Royal Studies Journal (Jun 2018)

“An audience with the Queen”: Indigenous Australians and the Crown, 1954- 2017

  • Mark McKenna

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21039/rsj.147
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 157 – 167

Abstract

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This article is the first substantial examination of the more recent historical relationship between Indigenous Australians and the Crown. While the earlier tradition of perceiving the Queen as benefactress has survived in Indigenous communities, it now co- exists with more critical and antagonistic views. After the High Court’s Mabo decision (1992), the passage of the Native Title Act (1993), and the federal government’s Apology to the Stolen Generations (2008), it is clear that the only avenues for seriously redressing Indigenous grievances lie within the courts and parliaments of Australia. The Australian monarch—either as a supportive voice, or as a vehicle for highlighting the failure of Australian governments— no longer holds any substantial political utility for Indigenous Australians. Monarchy has become largely irrelevant to the fate of future Indigenous claims for political and social justice.

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