Obliged to be Difficult :Nugget Coombs' Legacy in Indigenous Affairs

Publication subTitle :Nugget Coombs' Legacy in Indigenous Affairs

Author: Tim Rowse  

Publisher: Cambridge University Press‎

Publication year: 2000

E-ISBN: 9781139239028

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780521773539

Subject: C91 Sociology

Keyword: 社会学

Language: ENG

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Obliged to be Difficult

Description

Since the 1967 constitutional referendum, Australian governments have moved towards policies of indigenous self-determination. Obliged to be Difficult, first published in 2000, presents the central issue of self-determination as seen by Dr H. C. Coombs, the most important policy maker since the referendum: through what political mechanisms will indigenous Australians find their own voice? Coombs was singularly influential within government in the years 1967 to 1976, and he remained a tireless critic and policy advocate from 1977 to 1996. Rowse's narrative of his work, drawing on many unpublished sources, illuminates the interplay of government policy with indigenous practice. This book is both an account of government policies and a biographical slice of an outstanding Australian. In attempting a critical celebration of Coombs' vision and methods, it invites informed reflection on the issues of land rights, sovereignty and reconciliation in these conservative, and highly anxious, times.

Chapter

Indigenous choice

The Council for Aboriginal Affairs

A new policy philosophy?

Indigenous choice

2 'Land ownership for Aborigines presentsdifficult problems'1

The Hasluck legacy

Political handicaps

Up Wattie Creek

Gove and Nabalco

Land and the mandate of 1967

Land policy: whose initiative?

3 Mediating the Yolngu

The Cairns statement

Leases for Aborigines

The CAA and Yolngu

Howson and the Ministerial Committee

Finding a comprOlnise

Australia Day compromise

A demoralised minister

4 Voice and feet

The CAA and FCAATSI

Entrenched officials

Treading autonOIny's path

5 North and south

Indigenous diversity - the CAA's orthodoxy

Settled and colonial Australias

Assitnilation and the CAA

Koori dispossession

Dealing with the Embassy

The outback and the city

6 A national indigenous leadership?

The CAA and the indigenous constituency

Gordon Bryant

Gordon Bryant's RSL

Perkins in the news

Bringing Perkins to book

Reforms and obituaries for the NACC

7 Clans and councils

The new acculturation

Innovation and tradition: Paul Albrecht

Innovation and tradition: H.C. Coombs

The immediate crisis of self-determination

'A really free spontaneous people'

How to sack a whitefella

HerIDannsburg redeeIDed

The Land Council problelD

8 'As nasty a piece of chicanery as I canremember'

An Act to facilitate mining

Fox and the Aboriginal interest

The mentor spurned

The Land Council problent

9 Effectively Aboriginal

Nuts and bolts

Custom and organisation

Representing women

The chair, the field staff and the Aboriginal domain

Not the Northern Land Council

10 An indigenous public sphere

The treaty

A nation in need

The NAC and the Aboriginal Treaty Committee

Indigenous diversity

Reforming the NAC

11 From James Cook to Eva Valley

Responding to native title

Towards ATSIC

ATSIC: within and without

The significance of Eva Valley

Evaluating the Native Title Act

12 The 1940s in the 1990s

The 1940s and the Coombs approach

Regionalism and federalism in the 1940s

Indigenous regionalism

Conclusion Beyond Howard, Hanson and Herron

References

Notes

Index

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