Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/74425
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Type: Journal article
Title: 'A Halo of Protection': colonial protectors and the principle of aboriginal protection through punishment
Author: Nettelbeck, A.
Citation: Australian Historical Studies, 2012; 43(3):396-411
Publisher: Univ Melbourne
Issue Date: 2012
ISSN: 1031-461X
1940-5049
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Amanda Nettelbeck
Abstract: Scholarship on Australia's colonial protectorates has examined the ways in which protectors largely failed in their humanitarian mission, as well as the ambivalent roles they played as agents of ‘civilisation’. Yet as well as representing ‘friends and benefactors’ of Aboriginal people, colonial protectors worked to bring them within the legal reach of police, courts and prisons. This article will compare the work of the protectorates during the 1840s in Port Phillip and South Australia with that of Western Australia, where a more systematic and forebodingly modern policy of Aboriginal governance existed. It argues that in Western Australia a logic of Aboriginal protection emerged through a principle of discipline and punishment facilitated by the distinctive policy regime of Governor Hutt.
Rights: Copyright status unknown
DOI: 10.1080/1031461X.2012.706621
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1031461x.2012.706621
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 4
History publications

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