Historical context
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Aboriginal society
disrupted by
non-Aboriginal people
Introduction of welfare approaches for Aboriginal people e.g. Aboriginal ‘protectors’, missionaries
Convict transportation to NSW (1788–1841), Van Diemen’s Land (1803–1853)
Queensland 1824–1939 convict settlement; ‘free’ settlers from 1838
1835 Port Phillip District Victoria settled; Government representatives from 1836
1836 South Australian colony established with direct immigration from UK
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Gold rushes
Victoria separates
from NSW
Queensland separates
from NSW
End of convict
transportation (1868)
Land settlement,
pastoralism and agriculture
Growth of manufacturing, economic prosperity, rise
of labour movement
Population growth
Growth of cities and
regional mining towns
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Depressions of 1890s
and 1930s
First World War
Federation–some welfare responsibilities transfer to the Commonwealth Government
Infant welfare movement
‘Harvester Judgement’ minimum wage 1907
Aged pensions 1908
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World War II
Post-war migration
Economic stability and growth
Rising education levels
Commonwealth child endowment (1941), widows’ pensions (1942), unemployment and sickness benefits (1945)
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Whitlam Government reforms (including single parents’ benefit, Australian Assistance Plan)
Women’s rights movement
Self-help movement
Aboriginal rights movement
Legislation regarding child protection
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Prevailing Ideas of how to provide welfare. Significant changes to ideas/reforms
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Deserving and undeserving poor
Rejection of the Poor
Law concept
Care in Barracks
Assistance in the form
of money, food, clothing
or goods
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Legislation in all colonies regarding destitute children/differing approaches to providing
for them (introduction
of the concept of
‘State Ward’)
Child rescue movement
from the 1880s
Move towards boarding
out of destitute children in some colonies
Legislation to separate destitute and delinquent children
Figures: Caroline Chisholm, Rev. Charles Strong, Selina Sutherland, Catherine Spence
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Depressions and wars place strain on providers of services
Changes in provision of welfare during 1890s depression
Efforts to support men/widows/families, including returned servicemen,
by settling on the land
Introduction of legal adoption in all states from the 1890s
Figures: Oswald Barnett, Father Gerard Tucker
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Widening definitions of ‘neglected’ child as standards in the wider society rise
Changing views on appropriate care for those
in need of welfare – expression of these changes in services/institutions
De-segregation of services for the disabled
Growing awareness of psychological and emotional deprivation in institutions
Some states redefine neglected children as ‘in need of care and protection’
Figures: E Cunningham Dax
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Greater emphasis on support within community
De-institutionalisation
Emphasis on family support
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Recipients of welfare
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Aged
Infirm
Destitute
Orphans
Children not seen initially as a group needing to be accommodated separately
Provision (or lack of) for newly-arrived assisted and non-assisted immigrants
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Aged
Mentally ill
Orphan and destitute children
Delinquent children
‘Fallen’ women
Aboriginal people
(in some colonies)
Immigrants
‘Deserving’ poor
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Unemployed
Homeless
Elderly poor
Children
Destitute Mothers
Aboriginal people
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Children
Single parents
Aboriginal people
Disabled
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Recipients of welfare
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Providers of welfare
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Government provides for convict ‘welfare’
Control of girls and women
Ideas about government–provided versus charitable provision of welfare (rejection of the Poor
Law concept)
Growth of non-convict/
ex-convict populations
Discernment of need to provide charity by religious/philanthropic organisations (Benevolent Society NSW established 1813)
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Government subsidisation
of private/charitable providers of welfare
Religious providers
of services
Child rescuers
Mutual aid societies/
self-help
Women as providers
of services
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Expansion in the number of agencies assisting people in the 1930s depression
New approaches to assisting families in
poverty, e.g. advocacy
Government relief agencies/municipal relief agencies
Some states support widowed parents to keep their children at home
with them
Figures: Brotherhood of
St Laurence, Oswald Barnett, Legacy
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Increased dependence
by governments on voluntary agencies to supply services
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Government and private bodies
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The experience
of welfare
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Incarceration and work
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Institutionalisation
and work
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Places of refuge, relief
and charity
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Greater community integration of services
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Targeted welfare assistance and payments
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Types of places associated with welfare provision during the period
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Factories
Outdoor relief
Barracks
Gaols (before other institutions were available)
Missions
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Female refuges
Benevolent asylums
Immigration depots/shelters
Lunatic asylums
Orphanages
Industrial schools
Reformatories
Missions
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The rise of the babies’ home
Institutionalised
congregate care
Women’s refuges
Soup kitchens
Free kindergartens
Homeless shelters
Missions
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Often intangible, and difficult to attribute to specific heritage places
Cottage homes
Family group homes
Single mothers’ shelters
Missions
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Often intangible, and difficult to attribute to specific heritage places
Welfare benefits
Public housing
Refuges for victims of domestic violence
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