australia John Howard, on Australia Day, 26 January 2006.

In December 2007 journalist Mark McKenna visited the Australian of the Year Walk and interpreted it as a highly symbolic form of national memorial. The empty bollards stretching into the distance particularly intrigued him.[35]

These blank plaques – memorials to the future – stand as if waiting for the years to pass before they can be filled in and become whole. Yet strangely they seem more intriguing than the plaques that precede them. It is possible to imagine the line of blank plaques stretching on endlessly, and their emptiness begs the question: What sort of nation will Australia become over the next few decades?

— Mark McKenna in The Monthly, March 2008.

Australian of the Year Awards as part of Australian society Edit

The Australian of the Year Awards represent only one of many ways in which national identity is expressed, but after fifty years they have become a significant part of the ongoing conversation about Australia's past, present and future. The awards have also attracted the interest of foreigners, including BBC correspondent Nick Bryant, who recently observed that the awards program "offers an intriguing perspective on the Australian national character, which is both reinforcing and revelatory."[36]

An ongoing challenge faced by the NADC is that it is hard to represent the diversity of Australian achievement when there is only one winner per category in each year. The ongoing debates about the numbers of winners from the sciences, arts and sport are evidence of this. In the future, these debates might revolve around other issues, including gender balance and ethnic diversity. Awards Director Tam Johnston suggests that the value of the awards program is best measured by consulting the complete list of finalists for each year.[37] In its 2005 Annual Report the NADC included a summary of the 111 finalists honoured nationally, which revealed a remarkable variety of achievement and a diversity of personal backgrounds.[38] Importantly, the NADC has recently devoted attention to promoting the state finals, which emphasises the wide variety of achievement that is recognised each year.

Not all of the debate and discussion generated by the awards program has been of a serious nature. A more light-hearted portrait can be found in the award-winning television satire We Can Be Heroes: Finding The Australian of the Year (2005), in which actor Chris Lilley plays five obscure nominees for the Australian of the Year award. One reviewer suggested that Lilley's creation was both a humorous mockumentary and a serious critique of the awards program: 'if you want a show that skewers the nation's pretensions and aspirations, while providing laugh-out-loud comedy, this is the real deal.'[39] All five characters have in one way or another inspired people in their local community, but none of them appears even a remotely suitable choice for Australian of the Year. Although primarily a vehicle for Lilley's comic talent, We Can Be Heroes is also a biting critique of what we look for in role models. In contrast, the magazine Eureka Street offers a strong endorsement of the awards program's potential:[40]

Critics might suggest that the awards are manipulated by politicians, or point to the fact that a number of former recipients such as Alan Bond subsequently fell from grace. But the fact remains that the naming of role models is an important community-building exercise. It assists young people to set goals for themselves, and encourages older people to take pride in what they have achieved.

— Eureka Street, January 2007.

The editors of Eureka Street suggest that the awards have been successful in achieving one of the core goals of the National Australia Day Council, which is to "promote good citizenship, values and achievement by recognising excellence and service to the communities and the nation".[22]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "none". The Age. 27 January 1961. p. 2.
  2. ^ . Australian of the Year Awards. Archived from the original on 11 May 2013. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  3. ^ Australia Day Council (Victoria), 'Annual Report, 1970 – 1971'
  4. ^ Whose Australian of the Year?
  5. ^ a b Interview with Phillip Adams, 16 December 2008
  6. ^ The Australian's Australian of the Year
  7. ^ "Editorial". Sydney Morning Herald. 31 January 1988. p. 50.
  8. ^ "Knock-out shock for Rose, Australian of the Year". The Age. 18 January 1972. p. 2.
  9. ^ "What's your cause?". Australian of the Year. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  10. ^ National Portrait Gallery (1996). Australians of the Year (exhibition catalogue). Canberra: National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ Devine, Miranda (27 January 2016). "Sorry David, but it's the wrong fight". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  12. ^ Devine, Miranda (31 January 2016). "Miranda Devine: Australian of the Year has become a vehicle for feminist agenda". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  13. ^ Thomas, Hedley (29 January 2016). "Cate McGregor's nomination: Canberra, that's in Queensland". The Australian. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  14. ^ "Sober reflections on Australia Day 2016". Sydney Morning Herald. 30 January 2016. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  15. ^ An Overview 11 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Australian of the Year Awards (quotes the line from Phillip Adams, but no original source is cited)
  16. ^ "Now Evonne Goolagong is Australian of the Year". The Age. 18 January 1972. p. 2.
  17. ^ 'Executive Directors Meeting, 26–27 July 1982,' NAA C4688/1, Directors Meeting Folders, Box 13
  18. ^ NAA C4688/1, Directors Meetings Folders
  19. ^ 'Public Relations Report, June 1989,' NAA C4688/1, Directors Meetings Folders, Box 14
  20. ^ National Australia Day Council, Annual Report 2004, Chairman's Message
  21. ^ Interview with Warren Pearson, 27 March 2009
  22. ^ a b Charter. 2007. p. 9. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  23. ^ National Australia Day Council, Annual Report 2008, 'Chief Executive's Officer's Report,'
  24. ^ State Library of Victoria, Subject File, 'Australian of the Year'
  25. ^ The Age, 15 January 1966, p.2
  26. ^ Kiernan, Ian; Jarratt, Phil. Coming Clean. p. 223.
  27. ^ "Annual Award for "Best" Australian". Sydney Morning Herald. 16 January 1960. p. 6.
  28. ^ The Australia Day Award presented to Patrick White, Australian of the Year, 1973 (medal R 481), Mitchell Library (Australia)
  29. ^ Australia Day Update, Vol 8 No 2 (1987)
  30. ^ See NADC Directors Meeting, 25 November 1993, NAA C4688/1 Box 14
  31. ^ Interview with Warren Langley, 20 February 2009
  32. ^ 'Australian of the Year Trophies' 21 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ Interview with Kristin McFarlane, 12 January 2009
  34. ^ "Australians of the Year Walk". National Capital Authority. Retrieved 4 February 2010.
  35. ^ McKenna, Mark (March 2008). "The Nation Reviewed". The Monthly (32): 10.
  36. ^ Bryant, Nick (19 January 2009). "'Australian of the Year' blog". BBC. Retrieved 7 September 2010.
  37. ^ Interview with Tam Johnston, 13 November 2008
  38. ^ Annual Report. National Australia Day Council. 2005. p. 8.
  39. ^ Hassall, Greg (31 August 2005). "Review: 'We Can Be Heroes: Finding the Australian of the Year'". Sydney Morning Herald.
  40. ^ "Editorial, 'Who makes you proud to be an Australian?'". Eureka Street: 1–2. 22 January 2007.

External links Edit

  • Australians of the Year Walk

australian, year, further, information, list, award, recipients, national, award, conferred, australian, citizen, national, australia, council, profit, australian, government, owned, social, enterprise, similar, awards, also, conferred, state, territory, level. Further information List of Australian of the Year Award recipients The Australian of the Year is a national award conferred on an Australian citizen by the National Australia Day Council a not for profit Australian Government owned social enterprise Similar awards are also conferred at the state and territory level Australian of the YearAwarded forContributing to positive change in AustraliaSponsored byAustralia PostDate25 JanuaryCountryAustraliaPresented byNational Australia Day CouncilMottoReflect Respect Celebrate First awarded1960 63 years ago 1960 Latest recipientTaryn BrumfittWebsiteaoty wbr org wbr auTelevision radio coverageNetworkABC TV 2020 2021 2022 Contents 1 History 2 Sponsorship 3 Awards history by decade 3 1 1960s 3 2 1970s and 1980s 3 3 1990s 3 4 2000s onwards 4 Young Australian of the Year 5 Senior Australian of the Year 6 Australia s Local Hero 7 Choosing the winners 8 Statistical profiles 8 1 Award by category 8 2 Award by gender 9 Contemporary governance 10 Selection criteria 11 Announcements 12 Medallions and trophies 13 Australians of the Year Walk 14 Australian of the Year Awards as part of Australian society 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksHistory EditSince 1960 the award for the Australian of the Year has been bestowed as part of the celebrations surrounding Australia Day during which time it has grown steadily in significance to become one of the nation s pre eminent awards The Australian of the Year announcement has become a notable part of the annual Australia Day celebrations The official announcement has grown to become a public event and the Canberra ceremony is televised nationally The award offers an insight into Australian identity reflecting the nation s evolving relationship with world the role of sport in Australian culture the impact of multiculturalism and the special status of Indigenous Australians It has also provoked spirited debate about the fields of endeavour that are most worthy of public recognition The award program promotes active citizenship and seeks to elevate certain people as role models Three companion awards have been introduced recognising both Young and Senior Australians and proclaiming the efforts of those who work at a grass roots level through the Australia s Local Hero award Sponsorship EditThe Australian of the Year award receives substantial sponsorship from private companies including a relationship in excess of thirty years with the Commonwealth Bank The close relationship with the Australian Government ensures that the award s profile and reputation is significantly enhanced Awards history by decade EditFurther information List of Australian of the Year Award recipients 1960s Edit During the 1960s a network of state based organisations worked hard to increase the profile of Australia Day The most active and best resourced of these was the Victorian Australia Day Council which had grown out of the Australian Natives Association In January 1960 the council s chairman the unabashed patriot Sir Norman Martin announced the introduction of a new annual award for the Australian of the Year He explained that Australia Day was a fitting occasion on which to give proper recognition to a leading citizen whose contribution to the nation s culture economy sciences or arts was particularly outstanding nbsp The first Australian of the Year Sir Macfarlane Burnet Australian of the Year 1960For the first two decades the Australian of the Year was chosen by a panel of five which included the Victorian Premier the Anglican Archbishop of Melbourne the Vice Chancellor of Melbourne University the Lord Mayor of Melbourne and the President of the National Council for Women Although the panel was certainly distinguished it would in time become too closely associated with Melbourne to be appropriate for a national award The panel s first choice of Nobel Prize winning immunologist Sir Macfarlane Burnet gained general approval The editors of The Age proclaimed the new honour was symptomatic of Australia s growing confidence as a nation We are beginning to count for something in the world and we should be intensely proud of this fact 1 2 nbsp Sir Robert Helpmann Australian of the Year 1965International achievement remained a key criterion during the award s first decade Several sporting heroes were honoured from America s Cup skipper Jock Sturrock and swimmer Dawn Fraser to world champion motor racer Sir Jack Brabham and boxer Lionel Rose The pioneering neurologist Sir John Eccles followed Burnet s example becoming the second of five Australians to take out the Nobel Prize Australian of the Year double Achievers in the artistic realm were also well represented including opera singer Joan Sutherland renowned dancer and choreographer Robert Helpmann and the four members of the chart topping singing group The Seekers Judith Durham Athol Guy Keith Potger and Bruce Woodley The focus on international achievement reflected the philosophy of the award organisers who described the Australian of the Year as the person who has brought the greatest honour to Australia in the year under review 3 1970s and 1980s Edit During its first two decades the Australian of the Year award grew steadily in national prominence but it increasingly suffered from its close association with the Victorian Australia Day Council A competing Australian of the Year award was established by newspaper The Australian in 1971 4 In 1975 the newly formed Canberra Australia Day Council also began to name a rival Australian of the Year The Canberra council was run by a vibrant group of local inhabitants who pursued a more progressive agenda than their Victorian counterparts In particular the Canberra council was sympathetic to the emerging republican movement while the Victorian council was staunchly committed to constitutional ties with Britain The Victorian council also battled a common perception that it was an exclusive organisation that represented the Melbourne Establishment Australia s turbulent political climate nourished this division and the Australian of the Year award was embroiled in a wider debate about Australian nationalism Between 1975 and 1979 the Canberra Australia Day Council named four Australians of the Year Prime Minister Gough Whitlam lent his support to the Canberra award when he presented the inaugural honour to Major General Alan Stretton the commander of the emergency response to Cyclone Tracy The Canberra council also made good use of the federal parliamentary press boxes to promote its award to the national media The Victorian council was singularly unimpressed that a rival Australia Day organisation had copied its idea in 1977 it described its own winner Dame Raigh Roe as the real Australian of the Year The impasse was only resolved when the Fraser government created the National Australia Day Council NADC in 1979 The Victorian council willingly transferred responsibility for its award to the new national body while the Canberra council agreed to discontinue its rival program In 1982 the Victorian council was further sidelined when that state s Australian Labor Party government led by John Cain created a new Victorian Australia Day Committee within the Premier s Department which joined the NADC s official national network The NADC made immediate changes to the selection process appointing an independent panel of ten leading Australians from diverse fields Despite this rigorous approach the panel s first choice of historian Manning Clark did not please conservative politicians as Clark had been critical of the Fraser government s social policy If nothing else the controversy was a clear sign that the award had become a prominent and valued feature of the Australia Day celebrations In time the selection of the annual winner fell to the board of the NADC itself whose members are appointed by the Prime Minister of the day Former NADC chairman Phillip Adams recalls that heated debates were common Typically the Australian of the Year was chosen at a special two day board meeting which Adams likened to the election of a Pope We would go into conclave there would be lots of hot air then a puff of smoke 5 The Australian has continued to publish its own annual award which sometimes coincides with the choice of the National Australia Day Council 6 During the 1980s there was an expectation that corporate sponsorship would replace Government funding and that the NADC would become self sufficient The list of former Australians of the Year provides circumstantial evidence of this shift towards a more popular imperative Economist Sir John Crawford and judge Sir Edward Williams thoroughly deserved their awards but were perhaps not well placed to promote the importance of Australia Day to mainstream Australia or to secure corporate sponsorship for the NADC Subsequent winners included marathon runner Robert de Castella comedian and actor Paul Hogan singer John Farnham and cricketer Allan Border who were far more likely to attract public attention In 1988 the editor of the Sydney Morning Herald expressed concern at this development One worrying trend with the award is its attachment to ratings This year s candidates appear to have been people who held high public profiles 7 Yet the steadily rising numbers of nominations indicated that the award was capturing the public imagination nbsp John Farnham was Australian of the Year in 1987 nbsp Recognising the role of Aboriginal Australians Mandawuy Yunupingu frontman of Yothu Yindi was Australian of the Year in 19921990s Edit During the 1990s the Australian of the Year award intersected noticeably with the politics of national identity In its attempt to encourage unified national celebrations the NADC was a strong promoter of both multiculturalism and reconciliation The council was also linked to the growing republican movement and the campaign to change the national flag Australians of the Year in this period included Yothu Yindi lead singer and prominent Aboriginal identity Mandawuy Yunupingu environmentalist and republican Ian Kiernan and Chinese Australian paediatrician John Yu Yunupingu s award continued a strong tradition of honouring Indigenous Australians The first Aboriginal winner was boxer Lionel Rose who quipped One hundred and eighty two years ago one of my mob would have been a dead cert for this 8 Since then a further seven Indigenous people have been named Australian of the Year for achievements in sport music politics law public service and academia Many have played a role in Indigenous advocacy and some have raised concerns about the celebration of Australia Day on 26 January most notably the 1985 recipient Lowitja O Donoghue Prior to 1994 the award was given for the outstanding Australian of the previous year that is the 1992 Australian of the Year was announced on Australia Day in 1993 From 1994 onward the award became one for the year ahead so that the 1994 Australian of the Year was announced on Australia Day in 1994 This resulted in there being no Australian of the Year for 1993 9 2000s onwards Edit nbsp Fiona Stanley Australian of the Year 2003 running with Summer Olympic Torch 2008 nbsp Ita Buttrose Australian of the Year 2013Debates about the Australian of the Year award often revolve around the relative balance between sport science and the arts Fourteen winners have excelled in sports as diverse as cricket swimming athletics sailing tennis boxing and motor racing A recurring criticism that sport features too regularly peaked in 2004 when Steve Waugh was the fourth sporting winner in seven years and the third Test Cricket captain to be honoured Despite the perception of an over emphasis on sport the list of past winners reveals a strong endorsement for scientific achievement as of 2009 thirteen Australian scientists have received the honour including ten from the medical sciences A long term view also reveals that Australia s talented artists have not been neglected ten winners have excelled in creative pursuits including six musicians a dancer a painter a comedian and a Nobel Prize winning novelist nbsp Dame Joan Sutherland Australian of the Year 1961Many Australians of the Year do not fit neatly into categories such as sport science and the arts Phillip Adams once described the past winners as an eclectic collection of people who reflect the diversity of achievement in this country 10 Australians of the Year have also excelled in public administration the military social and community work business enterprise academia religious leadership and philanthropy There has been relatively little public debate about the gender balance of past winners In 1961 several news outlets incorrectly referred to Sir Macfarlane Burnet as Man of the Year the mistake was not allowed to continue as Joan Sutherland took out the second award but it is certainly true that women are under represented By 2009 11 winners out of a total of 56 were women In 2016 Miranda Devine of The Daily Telegraph criticised the selection process with the national selection panel having to choose from the eight candidates appointed by variously structured state based selection panels Devine also said the award which ought to reflect and unite this great nation has evolved into a mere plaything of social engineers noting also that three of the eight finalists were jointly involved in the same events 11 12 Concern has also been raised as to how a person who has not lived in a state for 40 something years Cate McGregor could be nominated as that state s representative 13 Following criticism of both the award process and the priorities of the 2016 recipient David Morrison an editorial in The Sydney Morning Herald said The Herald knows the selection board will look closely at the 2016 process and work to improve public confidence in the awards in time for a better Australia Day in 2017 14 While the selection of a single Australian of the Year is bound to stimulate debate the awards program as a whole recognises a much wider range of achievement In 1979 the NADC named its first Young Australian of the Year community service volunteer Julie Sochacki Twenty years later the veteran country music star Slim Dusty received the inaugural Senior Australian of the Year award In 2003 the NADC introduced an award for Australia s Local Hero which honours outstanding contributions to local communities With four award categories and a system of state and national finals the NADC now recognises a total of 128 inspiring Australian role models every year Young Australian of the Year EditFurther information List of Young Australian of the Year Award recipients For the first twenty years of the Australian of the Year Awards there was no specific honour reserved for younger Australia This period several young sports stars won the main award including Dawn Fraser Shane Gould Lionel Rose and Evonne Goolagong Gould remains the youngest person to be named Australian of the Year Shortly after the formation of the NADC in October 1979 the Northern Territory representative Dr Ella Stack convinced her fellow board members to introduce a new award that focussed specifically on the achievements of younger Australians The inaugural winner youth unemployment worker Julie Sochacki was named Young Australian of the Year in January 1980 The NADC coordinated the announcement with the Victorian Australia Day Council which chose the Australian of the Year for the last time The following year the NADC assumed responsibility for both awards In 1996 at the invitation of Phillip Adams the then chairman of the NADC the Young Australian of the Year Awards was facilitated and coordinated nationally by Awards Australia under the leadership of Jeffrey J Hopp Mr Hopp and his team ran the awards nationally working closely with the Australia Day Councils in every state and NADC Chairmain Kevin Gosper and Lisa Curry until the awards were handed back to the NADC in 2003 During that period the awards recognised Rebecca Chambers Nova Peris Kneebone Tan Le Bryan Gaensler Ian Thorpe James Fitzpatrick Scott Hocknull And Lleyton Hewitt Senior Australian of the Year EditFurther information List of Senior Australian of the Year Award recipients nbsp Slim Dusty Australian Senior of the Year nbsp Maggie Beer Senior Australian of the Year 2010The Senior Australian of the Year award initially had no connection with the NADC When the United Nations declared 1999 the International Year of Older Persons the Minister for Aged Care Bronwyn Bishop approached National Seniors Australia with a plan to increase the prominence of the award The Department of Health and Ageing took over responsibility for the program and Prime Minister John Howard presented the award to veteran country music star Slim Dusty in October 1999 Bishop arranged for the NADC to administer the program on behalf of the Department of Health and Ageing but the award continued to be presented in October with no discernible link to Australia Day Three years later the NADC streamlined its awards programs The council was running three separate awards as even the Young Australian of the Year was announced earlier in January and had a separate nominations process The Senior Australian of the Year announcement moved from October to January skipping 2002 altogether and joined the other two awards By integrating the various programs the NADC increased the prominence of the companion awards by announcing them at the same function as the Australian of the Year Since then many remarkable Senior Australians have been honoured on a national stage on Australia Day Eve Australia s Local Hero EditFurther information List of Australian Local Hero Award recipients In 2003 the NADC addressed calls to recognise ordinary lesser known people who work for the benefit of their fellow citizens by introducing a fourth award category known as the Local Hero Award The new award was part of a shift in thinking at the NADC towards the key goal of promoting good citizenship citation needed Choosing the winners EditThe process of choosing the Australian of the Year has evolved considerably over half a century including both the make up of the selection committee and the system of nominations In the 1960s Sir Norman Martin usually insisted that the decision of the small Victorian selection committee was unanimous If this is true then it is in stark contrast to the selection process in the 1990s when Phillip Adams recalls that heated debates were common In 1980 the NADC had formed an independent panel to decide the award but eventually the selection fell to the NADC board itself Typically the matter was considered at a special two day board meeting which Adams likened to the election of a new Pope We would go into conclave there would be lots of hot air then a puff of smoke 5 15 The most significant change in the selection procedure has been expansion of the nomination process In the 1960s and 1970s the committee usually chose the winner from a relatively small list of nominees for example in 1971 Evonne Goolagong edged out only 18 other nominees 16 At a meeting in 1982 the directors of the NADC and its state based affiliates identified low nominee numbers as a cause for concern 17 The problem persisted and board members were regularly encouraged to spread the word and encourage nominations 18 A public relations report commissioned in 1989 recommended greater community involvement in the nominations process Allow the ordinary citizens of Australia a chance to vote for or in some way have a say in who should be Australian of the Year 19 During the 1990s glossy brochures calling for nominations were distributed well in advance of the awards deadline More recently the NADC has realised that the nominations process is important not only to the integrity of its various awards but is also a crucial means of engaging with the Australian community In 2004 NADC Chair Lisa Curry Kenny proudly reported that nominations had doubled from the previous year This is a key indication that increasing numbers of Australians of all walks of life are actively engaging with the awards program 20 Public interest in the awards serves a much broader purpose as NADC Chief Executive Warren Pearson explains The awards program is not primarily about choosing four national recipients it is about engaging with Australians about citizenship 21 The introduction of the Local Hero award was directed towards this goal as were various other changes made in 2004 Most importantly the NADC introduced a new selection process based around state finals This approach meant a more prominent role for the state based Australia Day councils and committees which now oversee the selection of the finalists and host official functions to announce the contenders in November each year The NADC board now only chooses between the eight state and territory finalists in each category and organises the national announcement in January Statistical profiles EditAward by category Edit 1960 69 1970 79 1980 89 1990 99 2000 09 2010 19 2020 29 TotalScience non medical 1 2 0 0 2 1 0 6Arts 3 2 2 1 1 1 0 10Medical science 1 0 0 3 3 2 1 10Indigenous affairs 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 5Religion 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2Community Service 0 1 0 1 0 4 2 8Politics Public office 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 3Sport 4 2 3 2 2 1 1 15Non science academic 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2Military service 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 3Business 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 4Award by gender Edit 1960 69 1970 79 1980 89 1990 99 2000 09 2010 19 2020 29 TotalFemale 2 3 2 1 2 3 2 15Male 7 11 8 8 8 8 2 51Contemporary governance EditThe NADC s mission statement demonstrates how the awards program fits its wider purpose The National Australia Day Council works with and for the people and government of Australia to Unite all Australians through celebration with a focus on Australia Day Promote the meaning of Australia Day through activity education reflection discussion and debate and Promote good citizenship values and achievement by recognising excellence and service to the communities and the nation 22 The third of these aims is predominantly addressed through the Australian of the Year Awards which offer a high profile moment for the celebration of outstanding achievement The awards greatly assist the NADC in its central task which is aptly summarised by its Chief Executive Warren Pearson On 26 January each year the National Australia Day Council encourages Australians to celebrate what s great about Australia and being Australian 23 Selection criteria EditThere has also been a significant shift in the criteria for the Australian of the Year award in fifty years Initially the focus was on awarding the person who had brought the greatest honour to Australia 24 This emphasis on international acclaim was gradually relaxed and Australian based achievement was recognised more often from the 1970s onwards The official criteria have usually been suitably broad in their scope so changes in approach are largely attributable to the membership of the NADC board and the political climate of the time In the mid 1980s there was a notable shift towards high profile winners while in the 1990s some of those honoured reflected the prominent political issues of republicanism and reconciliation Currently the selection committees refer to three main criteria when considering nominees Demonstrated excellence in their field Significant contribution to the Australian community and nation and An inspirational role model for the Australian community The third of these criteria supports the NADC s key goal of encouraging good citizenship Announcements Edit nbsp Awards Announcement Australia Day Eve 25 January 2005During the 1960s and 1970s the Australian of the Year award was presented at Melbourne s Australia Day Luncheon which was held in either the Town Hall or the Royale Ballroom The winner was usually announced about two weeks earlier at a function that provided an opportunity to promote the upcoming Australia Day celebrations This event was a public relations exercise that attempted to capture the imagination of the media and the nation but in 1966 a journalist from The Age did not follow the script preferring to poke fun at the stage managed event 25 The patriotic tension in the boardroom on the 8th floor of the Australian Natives Association building in Elizabeth Street yesterday morning was being stretched to breaking point From four corners of the room hung Australian flags At the Head of the long boardroom table sat Sir Norman Martin chairman of the Australia Day Council There had been intense speculation earlier as to what the special uniformed messenger would be wearing when he arrived bearing a sealed envelope containing the Australian of the Year decision He was made to walk from the lift door to Sir Norman twice to satisfy other television cameramen until rather thankfully he at last handed the envelope over It was somehow an anticlimax when Sir Norman demanded Do you bear a message from the Premier Yes said the messenger meekly and as Sir Norman announced the winner to be Robert Helpmann a shower of prepared press releases announcing the same thing landed gently on the table in front of the waiting pressmen The 1966 announcement of the Australian of the Year as reported in The Age Since the 1960s the annual announcement has become progressively more sophisticated After the NADC took over in 1980 it usually presented the award at an Australia Day concert which moved around the nation and was often televised In the 1990s an Australia Day breakfast at Admiralty House in Sydney was the usual venue for the announcement but more recently the concert has been revived and is held in the national capital A highly memorable Australian of the Year function occurred in 1994 when the guest of honour was Charles Prince of Wales The Australian of the Year environmentalist Ian Kiernan sat on the stage after receiving his award when a gunshot was heard and an assailant rushed toward Prince Charles Kiernan jumped to his feet and wrestled the intruder to the ground with the assistance of New South Wales Premier John Fahey Kiernan later recalled the Premier and I lay on the stage panting as the adrenaline began to flow and wondering what to do next 26 As it turned out the man was armed only with a toy cap pistol but the incident was a serious security breach and somewhat upstaged Kiernan s award Since 2004 the award presentation has been held on Australia Day Eve in Canberra The 32 finalists enjoy an eventful day including morning tea with the Prime Minister at The Lodge and lunch with the Governor General at Yarralumla The winners are announced on a specially erected stage in front of Parliament House witnessed by a crowd of thousands and a national television audience Specially produced video packages describe the winners in each of the four categories The scale of the event displays a marked contrast to Sir Norman Martin s modest press conferences of the 1960s Medallions and trophies EditThe various medallions and trophies that have been presented to the Australians of the Year over fifty years are in themselves an interesting insight into changing understandings of what it means to be Australian Reflecting his lofty ambitions for the new award Sir Norman Martin announced a worldwide competition to design the inaugural trophy in 1960 27 Sir Norman hoped to attract entries from the world s finest artists but the eventual winner was Victor Greenhalgh the head of the Arts School at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Greenhalgh designed a bronze medallion which reflected the prevailing mood as to the importance of Australia Day its most prominent feature was a likeness of Governor Arthur Phillip who was described on the medal as The Outstanding Australian of 1788 28 In 1961 The Age reported that Sir Macfarlane Burnet was anxious when a photographer asked him to display the medallion at the awards ceremony The nervous scientist whose hand with a pipette would be as steady as a rock fumbled the medal and dropped it under the table 1 Greenhalgh s bronze medallion was presented to winners of the Victorian based Australian of the Year award for two decades When the NADC assumed responsibility in 1980 it apparently overlooked the issue of a trophy so Manning Clark received a framed certificate For the 1986 award to Dick Smith the NADC commissioned artist Michael Tracey to produce a more appropriate trophy which the council described in its journal Australia Day Update The trophy symbolising achievement incorporates a figure holding the Australian flag The figure is made from steel and the lettering is in pewter 29 In the bicentenary year Tracey was asked to cast his trophy in bronze instead of steel In the early 1990s the NADC commissioned glass sculptor Warren Langley to create a new trophy based on the updated Australia Day logo NADC chairman Phillip Adams had been criticised for removing the Australian flag from the logo and replacing it with a hand reaching for a star 30 After Adams resigned his position in 1996 the NADC asked Langley to produce an alternative trophy which featured a map of Australia 31 Melbourne based artist Kristin McFarlane designed the current Australian of the Year trophy in 2004 32 Like Langley McFarlane works with glass but she is also trained as a graphic designer she combines both text and images and sets them in kilned glass to produce striking works of art The task of designing a new trophy prompted McFarlane to think more deeply about national identity than she had before It made me look at Australian identity and think about what was an Australian Who is the archetypal Australian She quickly realised that an image of one person or even a group of people would not work and that her images needed to be generic She decided to use a map of Australia It is one of the oldest continents in the world and it is a very recognisable form for anyone who lives here 33 McFarlane also chose to use the text of the Australian national anthem Advance Australia Fair but gave particularly prominence to the lesser known second verse Australians of the Year Walk Edit nbsp Australians of the Year WalkThe Australians of the Year Walk in Canberra was designed by the National Capital Authority 34 and comprises a series of plinths seats and lighting Incorporated in the pathway are five metal strips set flush in the concrete representing the five music stave lines The plinths are placed in musical note position to the score of the national anthem Advance Australia Fair Fixed to each plinth is an anodised aluminium plaque containing the names and images of an Australian of the Year there is one plaque for each year of the award The plaques are arranged chronologically starting at the western end of the path near Commonwealth Avenue Bridge The lake side is bordered by white paving stones the land side by a white paved walkway nbsp The Australians of the Year Walk is on the shore of Lake Burley Griffin CanberraThe walk is situated along a straight section of shoreline on Lake Burley Griffin between the National Library of Australia and the Commonwealth Avenue Bridge 35 17 42 S 149 07 44 E 35 295 S 149 129 E 35 295 149 129 Australians of the Year Walk The walk was opened by the then Prime Minister of Australia John Howard on Australia Day 26 January 2006 In December 2007 journalist Mark McKenna visited the Australian of the Year Walk and interpreted it as a highly symbolic form of national memorial The empty bollards stretching into the distance particularly intrigued him 35 These blank plaques memorials to the future stand as if waiting for the years to pass before they can be filled in and become whole Yet strangely they seem more intriguing than the plaques that precede them It is possible to imagine the line of blank plaques stretching on endlessly and their emptiness begs the question What sort of nation will Australia become over the next few decades Mark McKenna in The Monthly March 2008 Australian of the Year Awards as part of Australian society EditThe Australian of the Year Awards represent only one of many ways in which national identity is expressed but after fifty years they have become a significant part of the ongoing conversation about Australia s past present and future The awards have also attracted the interest of foreigners including BBC correspondent Nick Bryant who recently observed that the awards program offers an intriguing perspective on the Australian national character which is both reinforcing and revelatory 36 An ongoing challenge faced by the NADC is that it is hard to represent the diversity of Australian achievement when there is only one winner per category in each year The ongoing debates about the numbers of winners from the sciences arts and sport are evidence of this In the future these debates might revolve around other issues including gender balance and ethnic diversity Awards Director Tam Johnston suggests that the value of the awards program is best measured by consulting the complete list of finalists for each year 37 In its 2005 Annual Report the NADC included a summary of the 111 finalists honoured nationally which revealed a remarkable variety of achievement and a diversity of personal backgrounds 38 Importantly the NADC has recently devoted attention to promoting the state finals which emphasises the wide variety of achievement that is recognised each year Not all of the debate and discussion generated by the awards program has been of a serious nature A more light hearted portrait can be found in the award winning television satire We Can Be Heroes Finding The Australian of the Year 2005 in which actor Chris Lilley plays five obscure nominees for the Australian of the Year award One reviewer suggested that Lilley s creation was both a humorous mockumentary and a serious critique of the awards program if you want a show that skewers the nation s pretensions and aspirations while providing laugh out loud comedy this is the real deal 39 All five characters have in one way or another inspired people in their local community but none of them appears even a remotely suitable choice for Australian of the Year Although primarily a vehicle for Lilley s comic talent We Can Be Heroes is also a biting critique of what we look for in role models In contrast the magazine Eureka Street offers a strong endorsement of the awards program s potential 40 Critics might suggest that the awards are manipulated by politicians or point to the fact that a number of former recipients such as Alan Bond subsequently fell from grace But the fact remains that the naming of role models is an important community building exercise It assists young people to set goals for themselves and encourages older people to take pride in what they have achieved Eureka Street January 2007 The editors of Eureka Street suggest that the awards have been successful in achieving one of the core goals of the National Australia Day Council which is to promote good citizenship values and achievement by recognising excellence and service to the communities and the nation 22 See also EditList of Australian of the Year Award recipients List of Young Australian of the Year Award recipients List of Senior Australian of the Year Award recipients List of Australian Local Hero Award recipients Orders decorations and medals of AustraliaReferences Edit a b none The Age 27 January 1961 p 2 An Overview Australian of the Year Awards Archived from the original on 11 May 2013 Retrieved 21 July 2015 Australia Day Council Victoria Annual Report 1970 1971 Whose Australian of the Year a b Interview with Phillip Adams 16 December 2008 The Australian s Australian of the Year Editorial Sydney Morning Herald 31 January 1988 p 50 Knock out shock for Rose Australian of the Year The Age 18 January 1972 p 2 What s your cause Australian of the Year Retrieved 28 January 2018 National Portrait Gallery 1996 Australians of the Year exhibition catalogue Canberra National Library of Australia Devine Miranda 27 January 2016 Sorry David but it s the wrong fight The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 29 January 2016 Devine Miranda 31 January 2016 Miranda Devine Australian of the Year has become a vehicle for feminist agenda The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 1 February 2016 Thomas Hedley 29 January 2016 Cate McGregor s nomination Canberra that s in Queensland The Australian Retrieved 29 January 2016 Sober reflections on Australia Day 2016 Sydney Morning Herald 30 January 2016 Retrieved 30 January 2016 An Overview Archived 11 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Australian of the Year Awards quotes the line from Phillip Adams but no original source is cited Now Evonne Goolagong is Australian of the Year The Age 18 January 1972 p 2 Executive Directors Meeting 26 27 July 1982 NAA C4688 1 Directors Meeting Folders Box 13 NAA C4688 1 Directors Meetings Folders Public Relations Report June 1989 NAA C4688 1 Directors Meetings Folders Box 14 National Australia Day Council Annual Report 2004 Chairman s Message Interview with Warren Pearson 27 March 2009 a b Charter 2007 p 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help National Australia Day Council Annual Report 2008 Chief Executive s Officer s Report State Library of Victoria Subject File Australian of the Year The Age 15 January 1966 p 2 Kiernan Ian Jarratt Phil Coming Clean p 223 Annual Award for Best Australian Sydney Morning Herald 16 January 1960 p 6 The Australia Day Award presented to Patrick White Australian of the Year 1973 medal R 481 Mitchell Library Australia Australia Day Update Vol 8 No 2 1987 See NADC Directors Meeting 25 November 1993 NAA C4688 1 Box 14 Interview with Warren Langley 20 February 2009 Australian of the Year Trophies Archived 21 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Interview with Kristin McFarlane 12 January 2009 Australians of the Year Walk National Capital Authority Retrieved 4 February 2010 McKenna Mark March 2008 The Nation Reviewed The Monthly 32 10 Bryant Nick 19 January 2009 Australian of the Year blog BBC Retrieved 7 September 2010 Interview with Tam Johnston 13 November 2008 Annual Report National Australia Day Council 2005 p 8 Hassall Greg 31 August 2005 Review We Can Be Heroes Finding the Australian of the Year Sydney Morning Herald Editorial Who makes you proud to be an Australian Eureka Street 1 2 22 January 2007 External links EditAustralian of the Year website Australians of the Year Walk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Australian of the Year amp oldid 1172962289 Young Australian of the Year, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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