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![]() Editor: Justin Healey Price: $20.95 |
Aboriginal Reconcilliation Reconciliation among Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians involves justice, recognition and healing and is about helping all Australians move forward with a better understanding of the past and how the past affects the lives of Indigenous people today. Reconciliation involves symbolic recognition of the first Australians, as well as practical measures to address the Indigenous disadvantage in health, employment, education and general opportunity. The Howard Government policy of ‘practical reconciliation’, with its focus on funding improvements to Aboriginal disadvantage through mainstream social services rather than by indigenous self-determination has been accused of excluding the non-practical elements of reconciliation, such as the need for recognition of the social, spiritual and cultural devastation caused by removal from traditional lands and the destruction of families. What form should the current Reconciliation process take? How important is saying “sorry”? Chapter 1 The Reconciliation Process Chapter 2 Reconciliation and Indigenous Affairs Reform Glossary; Facts and Figures; Additional Resources; Index |
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