In this book, originally published in 1973, the authors show just how wide-ranging and deep-rooted are the disadvantages of the Australian Aboriginal population. The title refers to an Aboriginal commentary on all they received for their land. Shockingly, when this book was written, there was a severe lack of meaningful information regarding the Aborigine population: their number, employment or educational attainment. The authors argue powerfully in this book that until this extraordinary ignorance was rectified, there could be no basis for planning vital improvements. The authors stressed the need for public authorities to gather information on Aboriginal health, housing, employment and education, as without this no attempt to overcome the gross inequalities could succeed.
A valuable source of historical data, this book remains important reading for politicians, social workers, sociologists and anthropologists.
In this book, originally published in 1973, the authors show just how wide-ranging and deep-rooted are the disadvantages of the Australian Aboriginal population. The title refers to an Aboriginal commentary on all they received for their land.
1.The Repatriation of the Aborigines 2 Educational Status of Aborigines
3. Workforce and Occupational Statuses of Aborigines
4. Population: Structure
and Future Growth
5. Towards A Social Policy
Leonard Broom (1911-2009) was a distinguished professor of sociology in a career spanning seven decades, with appointments at UCLA, UT Austin, the Australian National University and most recently at UCSB. He served as editor of the American Sociological Review (1955-57) and co-authored (with Philip Selznick, UC Berkeley) one of the first and most successful textbooks in sociology. Brooms early research on the effects of US internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII made him an early critic of that policy and shaped his life-long interest in social inequality and discrimination against minority and marginalized populations.
One of Brooms most lasting contributions may be his effect on the discipline of sociology. He was instrumental in shaping the development of a strong department while Chair at UCLA and later while Chair at the University of Texas. At Texas, he founded the Population Research Center, which remains one of the strengths of that department. In Australia in the mid-1960s, he was a critical adviser and influential voice in the creation of a department of sociology at The Australian National University and in the foundation of the Sociological Association of Australia and New Zealand, as well as the foundation the associations journal, which remains the major conduit for peer-reviewed academic work in Australia.