Taking a Stand: Land rights to reconciliation
By (Author) Robert Tickner
Allen & Unwin
Allen & Unwin
1st April 2001
Australia
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
Indigenous peoples / Indigeneity
Indigenous people: governance and politics
323.460994
376
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
570g
A candid account of six crowded years in the struggle for the rights of the first Australians. Told by Australia's longest-serving Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs, it tells the inside story of a succession of turning points in the history of black/white relations. The creation of ATSIC, the passage of the Native Title Act following the High Court's Mabo decision, the appointment of the "Stolen Generations" inquiry, the birth of the reconciliation process, the establishment of the Indigenous Land Fund - these are just some of the initiatives chronicled by a major participant. The realities of the political contest are revealed in the book: Robert Tickner served as Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander Affairs in both the Hawke and Keating Labor governments. From 1990 to 1996 he was in the thick of the fray as these governments confronted a two-centuries-long legacy of neglect and discrimination in circumstances which became increasingly bitter and divided. While describing the achievements of the governments he served, the author frankly acknowledges their failure to come to grips with the long-term crisis in Aboriginal health and points out where inertia and hostility to indigenous needs were not solely the property of the Opposition. As a result of initiatives of the Hawke and Keating governments, for the first time indigenous Australians had recourse to international human rights forums. Today Australia has been found in breach of its treaty obligations, testimony to the fact that the agenda of social justice for all citizens regardless of colour - the agenda Robert Tickner pursued for six years - remains unfinished.
'This unique, insider's account is essential reading for anyone interested in the making of Aboriginal policy - or in the conduct of national politics generally.' -- Henry Reynolds 'Robert Tickner portrays a system under severe pressure as it struggles to deal with a defining issue in Australian politics, on the threshold of the Commonwealth's second century.' -- Professor Garth Nettheim
Robert Tickner is a country boy from the NSW central coast who became an Aboriginal Legal Service lawyer and an Alderman of the Sydney City Council. In 1984 he won the federal seat of Hughes and in 1990 became the federal Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs. Until his tenure of the post, the average period in this position had been less than two years. Robert Tickner served for six years.