FY2001
In the Northern Territory of Australia, aborigine society perceived as traditional
has since the end of the 1970s undergone bewildering changes, not just in terms
of the systems for indigenous land rights, but also in line with various Australian
domestic policies concerning culture, labor, development, tourism, among others.
In response various policies have changed in turn. This research seeks to discover
historical documentation that speaks in micro terms about the changes which have
occurred in aborigine society and culture, while synthesizing this information
with marco narratives regarding policy changes at various levels, in an attempt
to narrate and analyze a history of dynamic relations involving aborigine society
and policies concerning the aborigines. This research will attempt to illuminate
the mutual effects of the policies towards the aborigines of Australia, a nation
which is advanced in global terms, and the society of the aborigines. Hopefully,
we will be able to suggest solutions for problems of relations with indigenous
peoples, an issue which is certain to surface in various countries and regions
of the world, including in Japan, in the days to come, and indicate specific directions
and suggestions that might be followed in developing policies for indigenous peoples.