‘We Know the Aborigines are Dying Out’: Aboriginal People and the Quest to Ensure their Survival, Wave Hill Station, 1944

In 1939 an Australian anthropologist, W.E.H. Stanner, believed that the nation needed to examine the question of biological and cultural preservation of the Aboriginal peoples. In an attempt to address the issue a range of proposals were suggested, most concentrating on the provision of adequate nut...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health and history 2014-01, Vol.16 (1), p.1-24
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description In 1939 an Australian anthropologist, W.E.H. Stanner, believed that the nation needed to examine the question of biological and cultural preservation of the Aboriginal peoples. In an attempt to address the issue a range of proposals were suggested, most concentrating on the provision of adequate nutrition, proper medical supervision, good conditions of employment, appropriately trained field staff with sufficient financial resources, and the creation of inviolable reserves. This paper is a case study of a northwest Northern Territory cattle station, Wave Hill, where a survey conducted by two anthropologists aimed to reveal the causes of population decline on Vestey owned cattle stations. Could these anthropologists devise a way that would see an increase in station labour without having to seek new labour from marginal areas—‘bush’ people as they were called? Could they provide an answer to the wider challenge of stemming population decline through improving Aboriginal health?
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subjects Aboriginal Australians
Acculturation
Applied anthropology
Australia
Cattle industry
Cultural anthropology
Culture contact
Death
Employment
Health Status Disparities
History, 20th Century
Humans
Mortality - ethnology
Nutrition
Population Dynamics - history
Survival
Territories
White people
title ‘We Know the Aborigines are Dying Out’: Aboriginal People and the Quest to Ensure their Survival, Wave Hill Station, 1944
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