From White Australia to Woomera: The Story of Australian ImmigrationThere has never been a greater need for a sober, historically informed yet critical account of immigration policy in Australia. In this book, Australia's leading specialist on migration James Jupp surveys the changes in policy over the last thirty years since the seismic shift away from the White Australia Policy. Along the way the author considers the history of the White Australia Policy, compares the achievements of the Fraser, Hawke and Keating governments, considers the establishment of the 'institutions' of multiculturalism and ethnicity, and then the waves of attacks on multiculturalism. It looks critically at the impact of economic rationalism on migration choices, the environmentalist challenges to migration, and the impact of Pauline Hanson and One Nation. Most importantly the vexed issue of refugees and asylum seekers is covered in great depth. |
Contents
Creating an immigrant society 17881972 | 5 |
White Australia | 6 |
Populate or perish | 10 |
Planning and control | 13 |
From assimilation to a multicultural society 19722002 | 21 |
The ethnic situation in 1972 | 23 |
Language and culture | 24 |
Ethnic community organisation | 27 |
A developing critique | 113 |
Popular critiques | 115 |
Summarising the conservative critique | 116 |
Less conservative critics | 119 |
The survival of multiculturalism | 120 |
The impact of One Nation | 123 |
The racist inheritance | 124 |
The arrival of One Nation | 127 |
The new proletariat | 29 |
Ghettoes and ethnic suburbs | 30 |
A political base | 32 |
Social mobility | 34 |
Asian settlement | 35 |
A new middle class | 36 |
An ethnic underclass? | 37 |
The Fraser Hawke and Keating governments 19751996 | 41 |
The Fraser government 19751983 | 42 |
The Hawke government 19831991 | 46 |
The Keating government 19911996 | 49 |
The ministerial record | 52 |
Prime ministerial intervention | 53 |
Continuity and difference | 56 |
Policy instruments and institutions | 61 |
State government agencies | 67 |
The advisory structures | 69 |
Inquiries and reports | 72 |
Consultation and representation | 73 |
Research and advocacy | 75 |
The ethnic communities | 79 |
Multicultural policy | 83 |
Australian multiculturalism | 84 |
The foundations | 85 |
The Galbally report | 86 |
Multicultural institutions | 89 |
The agenda of 1989 | 91 |
The reassessment of 1995 | 92 |
Settlement policy | 93 |
Language policy and multicultural education | 94 |
Access and equity | 97 |
The agenda of 1999 | 98 |
Indigenous peoples and multiculturalism | 99 |
Theorising multiculturalism | 101 |
Shifting emphases | 102 |
The attack on multiculturalism | 105 |
Conservative criticism of multiculturalism | 106 |
Other criticism | 109 |
The bipartisan consensus ends 1988 | 110 |
Australians Speak | 112 |
Hansons policies | 129 |
One Nations immigration program of 1998 | 131 |
One Nation support | 134 |
Graeme Campbell and One Nation | 136 |
The influence of One Nation | 137 |
Tragedy or farce? | 138 |
Economic rationalism | 141 |
The overall economic impact | 144 |
The human capital approach | 146 |
Selection criteria | 147 |
User pays and costfree immigration | 151 |
Settlement outcomes | 153 |
The uneconomic immigrant | 155 |
The limits of rationality | 157 |
Sustainability and population policy | 162 |
Populate or perish | 163 |
Growing doubts | 164 |
Zero population growth | 167 |
A population policy | 170 |
Growth limitation and devolution | 173 |
Ageing and decline | 175 |
Future stabilisation | 176 |
Refugees and asylum seekers | 180 |
The UN Convention and Protocol | 182 |
Refugee intakes since 1975 | 184 |
The humanitarian programs | 186 |
Boat people asylum seekers and mandatory detention | 187 |
The shift to temporary protection | 190 |
Tampa and the Pacific solution | 193 |
A tough solution for a small problem | 196 |
A past present and future success? | 200 |
Immigration policy in a globalised economy | 201 |
Multicultural reality | 208 |
A glance at the future | 213 |
Changing attitudes and values | 217 |
19722002 | 220 |
Ministers of immigration departmental secretaries and gross annual settler intake 19732002 | 224 |
| 225 | |
| 233 | |
Other editions - View all
From White Australia to Woomera: The Story of Australian Immigration James Jupp Limited preview - 2007 |
From White Australia to Woomera: The Story of Australian Immigration James Jupp Limited preview - 2002 |
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal accepted access and equity adult migrant agencies agenda AIMA areas arrivals Asian assisted passages asylum seekers Australian immigration became become Birrell Blainey Bolkus British cent centres Coalition Commonwealth conservative Council cultural decline Department of Immigration departmental developed economic rationalism electoral employment English Ethnic Affairs ethnic communities ethnic organisations European family reunion favoured FECCA FitzGerald report Galbally report Globalisation Grassby Howard government human capital humanitarian Ian Macphee immi Immigration Department immigration policy impact increase intake issues Jupp Labor government language Liberal MacKellar Macphee mainly major mandatory detention Melbourne ment Michael MacKellar million multi multicul Multicultural Affairs multiculturalism Nation NMAC non-British numbers official overseas party Pauline Hanson Philip Ruddock political population policy Queensland racist refugees remained Ruddock selection settlement skilled social society Sydney temporary protection temporary protection visas tion tralia turalism United visas welfare White Australia White Australia policy Whitlam Zealand



