"Unfinished Business": Accounting and the 'enslavement' of Aboriginal children
Author(s)
Greer, SusanKeywords
Protection ActsSenate Inquiry 2006: Unfinished business: Indigenous stolen wages
Colonial practices and social disadvantage
Aboriginal Apprenticeship programs NSW
Accounting in social context
Australian Government Intervention in Indigenous Communities
Stolen wages
Forced labour
Government accountability
Removal of Aboriginal children
Misappropriation and mishandling of Indigenous money
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/2123/3940Abstract
Several inquiries initiated by various Australian governments have documented the importance of policies and programs for the forcible removal of Aboriginal children from their families into forced indenture under government-negotiated contracts. The most recent of these studies completed in 2006 by the Australian Senate Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs reveals the connectedness between these policies and accounting technologies. This study examines the roles played by accounting in the constitution and implementation of such programs. The analysis highlights not only how accounting facilitated the problematisation of Aboriginal children as a site for government, but also how accounting technologies enabled the constitution and translation of the indenture programs into practice. This study provides an historical context in which to comprehend both contemporary Indigenous experiences and the role of accounting in the subordination of Indigenous peoples. The analysis reveals how the reliance on accounting techniques, and the prioritisation of accountability relations with the State in the name of good governance helped mask the extent of the inequities and the racial (and economic) discrimination against the Aboriginal population.Date
2008-08-29Type
PresentationIdentifier
oai:ses.library.usyd.edu.au:2123/3940http://hdl.handle.net/2123/3940