An Australian Story: Moral Breakdown
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N’s voice was tense; he was scared. He kept apologising for imposing, his heavily accented English and my deafness an unfortunate combination. I had asked him to call me an hour later as I was on a deadline. He told me he couldn’t as he feared for his safety.
Reorienting the Postcolonial Symposium: Sunday 10 July to Wednesday 13 July at the Institute of Postcolonial Studies, Melbourne
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‘A series of discussions with local and international speakers on ‘postcolonialism applied’: action-oriented and grounded in its practices—from the word to the world, from past to present, from exceptional moments to the everyday.’
Vale Patrick Wolfe
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Patrick Wolfe tragically passed away very prematurely on Thursday, we mourn his passing.
The Real Cost of Closing Remote Communities, by Brian F. Codding, Douglas W. Bird and Rebecca Bliege Bird
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Doing the sums on the contribution made by traditional Aboriginal economies
Iraq and Our Democracy by Alison Caddick
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If the non-response to the marches against the Iraq war in 2003 confirmed a disabling political cynicism in many people, today we witness the political fruits of two decades of aggression in the Middle East and its fallout.
Driving In The NT
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A new report shows how Intervention measures are criminalising Indigenous drivers
By Maggie Knight
Western Innocence
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Why the West continues to devastate Aboriginal cultures
Jon Hinkson
Shifting Fortunes: Mount Nancy
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On the ground in Mount Nancy Town Camp
By Barbara Shaw