6 research outputs found

    Anglo-Jews and Eastern European Jews in a White Australia

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    This thesis traces the story of Australian Jewish identity from the colonial period to the end of the 1920s. Anglo-Jews aligned themselves with ‘white Australia’, arguing that their Jewishness was merely a private trait. Moments of crisis in the 1890s and 1920s, prompted by the possible and actual migration of Eastern European Jews to Australia, threatened to destabilise the place Anglo-Jews had carved out in Australian society, and forced a renegotiation of what it meant to be Jewish in Australia. These moments demonstrate that despite being notionally accepted in Australia, the whiteness of Jews was never guaranteed. Drawing on newspapers and government records, this thesis argues that since their arrival in Australia, Jews have been ambivalently and ambiguously placed in relation to Australian constructions of whiteness. As a group notoriously hard to define, Jews are an important case study in an analysis of the discursive world of ‘white Australia’, presenting new questions that challenge existing binaries of ‘white’ and ‘coloured’.

    Decolonising the Self: Gandhi and Fanon on Violence and Agency

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    Scholarships & Prizes Office. University of Sydne

    Cases before Australian Courts and Tribunals Concerning Questions of Public International Law 2020

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    This article summarises Australian cases from 2020, with a focus on the relevance of international law. In the year 2020, international treaties and United Nations (‘UN’) declarations were considered by Australian courts in several key areas, including: the status of Aboriginal Australians under the Constitution; discrimination claims; and migration decisions, particularly those involving deportation due to criminal conduct (that is, cases involving so-called ‘crimmigration’ law). International law was also relevant in Australian cases concerning the human rights implications of COVID-19 restrictions, with the Victorian Supreme Court observing that ‘[h]uman rights are not suspended during states of emergency or disaster’.The publication of the ‘Brereton Report’ — which documents potential war crimes by members of the Australian Defence Force (‘ADF’) in Afghanistan — underscored the relevance of both international humanitarian law and international criminal law to our own military personnel
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