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Rosalind Kidd (International) assertion Rosalind Kidd i(A123116 works by)
Born: Established: 1944 ;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 1 y separately published work icon Trustees on Trial: Recovering the Stolen Wages Rosalind Kidd , Canberra : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2006 9100186 2006 single work criticism

'Ros Kidd uses official correspondence to reveal the extraordinary extent of government controls over Aboriginal wages, savings, endowments and pensions in twentieth century Queensland. In a disturbing indictment of the government’s $4000 reparations offer, Kidd unpicks official dealings on the huge trust funds compiled from private income and community endeavours, showing how governments used these finances to their advantage, while families and communities struggled in poverty.'

'Casting the evidence in terms of national and international litigation, particularly cases relating to government accountability for Indigenous interests, Kidd makes a powerful case that the Queensland government should be held to the same standards of accountability and redress as any major financial institution. Trustees on trial is a timely warning for all other Australian jurisdictions to consider their liability for Aboriginal money taken in trust.' (Source: Publisher's website)

1 1 y separately published work icon The Way We Civilise Rosalind Kidd , Queensland : University of Queensland Press , 1997 Z1582544 1997 single work criticism

'This account does not tell a history of 'savages' and 'natives', but it reinstitutes Aboriginal people as human beings with a knowable and known past." from the Foreword by Marcia Langton. This is a groundbreaking history of government's intervention in the lives of Aboriginal people. For more than a century, who they married, where they lived, how their wages were managed, all were determined by bureaucrats.Queensland has the highest population of indigenous people in Australia and this comprehensive account, based on previously restricted material, documents the extraordinary history of a century of Aboriginal affairs in the state. It moves beyond racial conflict to provide new perspectives on government practices.The often strained relations between churches and the government reveal the struggles and appalling conditions of under-funded missions and settlements. Documents also show that vested interests unscrupulously competed to retain cheap or unpaid labour.Between 1914 and 1986 three powerful individuals controlled Aboriginal affairs. Kidd describes how they wielded enormous influence over every aspect of the lives of Queensland's Aboriginal population. She reveals the bitter conflicts between state and federal politicians, and examines why governments failed to turn the rhetoric of reform into reality.Timely and significant, this disturbing account is essential to an understanding of Aboriginal grievances today.' (Source: Publisher's website)

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