Digital resources tagged with ‘social justice’
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Every digital resource on Screen Australia’s Digital Learning site is tagged with descriptive terms. This list shows the resources which are tagged with ‘social justice’.
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Albert Namatjira Northern Territory Art Gallery Curator Franchesca Cubillo talks about the life of acclaimed Arrente artist Albert Namatjira (1902-1959) and his citizenship granted in 1957. ![]() ![]() |
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Anna Naupa on Vanuatan heritage Ni-Vanuatu writer and historian Anna Naupa discusses different views of South Sea Islander labour trade history. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Australian South Sea Islanders Discover the Past Joe and Monica Leo are the descendents of ni-Vanuatu who helped build Queensland's sugar industry. ![]() |
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CAAMA & Indigenous Broadcasting A broadcast studio at Radio Redfern in the late 80s. Christina Spurgeon talks about the importance of providing media services to remote Indigenous communities to the culture, identity and language of Aboriginal Australians. ![]() |
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Charles Perkins - Freedom Ride Charles Perkins’ involvement in the Freedom Ride through rural New South Wales in the early 1960s played a crucial role in demonstrating that Aboriginal people could begin to stand up for themselves. ![]() ![]() |
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Charles Perkins - Institutions Charles Perkins recounts the experiences that fuelled his great anger against white injustice and his determination to fight for Aboriginal rights. ![]() |
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Faith Bandler - Activist Civil rights activist Faith Bandler has made an enormous contribution to the peace movement and indigenous politics. ![]() |
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Helping Children in War-Torn Countries Moira Kelly begs for funds from international charities to bring children from war-torn Albania to Australia for medical treatment. One of the children almost dies, but the results are worth the risks. ![]() |
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Imparja: Indigenous Broadcasting Imparja Television allows Indigenous communities to tell their stories and to communicate both with each other as well as the wider Australian community. ![]() |
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Lowitja O'Donoghue - Reunion Aboriginal leader and founding chairperson of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission, Lowitja O’Donoghue has worked tirelessly for her people. ![]() |
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Lowitja O'Donoghue - The Stolen Generation Lois O’Donoghue was born in 1932 in a remote Aboriginal community. She never knew her white father and, at the age of two, was taken away from her mother, who she was not to see for 33 years. ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Neville Bonner - Beginnings Neville Bonner grew up on the banks of the Richmond River and started his working life as a ringbarker, canecutter and stockman. He spent 16 years on the repressive Palm Island Aboriginal Reserve where he learned many of the skills that would help him later as a politician. ![]() ![]() |
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Neville Bonner - Change By the early 1960s, it was clear that Indigenous people were not being assimilated — discrimination against Indigenous people continued and many Indigenous people refused to surrender their culture and lifestyle. The assimilation policy had failed. ![]() ![]() |
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News as Entertainment John Safran talks about the use of 'doorstopping' in current affairs programs. Scott Goodings traces the celebrity and entertainment value of today's news broadcasts to the 'news wars' of the late 1980s. ![]() |
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Oodgeroo Noonuccal Writer and political activist Oodgeroo Noonuccal’s poetry represents and captures the growing reaction by a new generation of indigenous Australians against the long-standing colonial mentality. ![]() |
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Origins of the Bougainville Conflict The story of how long-standing local opposition to a copper mine in Bougainville erupted into full-scale civil war. ![]() |
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Outwork - A Vietnamese Refugee's Story Migrant women work long hours sewing garments at home for a few dollars an hour. Many are refugees and have little understanding of their rights or the chance of alternative employment. ![]() |
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Road to Progress -- Peter Butt interview For producer and director Peter Butt, making My Father, My Country was both an adventure and a chance to discover Papua New Guinea's past. ![]() |
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Rosalie Kunoth Monks - Social Work Rosalie Kunoth-Monks is an actor, ex-nun and Aboriginal activist. ![]() |
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Rosalie Kunoth Monks - Speaking Out Rosalie Kunoth-Monks is an actor, ex-nun and Aboriginal activist. ![]() ![]() |
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Sense of Belonging Joe and Monica Leo embark on a journey to Vanuatu to recover a small part of their past. ![]() ![]() |
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Taslima Nasrin - Bangladeshi doctor, poet and refugee The Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasrin recounts her 1960s childhood and her awakening to women's oppression. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Taslima Nasrin - the price of freedom Bangladeshi poet Taslima Nasrin reflects about her mother’s life and her own responsibility, through her writing, to changing the lives of women globally. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Ted Egan Ted Egan reflects on his life in remote communities, the inequalities between black and white Australians, the dilemma of holding power over the communities in which he worked and his changing attitude to Land Rights. ![]() |
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The Forgotten People The Indonesian province of Papua has a turbulent history and rich culture. Yet it remains largely unknown. ![]() |
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The Law Machine Starting as a simple apparatus to test sin and guilt, the law has become one of our most convoluted contraptions. ![]() |