Dates
Impacts
Definitions
Human Rights
General
100

What happened in 1901?

The Federation of Australia

100

What event led to the creation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights?

WWII and the Holocaust

100

Activism

The practice of taking action to effect social, political, economic, or environmental change

100

What does UDHR stand for?

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights

100

True or False; The 1967 referendum passed with only 64% of Australians voting in favour of it

False; over 90% voted 'yes'

200

What happened in 1967?

The referendum that voted 'yes' to include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the Constitution

200

What triggered the recent BLM movement in 2020?

The death of George Floyd

200

Segregation

The separation of people in daily life

200

Who wrote the International Declaration of Human Rights?

The United Nations

200

What is the difference between a primary and secondary source?

Primary source - Immediate, first-hand accounts of a topic, from people who had a direct connection with it. 

Secondary - One step removed from primary sources, though they often quote or otherwise use primary sources. 

300

What happened in 1938?

The Day of Mourning

300

What did the process of assimilation do?

Assimilation was used in an attempt to integrate Aboriginal people (particularly those of mixed heritage) into Australian society

300

Assimilation

A minority group comes to resemble a society's majority group or assume the values, behaviours, and beliefs of another group

300

True or False - Hate speech is protected under the UDHR

False

300

What establishments did segregation include?

‘Colour bars’ – bans that prevented Aboriginal people form entering clubs, pubs, restaurants, theatres, public swimming pools, or using public transport

400
What happened in 2008?

The Prime Minister issued a formal apology to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people

400

What national debate sparked from the 1938 Day of Mourning?

Australia Day: Change the date

400

What is the Stolen Generation?

The forced removal of Aboriginal children from their homes and families to be placed in government care and assimilated with white Australian society

400

List 2 examples of human rights

The right to life, the right to shelter, the right to liberty and freedom, the right to make decisions about your own body, etc

400

Who were two famous civil rights activists in the US?

Martin Luther King Jr.

Malcom X

500

What happened in 1965?

The Freedom Rides

500

List THREE reasons given for the removal of children in NSW

  • 'being Aboriginal'
  • 'being 14 years'
  • 'at risk of immorality'
  • 'neglected'
  • 'to get her away from surroundings of Aboriginal station/Removal from idle reserve life'
  • 'Orphan'
  • 'to send to service'
500

Define 'terra nulius'

'Land belonging to nobody'

500

When was the UDHR adopted by the United Nations?

1948

500

What was the Mabo decision?

Mabo v Queensland (No 2) is a landmark decision of the High Court of Australia that recognised the existence of Native Title in Australia

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