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'''Australia''' is the name of the smallest of the seven continents and the nation that occupies it. The westernmost landmass of [[Oceania]], it lies south of Papua New Guinea, with the [[Indian Ocean]] to the west, the [[South Pacific Ocean]] to the east, and the [[Southern Ocean]] between it and [[Antarctica]].
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The Commonwealth of Australia is the only sovereign nation to occupy an entire continent. It includes the island of [[Tasmania]] and seven external territories, including the [[Australian Antarctic Territory]].
{{Infobox Country
| conventional_long_name = Commonwealth of Australia
| common_name = Australia
| image_flag = Australia_-_national_flag.jpg|right|thumb|150px|
| image_coat = Coat_of_Arms_of_Australia.svg
| national_motto = None
| national_anthem = Advance Australia Fair
| image_map = Australia_with_AAT_(orthographic_projection).svg
| capital = [[Canberra]]
| official_languages = English
| government_type = Constitutional monarchy
| leader_title1 = Governor-General
| leader_name1 = General Peter Cosgrove, AC, MC
| leader_title2 = Prime Minister
| leader_name2 = [[Tony Abbott]]
| area =  7,610,930
| areami² = 2,938,597
| population_estimate = 23.3 million
| population_estimate_rank = 55th
| population_estimate_year = 2013
| population_density = 2.6
| population_density_rank = 235th
| population_densitymi²= 1
| currency = Australian dollars
| currency_code= AUD
| HDI = 0.962
| HDI_category = high
| HDI_rank = 3rd
| HDI_year = 2007–08
| time_zone = EST
| utc_offset = +10
| time_zone = CST
| utc_offset = +9:30
| time_zone_DST = WST
| utc_offset_DST = +8
| cctld = au
| calling_code = 61
}}
'''Australia''' is the name of the smallest of the seven continents and the nation that occupies it. The westernmost landmass of [[Oceania]], it lies south of Papua New Guinea, with the [[Indian Ocean]] to the west, the [[South Pacific Ocean]] to the east, and the [[Southern Ocean]] between it and [[Antarctica]]. The Commonwealth of Australia is the only sovereign nation to occupy an entire continent. It includes the island of [[Tasmania]] and seven external territories, including the [[Australian Antarctic Territory]].


[[Australian Aborigines|Aborigines]] inhabited Australia for tens of thousands of years, and it was only relatively recently discovered by Europeans (1606) and claimed for [[Great Britain]] by Captain [[James Cook]] in 1770. The British established the first European settlement in Australia at [[Sydney]] on 26 January 1788.
[[Australian Aborigines|Aborigines]] inhabited Australia for tens of thousands of years, and it was only relatively recently discovered by Europeans (1606) and claimed for [[Great Britain]] by Captain [[James Cook]] in 1770. The British established the first European settlement in Australia at [[Sydney]] on 26 January 1788. The six British colonies on the continent federated to form the Commonwealth of Australia on 1 January 1901.
 
The six British colonies on the continent federated to form the Commonwealth of Australia on 1 January 1901.


Australia is a member of the [[Commonwealth of Nations]] and the [[United Nations]], and a close ally of the [[United States of America]].
Australia is a member of the [[Commonwealth of Nations]] and the [[United Nations]], and a close ally of the [[United States of America]].


==Population==
==Population==
 
In January 2019, the population of Australia is estimated to be around 25.2 million.<ref>Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Population clock". Retrieved 17 January 2019 from http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/94713ad445ff1425ca25682000192af2/1647509ef7e25faaca2568a900154b63?OpenDocument</ref><ref>Unless otherwise specified, information in this section, and its associated subsections, comes from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Population distribution", ''4102.0 &ndash; Australian Social Trends, 2008''. Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/Lookup/4102.0Chapter3002008</ref>
In August 2008, the population of Australia is estimated to be around 21.4 million.<ref>Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Population clock". Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/Web+Pages/Population+Clock</ref><ref>Unless otherwise specified, information in this section, and its associated subsections, comes from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Population distribution", ''4102.0 &ndash; Australian Social Trends, 2008''. Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/Lookup/4102.0Chapter3002008</ref>


===Population distribution===
===Population distribution===
In 2006, more than two-thirds (68%) of the Australian population (20.7 million at that time) lived in major cities, the remaining 32% living in regional and remote areas.<ref>This is throws into sharp relief the myth that Australia is a nation of bronze-skinned giants living in the outback &ndash; the nation has always been highly urbanised, with the stereotypical Australian "bushman" (farmer, stockman &ndash; the Australian version of the US cowboy &ndash; etc.) being very much in the minority.</ref> The only part of Australia in which a significant proportion of the population is considered to live in remote (21.7%) or very remote (23.5%) areas is the [[Northern Territory]]. For all other states and territories, populations in those categories are in single digits (or even fractions of percentage points).
In 2006, more than two-thirds (68%) of the Australian population (20.7 million at that time) lived in major cities, the remaining 32% living in regional and remote areas.<ref>This is throws into sharp relief the myth that Australia is a nation of bronze-skinned giants living in the outback &ndash; the nation has always been highly urbanised, with the stereotypical Australian "bushman" (farmer, stockman &ndash; the Australian version of the US cowboy &ndash; etc.) being very much in the minority.</ref> The only part of Australia in which a significant proportion of the population is considered to live in remote (21.7%) or very remote (23.5%) areas is the [[Northern Territory]]. For all other states and territories, populations in those categories are in single digits (or even fractions of percentage points).


===Population growth===
===Population growth===
Between 1996 and 2006 the Australian population grew by 2.4 million at an average annual rate of 1.2%. The greatest growth took place in the major cities, at an average annual rate of 1.6%. The population of inner regional areas continued to grow (0.8%) and that of outer regional areas remained generally stable, but in remote and very remote areas the population underwent a decline (-0.4% and -0.3% respectively) over the decade. Over the last five years of the decade, however, population growth slowed in the major cities and increased in the other areas.
Between 1996 and 2006 the Australian population grew by 2.4 million at an average annual rate of 1.2%. The greatest growth took place in the major cities, at an average annual rate of 1.6%. The population of inner regional areas continued to grow (0.8%) and that of outer regional areas remained generally stable, but in remote and very remote areas the population underwent a decline (-0.4% and -0.3% respectively) over the decade. Over the last five years of the decade, however, population growth slowed in the major cities and increased in the other areas.


===Demographic characteristics===
===Demographic characteristics===
In 2006, the ratio of males to females in Australia was 99 to 100. There were more women than men in the major cities and inner regional areas, but this situation was reversed in more remote areas. The highest ratio of males to females was in very remote areas (113 males for every 100 females), probably because of the types of male-dominated industries common in those areas &ndash; agriculture, mining, etc.
In 2006, the ratio of males to females in Australia was 99 to 100. There were more women than men in the major cities and inner regional areas, but this situation was reversed in more remote areas. The highest ratio of males to females was in very remote areas (113 males for every 100 females), probably because of the types of male-dominated industries common in those areas &ndash; agriculture, mining, etc.


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Indigenous Australians comprise only a small percentage of the total population in the states and the Australian Capital Territory. In the Northern Territory, by contrast, almost one-third of the population is of Aboriginal or [[Torres Strait Islander]] origin.
Indigenous Australians comprise only a small percentage of the total population in the states and the Australian Capital Territory. In the Northern Territory, by contrast, almost one-third of the population is of Aboriginal or [[Torres Strait Islander]] origin.
===Ancestry===
For purposes of the Australian Census, ancestry is a self-defined and self-reported classification, further complicated by the fact that 35% of the population reported more than one ancestry in 2006 (hence the percentages in the following table add up to more than 100%).<ref>Information in this subsection is from ABS. 2008. ''Year Book Australia 2008'' (cat. no. 1301.0). Canberra: ABS. pp. 460&ndash;1. Retrieved 30 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/DetailsPage/1301.02008?OpenDocument</ref> Broadly, however, the ancestry of the Australian population is as follows:
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Ancestry
! % of pop'n
|-
| Australian<ref>Includes Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and Australian of
South Sea Islander descent</ref>
| 37.8
|-
| New Zealander, Maori,
other Pacific Islander
| 1.9
|-
| European
| 67.4
|-
| Middle Eastern
| 2.2
|-
| Asian
| 8.6
|-
| Other
| 1.9
|}
===Religion===
The 2006 Census<ref>ABS. 2008. ''Year Book Australia 2008''. pp. 457&ndash;8. Retrieved 30 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/DetailsPage/1301.02008?OpenDocument</ref> found that the population of Australia was 26% Roman Catholic, 19% Anglican, 19% other Christian denominations and 6% non-Christian religions (including Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism and others). Those professing no religion or failing to adequately respond to the question comprised almost 31% of the population.
===Languages===
Australia's national language is English, but the nation's cultural diversity has led to more than 200 languages being spoken in the community.<ref>ABS. 2008. ''Year Book Australia 2008". pp. 455&ndash;7</ref> Major languages other than English include Italian, Greek, Arabic, Cantonese, Mandarin and Vietnamese, speakers of which comprise around 7% of the total population.
===Literacy===
In 2003 the estimated rates of [[Literacy|literacy]] (defined by reference to those of age 15 and over can read and write) in Australia were 99% overall, and 99% for males and females alike.<ref>CIA 2008.</ref>


==Geography==
==Geography==
{{Image|Australia Map.png|right|300px|Add image caption here.}}


One of about 210 countries in the world, at 7,610,930 km<sup>2</sup> comprises 5% of the land area of the globe, but is the sixth-largest country on the planet (after [[Russia]], [[Canada]], [[China]], the [[United States of America|USA]] and [[Brazil]]).<Ref>Unless otherwise specified, information in this section, including the subsections, comes from the Australian Government's Geoscience Australia website and the various pages contained therein. Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.ga.gov.au/education/facts/</ref>
One of about 210 countries in the world, at 7,610,930 km<sup>2</sup> comprises 5% of the land area of the globe, but is the sixth-largest country on the planet (after [[Russia]], [[Canada]], China, the [[United States of America|USA]] and [[Brazil]]).<Ref>Unless otherwise specified, information in this section, including the subsections, comes from the Australian Government's Geoscience Australia website and the various pages contained therein. Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.ga.gov.au/education/facts/</ref>


===Dimensions and extremities===
===Dimensions and extremities===
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Of the six largest countries, Australia is the only one surrounded by water and has a total coastline length of 59,736 km. Of that, almost 40% (23,859 km) is made up of island coastlines, with the remaining 35,877 km surrounding the mainland.
Of the six largest countries, Australia is the only one surrounded by water and has a total coastline length of 59,736 km. Of that, almost 40% (23,859 km) is made up of island coastlines, with the remaining 35,877 km surrounding the mainland.


Australia is almost 3700 km long from its most northerly point ([[Cape York]], on the [[Cape York Peninsula]], [[Queensland]], latitude 10º41'21"S longitude 142º31'50" E) to its most southerly point in Tasmania ([[South East Cape]], 28º38'15"S 153º38'14"E). The southernmost mainland point of Australia is [[South Point]], on [[Wilson's Promontory]], [[Victoria]] (39º08'20"S 146º22'26"E).
Australia is almost 3700 km long from its most northerly point ([[Cape York]], on the [[Cape York Peninsula]], [[Queensland]], latitude 10º41'21"S longitude 142º31'50"E) to its most southerly point in Tasmania ([[South East Cape]], 28º38'15"S 153º38'14"E). The southernmost mainland point of Australia is [[South Point]], on [[Wilson's Promontory]], [[Victoria]] (39º08'20"S 146º22'26"E).


From east to west, Australia is almost 4000 km wide. The easternmost point is [[Cape Byron]], at [[Byron Bay]], [[New South Wales|NSW]] (28º38'15"S 153º38'14"E), while the western extremity of Australia is at [[Steep Point]], [[Shark Bay]], [[Western Australia|WA]] (26º09'5"S 113º09'18"E).
From east to west, Australia is almost 4000 km wide. The easternmost point is [[Cape Byron]], at [[Byron Bay]], [[New South Wales|NSW]] (28º38'15"S 153º38'14"E), while the western extremity of Australia is at [[Steep Point]], [[Shark Bay]], [[Western Australia|WA]] (26º09'5"S 113º09'18"E).


===States and territories===
===States and territories===
 
Australia comprises six states and two territories, as well as several smaller territories with varying degrees of habitation. Each state and territory has a capital city, which is the seat of the state or territory government. The Australian Capital Territory has at its capital Canberra, which is also the national capital of the Commonwealth of Australia.
Australia comprises five states and two major territories, as well as several smaller territories with varying degrees of habitation. Each state and major territory has a capital city, which is the seat of the state or territory government. The Australian Capital Territory has at its capital Canberra, which is also the national capital of the Commonwealth of Australia.


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
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! Capital
! Capital
! Population
! Population
(2007 est.)
(2013 est.)<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/mf/3101.0/|title=3101.0 - Australian Demographic Statistics, Mar 2013 - Main Features|author=Australian Bureau of Statistics|date=30 March 2013}} Accessed 6 October 2013.</ref>
! Area
! Area
(km<sup>2</sup>)
(km<sup>2</sup>)
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| ACT
| ACT
| Canberra
| Canberra
| 340,800
| 381,700
| 2,358
| 2,358
|-
|-
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| NSW
| NSW
| Sydney
| Sydney
| 6.9 million
| 7.4 million
| 800,642
| 800,642
|-
|-
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| NT
| NT
| Darwin
| Darwin
| 217,600
| 237,800
| 1,349,129
| 1,349,129
|-
|-
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| Qld
| Qld
| Brisbane
| Brisbane
| 4.2 million
| 4.6 million
| 1,730,648
| 1,730,648
|-
|-
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| SA
| SA
| Adelaide
| Adelaide
| 1.6 million
| 1.7 million
| 983,482
| 983,482
|-
|-
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| Tas
| Tas
| Hobart
| Hobart
| 495,800
| 512,900
| 68,401
| 68,401
|-
|-
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| Vic
| Vic
| Melbourne
| Melbourne
| 5.2 million
| 5.7 million
| 227,416
| 227,416
|-
|-
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| WA
| WA
| Perth
| Perth
| 2.1 million
| 2.5 million
| 2,529,875
| 2,529,875
|}
|}
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===Landforms===
===Landforms===
Half of the surface area of Australia is covered by the Western Shield.<ref>Information in this subsection, is from SBS. 1995. ''The SBS World Guide''. 4th edn. Melbourne: Reed Reference.</ref> This plateau, much of it desert, averages between 400 m and 600 m above sea level, but reaches 1,524 m at [[Mount Liebig]], in the central [[Macdonnell Ranges]].
East of the shield lies the [[Great Artesian Basin]], which sprawls across an area from the [[Gulf of Carpentaria]] in the north to the mouth of the [[Murray River]] in the south.
The third major physiographic region in Australia is the [[Great Dividing Range]] (or Eastern Uplands). Extending north-south from Queensland to Tasmania, the range cordons the western shield and basin regions from the populous and fertile south-eastern coastal plains.
The highest mainland point is [[Mount Kosciusko]] (2,228 m), while [[Mount Oisa]] in Tasmania climbs to 1,617 m. [[Lake Eyre]], at 15 m below sea level, is the lowest point on the continent.
Around 18% of the continent is forested, mainly along the ranges, plateaux and basins of the Great Divide. The tropical rainforest belt lies along the north-east coast of Queensland, although there are scattered instances of such forests further south.
The [[Murray River]], fed by the [[Darling River|Darling]], [[Murrumbidgee River|Murrumbidgee]] and [[Lachlan River|Lachlan]] rivers, is Australia's longest inland waterway, flowing 2,350 km from the [[Snowy Mountains]] to the [[Great Australian Bight]].
Off the north-east coast lies the [[Great Barrier Reef]], which runs 1,931 km almost parallel to the Great Dividing Range. Covering an area of some 350,000 km<sup>2</sup>, the reef (in reality a system of individual and fringing reefs) is an important environmental region and tourist attraction.


===External territories===
===External territories===
Australia has seven external territories, which range from hundreds to thousands of kilometres from the mainland. These include:
Australia has seven external territories, which range from hundreds to thousands of kilometres from the mainland. These include:
* Territory of [[Cocos (Keeling) Islands]] (14 km<sup>2</sup>)
* Territory of [[Cocos (Keeling) Islands]] (14 km<sup>2</sup>)
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===Oceans and seas===
===Oceans and seas===
Australia lies between the Indian Ocean to the west and the Pacific Ocean to the east.<ref>Information in this paragraph is from Geoscience Australia. 2006. "Appendix E: Limits of Oceans and Seas", in ''Geoscience Australia Topographic Data and Map Specifications for TOPO250K and TOPO100K National Topographic Databases and NTMS Series 1:250 000 and 1:100 000 Scale Topographic Map Products''. Retrieved 20 August 2008 from http://www.ga.gov.au/mapspecs/250k100k/pdfs/AppendixE.pdf</ref> It has coasts along the [[Timor Sea]] and [[Arafura Sea]] to the north, off which the [[Gulf of Carpentaria]] extends into the northern landmass of the continent. To the north-east is the [[Coral Sea]], which washes onto the Great Barrier Reef, while the [[Tasman Sea]] laps against the south-eastern shoreline of the nation. [[Bass Strait]] divides Tasmania from the mainland. The Southern Ocean lies to the south, meeting the coastline in an extensive waterway known as the [[Great Australian Bight]].


Australia retains the right to explore and exploit the seabed and waters in the nation's [[Exclusive Economic Zone]] (EEZ), which totals 8,148,250 km<sup>2</sup> (one of the largest EEZ's in the world, the total area exceeding the country's land area). The EEZ generally extends to a limit 200 nautical miles from Australia's coastline, including her external territories.
Australia retains the right to explore and exploit the seabed and waters in the nation's [[Exclusive Economic Zone]] (EEZ), which totals 8,148,250 km<sup>2</sup> (one of the largest EEZ's in the world, the total area exceeding the country's land area). The EEZ generally extends to a limit 200 nautical miles from Australia's coastline, including her external territories.
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== Economy ==
== Economy ==
Australia a strong economy and a per capita GDP (US$37,500, 2007 est.) comparable with the four most powerful European economies. The economy has in recent years been buoyed by strong business and consumer confidence, and by robust export prices for raw materials and agricultural produce. Over the past almost two decades the Australian government has emphasised economic reform and low inflation, encouraged a booming housing market, and strengthened ties with [[China]], which has led to relatively consistent expansion of the economy.
Australia a strong economy and a per capita GDP (US$37,500, 2007 est.) comparable with the four most powerful European economies. The economy has in recent years been buoyed by strong business and consumer confidence, and by robust export prices for raw materials and agricultural produce. Over the past almost two decades the Australian government has emphasised economic reform and low inflation, encouraged a booming housing market, and strengthened ties with China, which has led to relatively consistent expansion of the economy.


An extended drought across much of rural Australia, high demand for imports, and a strong currency have, however, led to an increased trade deficit in recent years. Constraints on export growth and inflation concerns have been created by infrastructure bottlenecks and a tight labour market.
An extended drought across much of rural Australia, high demand for imports, and a strong currency have, however, led to an increased trade deficit in recent years. Constraints on export growth and inflation concerns have been created by infrastructure bottlenecks and a tight labour market.


Despite this, however, strong revenue growth has seen the Australian budget remain in surplus since 2002.<ref>Information and statistics in this section are from the CIA's ''World Factbook'' entry for Australia, retrieved on 15 April 2008 from https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/</ref>
Despite this, however, strong revenue growth has seen the Australian budget remain in surplus since 2002.<ref>Information and statistics in this section are from the CIA 2008 (see previous reference).</ref>


== Politics ==
== Politics ==
Australia is a [[constitutional monarchy]], with [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]] as its [[Head of State|Head of State]].  She is represented by the [[Governor-General of Australia|Governor-General]], General [[Peter Cosgrove]], who holds broad, but for the most part nominal, executive powers.


Australia is a constitutional monarchy, with [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]] as its [[Head of state|head of state]]. She is represented by the governor-general, who holds broad, but for the most part nominal, executive powers.
Australia's [[head of government]] is Prime Minister [[Malcolm Turnbull]] of the Liberal and National parties coalition. The Opposition is the [[Australian Labor Party]] (ALP), led by [[Bill Shorten]].  


Australia’s head of government is Prime Minister [[Kevin Rudd]] of the [[Australian Labor Party]] (ALP). The Deputy Prime Minister is Julia Gillard. The Opposition is the [[Liberal Party of Australia|Liberal Party]], led by [[Brendan Nelson]].
The Australian system of government is based on that of the United Kingdom (the [[Westminster system]]), with elements of that of the [[United States of America|USA]]. Parliament comprises two houses. The House of Representatives (lower house) is where most legislation is initiated. Members of Parliament in this house are elected to represent seats based on population. The Senate (upper house) is generally considered a house of review. Each state of the Commonwealth of Australia elects an equal number of Senators. Unlike many other countries, voting is compulsory for all Australian citizens aged 18 or over.
 
The Australian system of government is based on that of the United Kingdom (the [[Westminster system]]), with elements of that of the [[United States of America|USA]]. Parliament comprises two houses. The House of Representatives (lower house) is where most legislature is initiated. Members of Parliament in this house are elected to represent seats based on population. The Senate (upper house) is generally considered a house of review. Each state of the Commonwealth of Australia elects an equal number of Senators. Unlike many other countries, voting is compulsory for all Australian citizens aged 18 or over.


Australia has close relations with the United States and Asia, and has special trade treaties with both. Australia currently has a [[free-trade agreement]] with the United States.
Australia has close relations with the United States and Asia, and has special trade treaties with both. Australia currently has a [[free-trade agreement]] with the United States.


==International relations==
==International relations==
Globalisation has brought new opportunities for Australia, promoting trade liberalisation and raising living standards, but has also led to an increased vulnerability to transnational threats such as international terrorism.<ref>Information in this section is from ABS. 2008. ''Year Book Australia 2008". p. 141.</ref> To advance its national interests on both sides of this global equation, Australia cultivates  close bilateral relationships with countries in the [[Asia&ndash;Pacific region]] and a robust alliance with the [[United States of America]], and is a member of a number of regional organisations such as the [[Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation]] forum (APEC), the [[Association of South-East Asian Nations Regional Forum]] (ASEAN), the [[East Asia Summit]] and the [[Pacific Islands Forum]]. Australia uses its membership of multilateral bodies such as the [[United Nations]] and [[World Trade Organization|World Trade Organisation]] to work towards important goals such as regional security, trade liberalisation, human rights and sustainable development.


==History==
==History==
(For a more in-depth treatment, see [[Australia, history]])


===Precolonial Aboriginal history===
===Before European settlement===
 
Archaeological evidence suggests that Aborigines were living in Australia at least 40,000 years ago,<ref>Unless otherwise specified, background information in this "History" section, including the subsections, comes from SBS. 1995. ''The SBS World Guide''. 4th edn. Melbourne: Reed Reference.</ref> although a skeleton found at [[Lake Mungo]], [[New South Wales|NSW]], is believed perhaps to have been buried between 57,000 and 71,000 years ago.<ref>Thorne, A., et al. 1999. "Australia's oldest human remains: Age of the Lake Mungo 3 skeleton". ''Journal of Human Evolution'' 36, 591–612. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://medicalsciences.med.unsw.edu.au/somsweb.nsf/resources/citationclassic01/$file/Thorne+et+al.+1999.pdf</ref> The Aborigines, like many other indigenous and ethnic groups, have a rich [[oral tradition]] based on ''the Dreaming'' (also the Dreamtime), when ancestral beings created life and significant landmarks across the country. Dreaming stories are a critical means of passing crucial knowledge, cultural values and belief systems from one generation to the next.<ref>Australian Government. 2008. "The Dreaming." ''Culture and Recreation Portal''. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/indigenous/dreamtime/</ref>  
According to archaeological evidence, Aborigines were living in Australia at least 40,000 years ago.<ref>Unless otherwise specified, background information in this "History" section, including the subsections, comes from SBS. 1995. ''The SBS World Guide''. 4th edn. Melbourne: Reed Reference.</ref> However, a skeleton found at [[Lake Mungo]], [[New South Wales|NSW]], is believed perhaps to have been buried between 57,000 and 71,000 years ago.<ref>Thorne, A., et al. 1999. "Australia's oldest human remains: Age of the Lake Mungo 3 skeleton". ''Journal of Human Evolution'' 36, 591–612. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://medicalsciences.med.unsw.edu.au/somsweb.nsf/resources/citationclassic01/$file/Thorne+et+al.+1999.pdf</ref> While it is unknown exactly how Aborigines first reached Australia, recent DNA evidence strongly suggests that they originated from Africa and then continued to evolve in relative isolation.<ref>Clarke, H. 2007. "DNA confirms Aboriginal Australian origins." ''Cosmos Online'', 8 May. Retrieved 18 August 2007 from http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/news/1286/dna-confirms-aboriginal-australian-origins</ref>
Prior to European settlement, Aborigines lived an often nomadic life as hunters, fishers and gatherers, in groups of 25 to 50 people. Estimates vary, but the Aboriginal population at the time of colonisation may have been around 750,000, speaking some 700 languages.<ref>Australian Museum. 2004. "Introduction." ''Indigenous Australia''. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.dreamtime.net.au/indigenous/index.cfm</ref> These numbers dropped sharply after 1788 because of introduced diseases and the killings by settlers.<ref>See, for example, "Racism. Now Way: Key dates", http://www.racismnoway.com.au/library/history/keydates/index-1800s.html &ndash; a search for the term "massacre" in your browser will give an idea, albeit incomplete, of the scale of what is being referred to here.</ref>
 
The Aborigines, like many other indigenous and ethnic groups, have a rich [[oral tradition]] based on ''the Dreaming'' (the Aborigines' preferred term for what is often also referred to as the Dreamtime or Dreamtimes), when the ancestral beings moved across the land, creating life and significant geographic landmarks. Translated from the Arrernte language, the Dreaming is known as ''Tjurkurrpa'', meaning also "to see and understand the law". Dreaming stories perform a critical role in Aboriginal culture, passing crucial knowledge, cultural values and belief systems from one generation to the next. These stories, passed on through storytelling, painting, song and dance, provide a link for modern Aborigines between ancient times and now.<ref>Australian Government. 2008. "The Dreaming." ''Culture and Recreation Portal''. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/indigenous/dreamtime/</ref>
 
Prior to the arrival of European colonists, Aborigines lived as hunters, fishers and gatherers, often nomadic across large areas, in groups of between 25 and 50 people. Estimates of the Aboriginal population at European settlement vary, but there may have been around 750,000 people speaking some 700 languages.<ref>Australian Museum. 2004. "Introduction." ''Indigenous Australia''. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.dreamtime.net.au/indigenous/index.cfm</ref> These numbers dropped sharply after 1788 because of diseases introduced by Europeans, and the killing of large numbers of Aborigines by settlers.<ref>See, for example, "Racism. Now Way: Key dates", http://www.racismnoway.com.au/library/history/keydates/index-1800s.html &ndash; a search for the term "massacre" in your browser will give an idea, albeit incomplete, of the scale of what is being referred to here.</ref>
 
===Precolonial contact and exploration===
 
Although traditional 19th- and 20th-century tellings of Australian history had Captain [[James Cook]] "discovering" the Great South Land in 1770, there is a much longer history of Aboriginal contact with people from other nations. It is now well-documented that Macassan traders, from the eastern part of modern Indonesia, were visiting and trading with northern-Australian Aborigines for at least 100 years prior to European settlement in 1788.<ref>Northern Territory Government. 2007. "Monsoon traders (Macassans)." Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.nt.gov.au/nreta/heritage/maritime/monsoon.html</ref>
 
Nor was Cook the first European to set eyes on the southern continent. A number of European explorers sailed the coast of Australia in the 17th century. Dutch explorer Abel Tasman, for example, charted the coast of what is now Tasmania in 1642, and of northern Australia during a second voyage in 1644. English explorer and sometime buccaneer William Dampier explored the western and north-western coastline during voyages in 1688 and 1699. Although Tasman claimed Tasmania for the Netherlands (a claim never followed through), it was Cook who first claimed part of mainland Australia for a European nation, when, in 1770, he charted the east coast and claimed it for England.
 
===Settlement===
 
The British established a penal colony at [[Port Jackson]] (now Sydney) on 26 January 1788 (and event now celebrated annually as [[Australia Day]]). Another penal colony was established in Tasmania (then called Van Diemen's Land) in 1803.
 
Free settlers began to arrive in the colony from the 1790s, and [[wheat]] and [[merino sheep]] were also introduced in the late 18th century. The government initially granted land to settlers, but by 1831 the sale of land had been introduced, with the proceeds helping to finance the passage of more migrants. It is estimated that the land sales paid for the migration of some 50,000 settlers over the next ten years.
 
As settlement spread and the country opened up, squatters <ref>People who settled on Crown (government-owned) land to run stock, particularly sheep, without government permission at first, but later with a lease or licence.</ref> began to occupy grazing land. The government recognised these squatters in 1836 and introduced a licence fee of £10 a year.
 
Meanwhile, free settlers had begun to resent competition for their jobs with convicts, and the policy of transporting felons began to fall out of favour in Britain. Transportation to NSW ceased in 1840, and to Tasmania in 1853. It was reintroduced briefly in WA &ndash; between 1853 and 1867 &ndash; to provide labour in the settlement there. In total, some 160,000 convicts were transported to Australia between 1788 and 1867.
 
===Growth and self-government===
 
Many of the free settlers arrived with notions of representative government in mind, and demand for self-government grew throughout the 1830s and 1840s. This was granted in 1850, with the British passed the ''Australian Colonies Government Act'', which allowed the colonies a significant degree of independence. Under the Act colonies could, for example, amend their constitutions, determine electoral franchise and fix tariffs.
 
The discovery of gold in NSW and Victoria in 1851 led to a large influx of migrants. The population of Victoria quadrupled by 1855. The Australian economy was now firmly based on wool and gold.
 
The large holdings of squatters were now preventing small farmers from purchasing land, so most colonies tried to break them up, although with limited success. Trade unions also began to emerge, particularly among miners and shearers, and the 1880s saw intermittent industrial unrest.
 
In 1890 wharf labourers went on strike over the issue of employers' rights to engage non-union labour, and miners and farm workers also became involved. The strike was put down by troops and special police, but this did not deter further strike action over the same issue in the 1890s. During this period labour became a political force and the Australian Labor Party emerged; after the 1891 elections it held the balance of power in NSW.
 
The final decade of the 19th century was difficult for Australia. An extended drought combined with industrial unrest, overexpansion and excessive borrowing to cause bank failures and a financial crisis.
 
It was becoming apparent that, too, that the independent nature of the various colonies caused problems, such as differing postal systems and railway gauges, and the absence of a unified defence policy. When Victoria (soon followed by all colonies except NSW) introduced a trade protection policy in 1866, it began to become clear that some form of intercolonial cooperation was needed.
 
In 1883 the first of a series of intercolonial conferences aimed at closer ties was held, but it failed to make any significant headway. The first Australian Federal Convention then met in 1891, and made initial moves towards a unified nation. The convention, comprising members of the colonial parliaments, worked out a draft constitution that later became the basis for federation.
 
On 1 January 1901 the colonies of NSW, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania federated to become the Commonwealth of Australia. (The Northern Territory, at that time under South Australia governance, was transferred to commonwealth control in 1911.)
 
===From federation to war===
 
Under the newly formed Commonwealth of Australia, the federal government was to control foreign affairs, defence, trade, and so on. The first piece of legislation passed by the new parliament was the ''Immigration Restriction Act'' (1901), which put in place what became known as the [[White Australia policy]]. This was aimed especially at keeping out Chinese immigrants, who had arrived in large numbers to work the goldfields, but also caused the repatriation of Pacific Islanders, many of whom were working on sugar plantations in Queensland.
 
A great deal of social legislation was also passed during this period, however. In 1902 women were given the vote in federal elections. An industrial arbitration court, which established the principle of a basic wage, was set up in 1906. Free and compulsory education was introduced, as were old-age and invalid pensions.
 
The first ship of the [[Royal Australian Navy|Australian navy]] was ordered in 1909. The Commonwealth Bank was established in 1911, and in the same year the Commonwealth bought land from NSW to form the federal capital, Canberra, in the Australian Capital Territory. Parliament first met there in 1927.
 
===World War I: Baptism of fire===
 
Australia's role during World War I, although relatively minor in global terms, is considered very significant taking into account the size of the nation and the toll of the war on its population. The war remains the most costly conflict in the nation's history, in terms of deaths and casualties.<ref>Information in this subsection is from Australian War Memorial. n.d. "First World War 1914&ndash;18". Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/ww1.asp</ref> Of a population of fewer than 5 million, 416,809 men enlisted. Of those, more than 60,000 died and 156,000 wounded, gassed or taken prisoner.
 
====Heading off to war====
 
The initial reaction to the outbreak of war was, in Australia as in many other places, one of exuberant enthusiasm, reflected in enlistment numbers.<ref>Such were the numbers of volunteers for the armed services that the authorities were able to be very particular about physical standards for recruits. These standards were significantly lowered later in the war, as casualties and decreasing numbers of volunteers took their toll.</ref> But instead of being sent to Europe, as they expected, the new soldiers found themselves in [[Egypt]], training to meet the threat the [[Ottoman Empire]] posed to British interests in the [[Middle East]]. After four and a half months of training near [[Cairo]], the Australians boarded ships for the [[Gallipoli]] peninsula, together with troops from Britain, [[France]] and [[New Zealand]].<ref>They were to take part in an ambitious campaign with the multiple aims of knocking the Ottomans out of the war, exposing the "soft underbelly" of their [[Germany|German]] and [[Austro-Hungarian Empire|Austro-Hungarian]] enemies in Europe, and opening a passage for shipping supplies and munitions to the Russians via the Black Sea.</ref>
 
====Gallipoli====
 
At dawn on 25 April 1915 the Australians landed at what was to become known as [[Anzac Cove]] (after the [[Australian and New Zealand Army Corps]], or ANZAC), at the commencement of a campaign that was considered Australia's baptism of fire as a nation. The invading soldiers were met with unexpectedly steep terrain and fierce resistance from the defending Turks, but were able to create a tenuous foothold near the shoreline. The campaign, here and elsewhere on the peninsula, dissolved into a bloody stalemate, with both sides failing to strike a decisive blow during months of fruitless battles. Ironically, the most successful part of the campaign was the evacuation of troops on 19 and 20 December 1915. Aware that attempts to retreat openly could lead to a massacre, the British commanders organised a deception operation that completely fooled the Turks into thinking the Allied positions were still occupied for some time after they had left. The Turks inflicted very few casualties on the withdrawing forces.


====The Western Front====
In conventional 19th- and 20th-century versions of Australian history, Captain [[James Cook]] "discovered" the Great South Land in 1770, but Macassan traders, from the eastern part of modern Indonesia, were visiting and trading with northern-Australian Aborigines for at least a century prior to European settlement in 1788.<ref>Northern Territory Government. 2007. "Monsoon traders (Macassans)." Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.nt.gov.au/nreta/heritage/maritime/monsoon.html</ref> Europeans other than Cook had also visited southern continent earlier. Dutch explorer Abel Tasman, for example, charted the coast of what is now Tasmania in 1642, and of northern Australia in 1644. English explorer and sometime buccaneer William Dampier explored the western and north-western coastline during voyages in 1688 and 1699. Cook was, however, first to claim part of mainland Australia for a European nation, when in 1770 claimed the east coast for England.


After Gallipoli, the [[Australian Imperial Force (AIF)]] was reorganised and expanded from two to five infantry divisions. From March 1916 these were progressively transferred to the [[Western Front]] in France. The AIF mounted division that had served as auxiliary infantry during the Gallipoli campaign remained in the Middle East, where it was to serve with distinction for the remainder of the war.
===Colonisation to federation===
The British established a penal colony at [[Port Jackson]] (now Sydney) on 26 January 1788 (and event now celebrated annually as [[Australia Day]]). Another penal colony was established in Tasmania (then called Van Diemen's Land) in 1803. Free settlers began to arrive in the colony from the 1790s, and [[wheat]] and [[merino sheep]] were also introduced in the late 18th century. As settlement spread and the country opened up, squatters<ref>People who settled on Crown (government-owned) land to run stock, particularly sheep, without government permission at first, but from 1836 with a lease or licence.</ref> began to occupy grazing land. Resentment among free settlers of competition for jobs with convict labour, and a decline in Britain in the popularity of transporting felons, saw transportation to NSW end in 1840 and to Tasmania in 1853. It was reintroduced briefly in WA (1853&ndash;1867) to provide labour. Some 160,000 convicts were transported to Australia between 1788 and 1867.


By the time the AIF arrived in France the Western Front had long since bogged down into stalemate. The opposing forces faced each other along a system of trenches that ran from the English Channel to the Swiss border, across Belgium and north-east France. Machine-guns, artillery and barbed wire had transformed modern warfare from the highly mobile operations of old to a grinding impasse that was never quite totally overcome, even by the end of the war.
During the 1830s and 1840s, there was growing demand for self-government. This was granted in 1850, when the British allowed colonies a significant degree of independence under the ''Australian Colonies Government Act''. Under the Act colonies could, for example, amend their constitutions, determine electoral franchise and fix tariffs.


The Australians took part in a number of massive, if fruitless, offensives throughout 1916 and 1917. At [[Battle of Fromelles|Fromelles]] in July 1916 the Australians had their first taste of trench warfare, suffering 5,533 casualties in 24 hours. By the end of the year they had lost around 40,000 men, killed or wounded, on the Western Front. Almost 77,000 Australians became casualties in 1917, at battles such as [[Battle of Bullecourt|Bullecourt]], [[Battle of Messines|Messines]], and the four-month campaign around the Belgian town of [[Ypres]] (now known by its Flemish name, [[Ieper]], and affectionately called "Wipers" by the Australian troops), which is now known as the [[Battle of Passchendaele]].
The discovery of gold in NSW and Victoria in 1851 led to a large influx of migrants; the population of Victoria quadrupled by 1855. The Australian economy was now firmly based on wool and gold. The large holdings of squatters were now preventing small farmers from purchasing land, so most colonies tried to break them up, but with limited success. Trade unions also began to emerge, particularly among miners and shearers, and the 1880s saw intermittent industrial unrest. Labour became a significant political force in the 1890s, with industrial action among wharf labourers spreading to miners and farm workers in a strike that was ultimately put down by troops and police. Further strike action followed nonetheless, and by 1891 the newly emergent Australian Labor Party (ALP) held the balance of power in NSW.


In March 1918 the Germans launched their final offensive of the war, hoping for victory before the Unites States could bring its military and industrial might into play for the Allies. Initial successes soon gained inertia, and between April and November the stalemate began to crumble as the Allies learned how to effectively combine infantry, artillery, tanks and aircraft. The Australian capture of [[Battle of Hamel|Hamel]] spur on 4 July 1918 is a case in point.
The final decade of the 19th century was difficult for Australia. An extended drought, industrial unrest, overexpansion and excessive borrowing to cause bank failures and a financial crisis. Problems were also arising because of the independent nature of the various colonies &mdash; differing postal systems and railway gauges, for example, and the want of a unified defence policy. Growing trade protectionism among the majority of colonies from 1866 made clear the need for some form of intercolonial cooperation.


The Allied offensive that began on 8 August at [[Battle of Amiens|Amiens]] saw AIF successes at [[Battle of Mont St Quentin|Mont St Quentin]] and [[Péronne]], and led to the breaking of the [[Hindenburg Line]].
Although in 1833 the first of a series of intercolonial conferences aimed at closer ties failed to make significant headway, in 1891 initial moves towards a unified nation were taken at the first Australian Federal Convention, which worked out a draft constitution that later became the basis for federation. On 1 January 1901 the colonies of NSW, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania federated to become the Commonwealth of Australia.


After heavy fighting that severely depleted their fighting effectiveness, Australian divisions were withdrawn from the line in early October 1918 for rest and refitting. As they were preparing to rejoin the Germans surrendered on 11 November.
The new federal government now controlled foreign affairs, defence, trade, and so on. The first piece of legislation passed by the new parliament was the ''Immigration Restriction Act'' (1901), which put in place what became known as the [[White Australia policy]] (aimed especially at keeping out Chinese immigrants, who had arrived in large numbers to work the goldfields). A great deal of social legislation was also passed during this period, however &mdash; in 1902 women were given federal franchise; an industrial arbitration court, which established the principle of a basic wage, was set up in 1906; and free and compulsory education was introduced, as were old-age and invalid pensions. The first ship of the [[Royal Australian Navy|Australian navy]] was ordered in 1909. The Commonwealth Bank was established in 1911, and in the same year the Commonwealth bought land from NSW to form the federal capital, Canberra, in the Australian Capital Territory, where Parliament was to meet for the first time in 1927.


====The Light Horse in the Middle East====
===Genocide of Aboriginal Australians===
The history and legacy of the genocide of Aboriginal Australians is detailed in the 1997 report /Bringing Them Home/ <ref>https://humanrights.gov.au/our-work/bringing-them-home-report-1997</ref>. After colonisation, due to the culture of scientific racism in Europe, Aboriginal Australians were regarded as a racially inferior, dying race. As the report details, State Governments implemented a policy of assimilation to eliminate blackness in Anglo-Australian society by forcibly removing Aboriginal children from their family. Such a practice is listed as genocide under article 2(e) of the 1948 UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide <ref>https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/genocide-convention.shtml</ref>. The consequences of such a policy was disastrous, leading to mass intergenerational trauma, whose victims are now called The Stolen Generation. Children who were removed were put into government institutions, foster families or Christian missionaries, which often perpetrated systemic abuse of the children. This legacy continues today, as forced removals still occur under similar legal pretexts <ref>https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-02-03/fears-rates-of-aboriginal-children-removed-from-families-rising/100772704</ref>, despite the important symbolic apology by the former PM Kevin Rudd <ref>https://www.dfat.gov.au/people-to-people/public-diplomacy/programs-activities/Pages/text-of-the-apology-to-the-stolen-generations</ref>.


Back in the Middle East, troopers of the [[Australian Light Horse]] were fighting a much more mobile war against the Ottomans. Rather than mud and stagnation, these men and their horses (remounts of unspecific breeding known as "[[Walers]]") had to deal with extremes of heat and terrain, and lack of water. Despite conditions, casualties were relatively light; only 1,394 Australians were killed in this theatre over three years of war.
===World War I===
[[World War I, Australia|Australia's role]] during [[World War I]], although relatively minor overall, was significant given the size of the nation and the toll of the conflict on its population.<ref>Information in this subsection is from Australian War Memorial. n.d. "First World War I914&ndash;18". Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/ww1.asp</ref> In terms of lives shattered or lost, the war was the most costly in Australian history: of the 416,809 men who enlisted (from a population of fewer than 5 million), more than 60,000 died and 156,000 were wounded, gassed or taken prisoner.


In 1916 the Australians began their campaign by aiding in the defence of the [[Suez Canal]] and the Allied reconquest of the Sinai peninsula. In 1917, Australian troops advanced with the Allies into Palestine and took Gaza and Jerusalem. During 1918 they occupied Lebanon and Syria, and on 30 October 1918 Turkey sued for peace.
Australian troops first took part in the ultimately abortive Allied operations against the [[Ottoman Empire]] on the [[Gallipoli]] Peninsula (25 April to 20 December 1915), considered by Australians their baptism of fire. After Gallipoli, the [[Australian Imperial Force (AIF)]] fought on the [[Western Front]] from March 1916 until war's end, making their name in battles such as [[Battle of Fromelles|Fromelles]] (July 1916); [[Battle of Bullecourt|Bullecourt]], [[Battle of Messines|Messines]] and [[Battle of Passchendaele|Passchendaele]] (1917); and [[Battle of Hamel|Hamel]], [[Battle of Mont St Quentin|Mont St Quentin]] and [[Péronne]] (1918). In October 1918 the depleted Australian divisions were withdrawn from the line for rest and refitting, and were preparing to return when the Germans surrendered on 11 November.


====Naval and air commitments====
Australians also acquitted themselves admirably in the Middle East, where [[Australian Light Horse]] troopers assisted the Allies against the Ottomans in the defence of the [[Suez Canal]] and the reconquest of the Sinai peninsula (1916), the advance into [[Palestine]] and the taking of [[Gaza]] and [[Jerusalem]] (1917), and the occupation of [[Lebanon]] and [[Syria]] (1918). Australia also provided naval and air forces. The [[Royal Australian Navy (RAN)]] was under the command of the British [[Royal Navy]], and scored an early and significant victory when it destroyed the German raider ''[[Emden]]'' in 1914. Around 3,000 airmen served in the Middle East and France with the newly formed [[Australian Flying Corps (AFC)]].


Australia also provided naval and air forces. The [[Royal Australian Navy (RAN)]] was under the command of the British [[Royal Navy]], and scored an early and significant victory when it destroyed the German raider ''Emden'' near the Cocos Islands in 1914. Around 3,000 airmen serve in the Middle East and France saw service with the newly formed [[Australian Flying Corps (AFC)]], mainly during observation missions or in infantry support.
In 1916 the Labor Prime Minister, [[Billy Hughes]], decided that [[conscription]] was necessary if the strength of Australia's military forces at the front was to be maintained. The Labor Party and the trade unions were bitterly opposed to conscription, and Hughes and his followers were expelled from the party when they refused to back down. In 1916 and again in 1917 the Australian people voted against conscription in national plebiscites.
 
====The home front====
 
At home, the war had a deep and lasting effect. Communities and individuals bore deep-seated grief after the loss of so many men, and the physical and financial burdens of caring for families fell increasingly onto women. Anti-German feeling was rife; many Germans living in Australia were interned in camps, and placenames of German origin were changed (South Australia, with many German migrants, provides many examples of this practice).
 
Social division over the war reached its height during 1916 and 1917, when Prime Minister [[William Morris Hughes|Billy Hughes]] sought to introduce conscription in two bitterly fought and ultimately unsuccessful referendums.
 
After the war new difficulties arose, as thousands of former servicemen, many disabled with physical or emotional injuries, had to try to reintegrate into a society whose most precious ambition was now to put the war behind it and move on.


===Between the wars===
===Between the wars===
After World War I, Australia participated in the [[Paris Peace Conference]] of 1919. During the 1920s, high prices for wool and wheat supported an expansion of the Australian economy. Manufacturing industries received protection from newly introduced tariffs, while primary producers gained subsidies. Hughes united with the Liberals to form the [[Nationalist Party of Australia|Nationalist Party]], and remained in office until 1923, when he was succeeded by [[Stanley Bruce]]. Hughes became one of the longest serving members of parliament in Australian history.


After World War I, Australia participated in the [[Paris Peace Conference]] of 1919, during which the inimitable Billy Hughes ensured that Australia, despite strenuous opposition from US President [[Woodrow Wilson]], gained control of German New Guinea.<ref>Fitzhardinge, L.F. 1983. "Hughes, William Morris (Billy) (1862 - 1952)". ''Australian Dictionary of Biography''. Vol. 9. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. pp. 393-400. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A090395b.htm</ref> Hughes also prevented a Japanese racial-equality clause, which threatened the White Australia policy, from being inserted into the League of Nations covenant.<ref>Fitzharding 1983.</ref> Australia went on to become a founder member of the [[League of Nations]] in 1920.
The [[Great Depression|Depression]] of the 1930s hit hard in Australia, but rising prices for wool and gold, combined with preferential trade terms within the British Commonwealth, enabled it to recover from the Depression faster than many other nations. Australia had, in 1931, become a dominion with the Commonwealth of Nations (sometimes called the British Commonwealth) by virtue of the passage of the Statute of Westminster.


During the 1920s, high prices for wool and wheat supported an expansion of the Australian economy. Manufacturing industries received protection from newly introduced tariffs, while primary producers gained subsidies.
===World War II===
Almost a million Australians, men and women, served during [[World War II, Australia|World War II]].<ref>Unless otherwise specified, information in this subsection is from Australian War Memorial. n.d. "Second World War I939&ndash;45". Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/ww2.asp</ref><ref>Australia's population was only 7 million in 1939. Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Table 2. Population by sex, states and territories, 30 June, 1901 onwards", ''3105.0.65.001 - Australian Historical Population Statistics, 2006'' (Microsoft Excel spreadsheet). Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/ABS@Archive.nsf/log?openagent&3105065001_table2.xls&3105.0.65.001&Data%20Cubes&7BB5E247A5A2F416CA25717600229537&0&2006&23.05.2006&Latest</ref> Of those, around 30,000 died. Australians fought Germany and [[Italy]] in [[Europe]], the [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] and [[North Africa]], and [[Japan]] in [[South-East Asia]] and elsewhere in the Pacific. For the first time the Australian mainland was directly attacked, and Australia conducted its war accordingly.


The [[Great Depression|Depression]] of the 1930s hit hard in Australia. The nation's economy was largely dependent on that of Britain, which demanded loan repayments from Australia regardless of its incapacity to make them. Australians were caught in a situation that led to widespread unemployment and adversity. Australia was, however, quicker to recover from the Depression than many other nations because of the rising price of wool and gold, but also aided by the Ottawa Trade Agreement (1932), which provided for preferential trade terms between Britain and its dominions and colonies.
The Australian Army first saw combat in early 1941, against the Italians in the Mediterranean and North Africa. After the Germans entered the war, Australian troops conducted a desperate defence of the [[Libya|Libyan]] port of [[Tobruk]], earning the nickname "the [[Rats of Tobruk]]". Upon being relieved, most returned to Australia to take up the war against Japan, who had swiftly and suddenly entered the war in December 1941.


Australia had, in 1931, become a dominion with the Commonwealth of Nations (sometimes called the British Commonwealth) by virtue of the passage of the Statute of Westminster.
By the end of March 1942 the Japanese occupied most of South-East Asia and large areas of the Pacific. When Singapore fell (February 1942) the entire Australian 8th Division became prisoners of war at [[Changi]], and later on the [[Thai-Burma Railway]]. By now, though, Japan's southward advance was slowing. Australian invasion fears were eased as AIF veterans returned from the Mediterranean, and United States forces under General [[Douglas Macarthur]] took over responsibility for Australia's defence. The Allies also began to defeat the Japanese in a series of decisive land and sea battles, and the threat of invasion faded further still. During 1943 and early 1944 Australian troops were predominantly involved in land battles in [[New Guinea]]. They also began, in 1944, a series of campaigns against the Japanese from [[Bougainville campaign|Bougainville]] to [[Borneo campaign|Borneo]]. Australians were still fighting in Borneo when the war ended in August 1945.


===World War II: Defending the nation===
[[Sir Robert Menzies|Robert Menzies]] became Prime Minister of Australia in 1939, until 1941. He returned to office in 1949, and became Australia's longest-serving prime minister and the dominant figure in Australian politics until the mid-1960s.
 
Of a population of only 7 million in 1939,<ref>Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Table 2. Population by sex, states and territories, 30 June, 1901 onwards", ''3105.0.65.001 - Australian Historical Population Statistics, 2006'' (Microsoft Excel spreadsheet). Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/ABS@Archive.nsf/log?openagent&3105065001_table2.xls&3105.0.65.001&Data%20Cubes&7BB5E247A5A2F416CA25717600229537&0&2006&23.05.2006&Latest</ref> almost a million Australians, both men and women, served during World War II.<ref>Unless otherwise specified, information in this subsection is from Australian War Memorial. n.d. "Second World War 1939&ndash;45". Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/ww2.asp</ref> Of those, around 30,000 gave their lives. Australians fought Germany and [[Italy]] in [[Europe]], the [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] and [[North Africa]], and [[Japan]] in [[South-East Asia]] and elsewhere in the Pacific. For the first time the Australian mainland was directly attacked, by Japanese aircraft in northern Australia and Japanese midget submarines in [[Sydney Harbour]]. If for no other reason than this, Australia had a lot more at stake during World War II than it had in World War I.
 
====Early operations====
 
After Italy joined the war in June 1940, the RAN took part in operations against the German ally. A number of Australians fought in the [[Battle of Britain]] in August and September of that year, but the Australian Army did not see combat until 1941, when the 6th, 7th, and 9th divisions took part in Allied operations in the Mediterranean and North Africa.
 
====North Africa and the Mediterranean====
 
After early successes against Italian forces, Australia, along with its Allies, began to suffer defeats against the Germans in Greece, Crete and North Africa. In June and July 1941, however, Australians were part of the successful Allied invasion of [[Vichy France|Vichy French]] mandate [[Syria]].
 
The desperate Australian defence of the [[Libya|Libyan]] port of [[Tobruk]] earned its Australian defenders &ndash; up to 14,000 of whom held out against repeated German attacks during a siege between April and August 1941 &ndash; the initially derisory sobriquet "the [[Rats of Tobruk]]", which came to be a badge of honour among the Australian troops who had fought there.
 
After being relieved at Tobruk, the 6th and 7th divisions departed to take up the war against Japan in the Pacific. The 9th Division stayed on, only joining the 6th and 7th after having played a vital role in the Allied victory at [[El Alamein]] in October 1942. The only Australians still in the Mediterranean theatre by the end of 1942 were airmen serving with 3 Squadron, [[Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF)]], or in the [[Royal Air Force (RAF)]].
 
====Japan enters the fray====
 
Japan's sudden entry into the war on 7 December 1941 and its swift and seemingly inexorable victories saw its forces occupy most of South-East Asia and large swathes of the Pacific by the end of March 1942. Singapore had fallen in February, which left an entire Australian division (the 8th) struggling to survive in Japanese prison camps at [[Changi]] and on the [[Thai-Burma Railway]]. When [[Darwin]] was bombed that month the government recalled all RAN ships in the Mediterranean, and the 6th and 7th divisions, to the defence of Australia. The government also expanded the army and air force, and set in place policies that allowed the nation to mount a total war effort at home.
 
====Stemming the Japanese tide====
 
By March 1942, after the fall of the Netherlands East Indies, Japan's southward march began to slow. Australian fears of an imminent invasion were eased, and further relief came in the form of returning AIF veterans from the Mediterranean. Then the United States, with forces under General [[Douglas Macarthur]], assumed responsibility for Australia's defence, committing reinforcements and equipment to the task.
 
Finally, too, the Allies began to defeat the Japanese in a series of decisive battles: in the [[Battle of the Coral Sea|Coral Sea]], at [[Battle of Midway|Midway]], on [[Battle of Imita Ridge|Imita Ridge]] and the [[Battle of Kokoda|Kokoda Trail]], and at [[Battle of Milne Bay|Milne Bay]] and [[Battle of Buna-Gona|Buna-Gona]]. The apparently invincible Japanese were able to be defeated after all, and the threat of invasion faded further still.
 
The Japanese suffered further defeats during 1943. Australian troops were predominantly involved in land battles in [[New Guinea]], the Japanese defeat at [[Battle of Wau|Wau]] and forcing Japanese troops off the [[Huon Peninsula campaign|Huon Peninsula]]. This, Australia's greatest and most complicated offensive of the war, only ended in April 1944.
 
Australian troops also began in 1944 a series of campaigns in against Japanese garrisons dotted from [[Borneo campaign|Borneo]] to [[Bougainville campaign|Bougainville]]. These actions involved greater numbers of Australian soldiers than at any other time in the war. The first of these campaigns was fought in [[New Britain]] and at [[Aitape]], on Bougainville. The value of the Borneo campaign (1945) to the overall war effort is still a matter of some debate. When the war ended in August 1945, Australians were still fighting in Borneo.
 
====Australians in the air war in Europe====
 
Although Australia invested most of its energies from 1942 in the defeat of Japan, in Europe and the Middle East thousands of Australians continued to serve with the RAAF. Losses among those flying against Germany were much greater than those who fought the Japanese, despite the greater numbers of airman involved in the latter campaign. Australians played a particularly prominent role in Bomber Command's European offensive, which for Australia, with around 3,500 of its airmen killed, was the costliest of the war.
 
===="Guests" of the enemy: Prisoners of war====
 
Of the more than 30,000 Australian servicemen taken prisoner during World War II, two-thirds were captured by the Japanese during the first weeks of 1942. Those imprisoned by the Germans had a good chance of surviving the war; 36 per cent of Australian prisoners of the Japanese died in captivity.
 
====The changing role of women====
 
Although nurses had gone overseas with the AIF in 1940, during the early years of the war women were otherwise unable to make a significant official contribution to the war effort. As labour shortages grew, however, the government had to allow women to become more active. In February 1941 Cabinet authorised the RAAF to set up the [[Women's Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF)]]. Simultaneously, the RAN began to employ female telegraphists, which eventually led to the establishment in 1942 of the [[Women's Royal Australian Naval Service (WRANS)]]. To release men from certain military duties in base units in Australia and allow them to fight overseas, the [[Australian Women's Army Service (AWAS)]] commenced in October 1941. Outside the armed services, the [[Women's Land Army (WLA)]] encouraged women to work in rural industries, while women in urban areas were employed in industries such as munitions. Although with the end of the war women were largely expected to return to their prewar roles, they had shown that they were as capable (if not more so, in some cases) than men, and paved the way for women of the future to take on roles outside the home.


===Living in a Cold War world===
===Living in a Cold War world===
Australian troops took part in a number of [[Cold War]] conflicts, including the [[Korean War]] (1950–1953), the [[Malayan Emergency]] (1950–1960) and the [[Vietnam War]] (1962–1972). It was also a signatory to significant regional treaties and agreements such as [[ANZUS]] and [[SEATO]]. Cold War fears allowed Menzies to retain office, and in 1951 he narrowly failed to win a referendum to allow him to ban the [[Communist Party of Australia|Communist Party]]. Monarchist sentiment in Australia peaked during the Menzies era with the successful 1954 tour by [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]]. Menzies' policies were also responsible for expanding higher education and industrial development. Australia's participation in Vietnam, and particularly the use of [[conscription]], became politically contentious and saw massive protests, though they were for the most part peaceful. The Liberal Party maintained power through Menzies' successors, [[Harold Holt]] (who disappeared in 1967, while swimming off Cheviot Beach in Victoria), [[John Gorton]] and [[William McMahon]], though each Prime Minister was generally considered to be less popular and less politically skilled than his predecessor. In 1972, Labor leader Gough Whitlam was elected, marking the end of Australia's participation in the Vietnam War and changes to foreign policy, including formally recognizing the People's Republic of China. Whitlam's administration was troubled with high unemployment, uncontrolled inflation, political scandals, Indonesia's invasion of East Timor, and a hostile Senate which blocked supply leading to a constitutional crisis ending with the dismissal of the Prime Minister, in November 1975. The Liberal-National Country Party coalition under Malcolm Fraser won a landslide election victory in December 1975, with a record 55-seat majority.


Australia took part in both the Vietnam War and second Iraq War. The government supports the "War on Terrorism", although, as in the United States, this campaign has both its supporters and detractors in the general population.
===The Howard era===
In 1996, former Liberal Party treasurer John Howard was elected Prime Minister. The Howard government reduced Australia's government deficit and the influence of [[labour union]]s, placing more emphasis on workplace-based collective bargaining for wages. The government also accelerated the pace of [[privatisation]], beginning with the government-owned telecommunications corporation, [[Telstra]]. Howard's coalition government continued some elements of the foreign policy of its predecessors, based on relations with four key countries: the [[United States of America]], [[Japan]], China, and [[Indonesia]]. Following the [[9/11 Attack|9/11]] attack in 2001, Australia aligned itself further with the United States, and participated in military campaigns in Iraq, and Afghanistan. The 2002 Bali bombings and the bombing of the Jakarta Marriott hotel in 2003, saw terrorism on Australia's doorstep, and the Howard government was returned to office comfortably on a strong national security platform in 2004. Changes to industrial relations policies proved unpopular and the Howard government subsequently lost the 2007 federal election, despite strong economic growth and low unemployment. Howard was Australia's second longest serving Prime Minister.


===The Whitlam era===
Many Aborigines exist today, and there is a large ethnically mixed population with Aboriginal inheritance as well. Some Aborigines are able to continue their native traditions and some have been assimilated into the larger society, while others remain at odds with society in general and feel that they have not been been adequately compensated for many years of disenfranchisement and mistreatment. Recently, many initiatives have been taken to increase the quality of life of the Aborigines. An important step in improving relations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians was Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's speech of 13 February 2008. Rudd apologised for past wrongs against Aborigines and spoke of a future in which Australians of all races were united.<ref>Rudd, K., "Apology to Australia's Indigenous people". Retrieved 10 August 2008 from http://parlinfoweb.aph.gov.au/piweb/view_document.aspx?id=2815365&table=HANSARDR</ref> Rudd's Prime Ministership however was eroded, with disquiet over his autocratic style of management within his own party, the ALP, and falling popularity in the opinion polls after the apology. In 2013, it was revealed in leaked documents that Rudd had authorized spying on Asian neighbour [[Indonesia]] in 2009, the revelation of which resulted in widespread protests against Australia in that country.<ref>{{cite news|last=Henderson|first=Anna|coauthors=George Roberts|date=22 November 2013|title=Tony Abbott should promise not to tap Indonesian president's phone in future, Julia Gillard says|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-11-22/senior-indonesian-politician-accuses-abbott-of-mishandling-spyi/5109632|work=ABC News|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|accessdate=22 November 2013}}</ref> Julia Gillard became the first female Prime Minister of Australia during an unprecedented leadership spill in 2010, motivated by the ALP's drop in the opinion polls and loss of union support for Rudd. It was the first time in Australian history that an elected Prime Minister had lost the leadership of their own party. Gillard's leadership was not without controversy including opposing support for same-sex marriage equality, and public criticism in January 2013 when she 'parachuted' Aboriginal sportswoman Nova Peris into the Northern Territory senate candidacy, overruling the party pre-selection of Trish Crossin, in what she termed a 'captain's pick'.<ref>{{cite news|author=Staff writer|date=23 January 2013|title=Gillard faces criticism over Peris Senate preselection|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-01-23/gillard-faces-criticism-over-senate-preselection/4479596|work=ABC News|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|accessdate=13 November 2013}}</ref> Gillard's popularity was steadily declining in the opinion polls, and in June 2013, in another unprecedented move, Gillard was removed as leader by a Caucus vote, and Rudd returned as Prime Minister. The ALP had become destabilised and at the 2013 Federal election, was swept out of office by the Liberal-National Party coalition, led by [[Tony Abbott]].
 
Many Aborigines exist today, and there is a large ethnically mixed population with Aboriginal inheritance as well. Some Aborigines are able to continue their native traditions and some have been assimilated into the larger society, while others remain at odds with society in general and feel that they have not been been adequately compensated for many years of disenfranchisement and mistreatment. Recently, many initiatives have been taken to increase the quality of life of the Aborigines. An important step in improving relations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians was Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's speech of 13 February 2008. Rudd apologised for past wrongs against Aborigines and spoke of a future in which Australians of all races were united.<ref>Rudd, K., "Apology to Australia's Indigenous people". Retrieved 10 August 2008 from http://parlinfoweb.aph.gov.au/piweb/view_document.aspx?id=2815365&table=HANSARDR</ref>
 
==Further reading==
* Bambrick, Susan ed. ''The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Australia'' (1994)
*  Appleton, Richard, and Barbara Appleton. ''The Cambridge Dictionary of Australian Places'' (1993)
*  Barker, Anthony. ''What Happened When: A Chronology of Australia from 1788.'' Allen & Unwin. 2000. [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=108433410 online edition]
* Clarke, Frank G.  ''The History of Australia'' (2002). [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=101344125 online edition]
*  Davison, Graeme, John Hirst, and Stuart Macintyre, eds. ''The Oxford Companion to Australian History,'' (2001) [http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-Companion-Australian-History/dp/019551503X/ref=sr_1_2/103-4827826-5463040?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1193539631&sr=1-2 excerpt and text search]
* Firth, Stewart. ''Australia in International Politics: An Introduction to Australian Foreign Policy'' (2005). [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=108662470 online edition]
* Hughes, Robert. ''The Fatal Shore: The Epic of Australia’s Founding'' (1988).
* Jupp, James, ed. ''The Australian People: An Encyclopedia of the Nation, its People and their Origins'' (2nd ed. 2002) 960pp [http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0521807891/ref=sib_dp_pt/103-4827826-5463040#reader-link excerpt and text search]
* Moran, Anthony. ''Australia: Nation, Belonging, and Globalization'' (2004) [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=108858937 online edition]
* O'Shane, Pat  et al. ''Australia: The Complete Encyclopedia'' (2001)
*  Penney, Barry. ''Australia - Culture Smart!: a quick guide to customs and etiquette'' (2006)
* Shaw, John, ed. ''Collins Australian Encyclopedia'' (1984)
* Serle. Percival, ed. ''Dictionary of Australian Biography'' (1949)[http://gutenberg.net.au/dictbiog/00-dict-biogIndex.html online edition]


==Notes and references==
==Notes and references==
{{Reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|2}}[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]
 
== External Links ==
 
[http://www.australia.gov.au/ Australian Government Website]

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Commonwealth of Australia
Australia with AAT (orthographic projection).svg
Australia - national flag.jpg     Coat of Arms of Australia.svg
Motto None
National anthem Advance Australia Fair
Capital Canberra
Official language English
Government type Constitutional monarchy
Governor-General General Peter Cosgrove, AC, MC
Prime Minister Tony Abbott
Area 7,610,930 km²
2,938,597 mi²
Population 23.3 million (55th)
(2013 estimate)
Population density 2.6/km² (235th)
1 mi²
HDI 0.962 (high) (3rd) (2007–08)
Currency Australian dollars (AUD)
Time zone CST (UTC+9:30)
Summer:WST (UTC+8)
Country codes Internet TLD : au
Calling code : +61

Australia is the name of the smallest of the seven continents and the nation that occupies it. The westernmost landmass of Oceania, it lies south of Papua New Guinea, with the Indian Ocean to the west, the South Pacific Ocean to the east, and the Southern Ocean between it and Antarctica. The Commonwealth of Australia is the only sovereign nation to occupy an entire continent. It includes the island of Tasmania and seven external territories, including the Australian Antarctic Territory.

Aborigines inhabited Australia for tens of thousands of years, and it was only relatively recently discovered by Europeans (1606) and claimed for Great Britain by Captain James Cook in 1770. The British established the first European settlement in Australia at Sydney on 26 January 1788. The six British colonies on the continent federated to form the Commonwealth of Australia on 1 January 1901.

Australia is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations and the United Nations, and a close ally of the United States of America.

Population

In January 2019, the population of Australia is estimated to be around 25.2 million.[1][2]

Population distribution

In 2006, more than two-thirds (68%) of the Australian population (20.7 million at that time) lived in major cities, the remaining 32% living in regional and remote areas.[3] The only part of Australia in which a significant proportion of the population is considered to live in remote (21.7%) or very remote (23.5%) areas is the Northern Territory. For all other states and territories, populations in those categories are in single digits (or even fractions of percentage points).

Population growth

Between 1996 and 2006 the Australian population grew by 2.4 million at an average annual rate of 1.2%. The greatest growth took place in the major cities, at an average annual rate of 1.6%. The population of inner regional areas continued to grow (0.8%) and that of outer regional areas remained generally stable, but in remote and very remote areas the population underwent a decline (-0.4% and -0.3% respectively) over the decade. Over the last five years of the decade, however, population growth slowed in the major cities and increased in the other areas.

Demographic characteristics

In 2006, the ratio of males to females in Australia was 99 to 100. There were more women than men in the major cities and inner regional areas, but this situation was reversed in more remote areas. The highest ratio of males to females was in very remote areas (113 males for every 100 females), probably because of the types of male-dominated industries common in those areas – agriculture, mining, etc.

The median age of the Australian population in 2006 was 37 years. In major cities, the median age was 36, in inner regional areas 39, and outer regional areas 38.

Australia's population is ageing.[4] Between June 2001 and June 2006 the proportion of males and females aged 19 years and younger decreased, while the proportion of the population aged 55 or older generally increased. The median age of the population (the age at which half the population is younger and half older), was 36.6 years in June 2006, up from the 35.7 years in June 2001 and 34 years in June 1996.

Indigenous Australian population

At 30 June 2006, the preliminary estimated population of Indigenous Australians (Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders)[5] was 517,200, some 2.5% of the total population. In marked contrast with the population as a whole, in 2006 only 32% of Indigenous people lived in major cities, significantly lower than the 68% of the general population who do so. Some 43% of Indigenous people lived in inner or outer regional areas, 10% in remote areas and 16% in very remote areas. Indigenous people therefore made up 48% of the overall population in very remote areas and 16% in remote areas.

The majority of Indigenous people live in New South Wales (29%), Queensland (28%), Western Australia (15%) and the Northern Territory (13%).

Indigenous Australians comprise only a small percentage of the total population in the states and the Australian Capital Territory. In the Northern Territory, by contrast, almost one-third of the population is of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin.

Ancestry

For purposes of the Australian Census, ancestry is a self-defined and self-reported classification, further complicated by the fact that 35% of the population reported more than one ancestry in 2006 (hence the percentages in the following table add up to more than 100%).[6] Broadly, however, the ancestry of the Australian population is as follows:

Ancestry % of pop'n
Australian[7] 37.8
New Zealander, Maori,

other Pacific Islander

1.9
European 67.4
Middle Eastern 2.2
Asian 8.6
Other 1.9

Religion

The 2006 Census[8] found that the population of Australia was 26% Roman Catholic, 19% Anglican, 19% other Christian denominations and 6% non-Christian religions (including Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism and others). Those professing no religion or failing to adequately respond to the question comprised almost 31% of the population.

Languages

Australia's national language is English, but the nation's cultural diversity has led to more than 200 languages being spoken in the community.[9] Major languages other than English include Italian, Greek, Arabic, Cantonese, Mandarin and Vietnamese, speakers of which comprise around 7% of the total population.

Literacy

In 2003 the estimated rates of literacy (defined by reference to those of age 15 and over can read and write) in Australia were 99% overall, and 99% for males and females alike.[10]

Geography

(PD) Photo: CIA World Factbook
Add image caption here.

One of about 210 countries in the world, at 7,610,930 km2 comprises 5% of the land area of the globe, but is the sixth-largest country on the planet (after Russia, Canada, China, the USA and Brazil).[11]

Dimensions and extremities

Of the six largest countries, Australia is the only one surrounded by water and has a total coastline length of 59,736 km. Of that, almost 40% (23,859 km) is made up of island coastlines, with the remaining 35,877 km surrounding the mainland.

Australia is almost 3700 km long from its most northerly point (Cape York, on the Cape York Peninsula, Queensland, latitude 10º41'21"S longitude 142º31'50"E) to its most southerly point in Tasmania (South East Cape, 28º38'15"S 153º38'14"E). The southernmost mainland point of Australia is South Point, on Wilson's Promontory, Victoria (39º08'20"S 146º22'26"E).

From east to west, Australia is almost 4000 km wide. The easternmost point is Cape Byron, at Byron Bay, NSW (28º38'15"S 153º38'14"E), while the western extremity of Australia is at Steep Point, Shark Bay, WA (26º09'5"S 113º09'18"E).

States and territories

Australia comprises six states and two territories, as well as several smaller territories with varying degrees of habitation. Each state and territory has a capital city, which is the seat of the state or territory government. The Australian Capital Territory has at its capital Canberra, which is also the national capital of the Commonwealth of Australia.

State/Territory Abbreviation Capital Population

(2013 est.)[12]

Area

(km2)

Australian Capital Territory ACT Canberra 381,700 2,358
New South Wales NSW Sydney 7.4 million 800,642
Northern Territory NT Darwin 237,800 1,349,129
Queensland Qld Brisbane 4.6 million 1,730,648
South Australia SA Adelaide 1.7 million 983,482
Tasmania Tas Hobart 512,900 68,401
Victoria Vic Melbourne 5.7 million 227,416
Western Australia WA Perth 2.5 million 2,529,875

Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Geoscience Australia (see notes below)

Landforms

Half of the surface area of Australia is covered by the Western Shield.[13] This plateau, much of it desert, averages between 400 m and 600 m above sea level, but reaches 1,524 m at Mount Liebig, in the central Macdonnell Ranges.

East of the shield lies the Great Artesian Basin, which sprawls across an area from the Gulf of Carpentaria in the north to the mouth of the Murray River in the south.

The third major physiographic region in Australia is the Great Dividing Range (or Eastern Uplands). Extending north-south from Queensland to Tasmania, the range cordons the western shield and basin regions from the populous and fertile south-eastern coastal plains.

The highest mainland point is Mount Kosciusko (2,228 m), while Mount Oisa in Tasmania climbs to 1,617 m. Lake Eyre, at 15 m below sea level, is the lowest point on the continent.

Around 18% of the continent is forested, mainly along the ranges, plateaux and basins of the Great Divide. The tropical rainforest belt lies along the north-east coast of Queensland, although there are scattered instances of such forests further south.

The Murray River, fed by the Darling, Murrumbidgee and Lachlan rivers, is Australia's longest inland waterway, flowing 2,350 km from the Snowy Mountains to the Great Australian Bight.

Off the north-east coast lies the Great Barrier Reef, which runs 1,931 km almost parallel to the Great Dividing Range. Covering an area of some 350,000 km2, the reef (in reality a system of individual and fringing reefs) is an important environmental region and tourist attraction.

External territories

Australia has seven external territories, which range from hundreds to thousands of kilometres from the mainland. These include:

Oceans and seas

Australia lies between the Indian Ocean to the west and the Pacific Ocean to the east.[14] It has coasts along the Timor Sea and Arafura Sea to the north, off which the Gulf of Carpentaria extends into the northern landmass of the continent. To the north-east is the Coral Sea, which washes onto the Great Barrier Reef, while the Tasman Sea laps against the south-eastern shoreline of the nation. Bass Strait divides Tasmania from the mainland. The Southern Ocean lies to the south, meeting the coastline in an extensive waterway known as the Great Australian Bight.

Australia retains the right to explore and exploit the seabed and waters in the nation's Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), which totals 8,148,250 km2 (one of the largest EEZ's in the world, the total area exceeding the country's land area). The EEZ generally extends to a limit 200 nautical miles from Australia's coastline, including her external territories.

Climate

Biodiversity

Flora

Fauna

Economy

Australia a strong economy and a per capita GDP (US$37,500, 2007 est.) comparable with the four most powerful European economies. The economy has in recent years been buoyed by strong business and consumer confidence, and by robust export prices for raw materials and agricultural produce. Over the past almost two decades the Australian government has emphasised economic reform and low inflation, encouraged a booming housing market, and strengthened ties with China, which has led to relatively consistent expansion of the economy.

An extended drought across much of rural Australia, high demand for imports, and a strong currency have, however, led to an increased trade deficit in recent years. Constraints on export growth and inflation concerns have been created by infrastructure bottlenecks and a tight labour market.

Despite this, however, strong revenue growth has seen the Australian budget remain in surplus since 2002.[15]

Politics

Australia is a constitutional monarchy, with Queen Elizabeth II as its Head of State. She is represented by the Governor-General, General Peter Cosgrove, who holds broad, but for the most part nominal, executive powers.

Australia's head of government is Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull of the Liberal and National parties coalition. The Opposition is the Australian Labor Party (ALP), led by Bill Shorten.

The Australian system of government is based on that of the United Kingdom (the Westminster system), with elements of that of the USA. Parliament comprises two houses. The House of Representatives (lower house) is where most legislation is initiated. Members of Parliament in this house are elected to represent seats based on population. The Senate (upper house) is generally considered a house of review. Each state of the Commonwealth of Australia elects an equal number of Senators. Unlike many other countries, voting is compulsory for all Australian citizens aged 18 or over.

Australia has close relations with the United States and Asia, and has special trade treaties with both. Australia currently has a free-trade agreement with the United States.

International relations

Globalisation has brought new opportunities for Australia, promoting trade liberalisation and raising living standards, but has also led to an increased vulnerability to transnational threats such as international terrorism.[16] To advance its national interests on both sides of this global equation, Australia cultivates close bilateral relationships with countries in the Asia–Pacific region and a robust alliance with the United States of America, and is a member of a number of regional organisations such as the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC), the Association of South-East Asian Nations Regional Forum (ASEAN), the East Asia Summit and the Pacific Islands Forum. Australia uses its membership of multilateral bodies such as the United Nations and World Trade Organisation to work towards important goals such as regional security, trade liberalisation, human rights and sustainable development.

History

(For a more in-depth treatment, see Australia, history)

Before European settlement

Archaeological evidence suggests that Aborigines were living in Australia at least 40,000 years ago,[17] although a skeleton found at Lake Mungo, NSW, is believed perhaps to have been buried between 57,000 and 71,000 years ago.[18] The Aborigines, like many other indigenous and ethnic groups, have a rich oral tradition based on the Dreaming (also the Dreamtime), when ancestral beings created life and significant landmarks across the country. Dreaming stories are a critical means of passing crucial knowledge, cultural values and belief systems from one generation to the next.[19] Prior to European settlement, Aborigines lived an often nomadic life as hunters, fishers and gatherers, in groups of 25 to 50 people. Estimates vary, but the Aboriginal population at the time of colonisation may have been around 750,000, speaking some 700 languages.[20] These numbers dropped sharply after 1788 because of introduced diseases and the killings by settlers.[21]

In conventional 19th- and 20th-century versions of Australian history, Captain James Cook "discovered" the Great South Land in 1770, but Macassan traders, from the eastern part of modern Indonesia, were visiting and trading with northern-Australian Aborigines for at least a century prior to European settlement in 1788.[22] Europeans other than Cook had also visited southern continent earlier. Dutch explorer Abel Tasman, for example, charted the coast of what is now Tasmania in 1642, and of northern Australia in 1644. English explorer and sometime buccaneer William Dampier explored the western and north-western coastline during voyages in 1688 and 1699. Cook was, however, first to claim part of mainland Australia for a European nation, when in 1770 claimed the east coast for England.

Colonisation to federation

The British established a penal colony at Port Jackson (now Sydney) on 26 January 1788 (and event now celebrated annually as Australia Day). Another penal colony was established in Tasmania (then called Van Diemen's Land) in 1803. Free settlers began to arrive in the colony from the 1790s, and wheat and merino sheep were also introduced in the late 18th century. As settlement spread and the country opened up, squatters[23] began to occupy grazing land. Resentment among free settlers of competition for jobs with convict labour, and a decline in Britain in the popularity of transporting felons, saw transportation to NSW end in 1840 and to Tasmania in 1853. It was reintroduced briefly in WA (1853–1867) to provide labour. Some 160,000 convicts were transported to Australia between 1788 and 1867.

During the 1830s and 1840s, there was growing demand for self-government. This was granted in 1850, when the British allowed colonies a significant degree of independence under the Australian Colonies Government Act. Under the Act colonies could, for example, amend their constitutions, determine electoral franchise and fix tariffs.

The discovery of gold in NSW and Victoria in 1851 led to a large influx of migrants; the population of Victoria quadrupled by 1855. The Australian economy was now firmly based on wool and gold. The large holdings of squatters were now preventing small farmers from purchasing land, so most colonies tried to break them up, but with limited success. Trade unions also began to emerge, particularly among miners and shearers, and the 1880s saw intermittent industrial unrest. Labour became a significant political force in the 1890s, with industrial action among wharf labourers spreading to miners and farm workers in a strike that was ultimately put down by troops and police. Further strike action followed nonetheless, and by 1891 the newly emergent Australian Labor Party (ALP) held the balance of power in NSW.

The final decade of the 19th century was difficult for Australia. An extended drought, industrial unrest, overexpansion and excessive borrowing to cause bank failures and a financial crisis. Problems were also arising because of the independent nature of the various colonies — differing postal systems and railway gauges, for example, and the want of a unified defence policy. Growing trade protectionism among the majority of colonies from 1866 made clear the need for some form of intercolonial cooperation.

Although in 1833 the first of a series of intercolonial conferences aimed at closer ties failed to make significant headway, in 1891 initial moves towards a unified nation were taken at the first Australian Federal Convention, which worked out a draft constitution that later became the basis for federation. On 1 January 1901 the colonies of NSW, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania federated to become the Commonwealth of Australia.

The new federal government now controlled foreign affairs, defence, trade, and so on. The first piece of legislation passed by the new parliament was the Immigration Restriction Act (1901), which put in place what became known as the White Australia policy (aimed especially at keeping out Chinese immigrants, who had arrived in large numbers to work the goldfields). A great deal of social legislation was also passed during this period, however — in 1902 women were given federal franchise; an industrial arbitration court, which established the principle of a basic wage, was set up in 1906; and free and compulsory education was introduced, as were old-age and invalid pensions. The first ship of the Australian navy was ordered in 1909. The Commonwealth Bank was established in 1911, and in the same year the Commonwealth bought land from NSW to form the federal capital, Canberra, in the Australian Capital Territory, where Parliament was to meet for the first time in 1927.

Genocide of Aboriginal Australians

The history and legacy of the genocide of Aboriginal Australians is detailed in the 1997 report /Bringing Them Home/ [24]. After colonisation, due to the culture of scientific racism in Europe, Aboriginal Australians were regarded as a racially inferior, dying race. As the report details, State Governments implemented a policy of assimilation to eliminate blackness in Anglo-Australian society by forcibly removing Aboriginal children from their family. Such a practice is listed as genocide under article 2(e) of the 1948 UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide [25]. The consequences of such a policy was disastrous, leading to mass intergenerational trauma, whose victims are now called The Stolen Generation. Children who were removed were put into government institutions, foster families or Christian missionaries, which often perpetrated systemic abuse of the children. This legacy continues today, as forced removals still occur under similar legal pretexts [26], despite the important symbolic apology by the former PM Kevin Rudd [27].

World War I

Australia's role during World War I, although relatively minor overall, was significant given the size of the nation and the toll of the conflict on its population.[28] In terms of lives shattered or lost, the war was the most costly in Australian history: of the 416,809 men who enlisted (from a population of fewer than 5 million), more than 60,000 died and 156,000 were wounded, gassed or taken prisoner.

Australian troops first took part in the ultimately abortive Allied operations against the Ottoman Empire on the Gallipoli Peninsula (25 April to 20 December 1915), considered by Australians their baptism of fire. After Gallipoli, the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) fought on the Western Front from March 1916 until war's end, making their name in battles such as Fromelles (July 1916); Bullecourt, Messines and Passchendaele (1917); and Hamel, Mont St Quentin and Péronne (1918). In October 1918 the depleted Australian divisions were withdrawn from the line for rest and refitting, and were preparing to return when the Germans surrendered on 11 November.

Australians also acquitted themselves admirably in the Middle East, where Australian Light Horse troopers assisted the Allies against the Ottomans in the defence of the Suez Canal and the reconquest of the Sinai peninsula (1916), the advance into Palestine and the taking of Gaza and Jerusalem (1917), and the occupation of Lebanon and Syria (1918). Australia also provided naval and air forces. The Royal Australian Navy (RAN) was under the command of the British Royal Navy, and scored an early and significant victory when it destroyed the German raider Emden in 1914. Around 3,000 airmen served in the Middle East and France with the newly formed Australian Flying Corps (AFC).

In 1916 the Labor Prime Minister, Billy Hughes, decided that conscription was necessary if the strength of Australia's military forces at the front was to be maintained. The Labor Party and the trade unions were bitterly opposed to conscription, and Hughes and his followers were expelled from the party when they refused to back down. In 1916 and again in 1917 the Australian people voted against conscription in national plebiscites.

Between the wars

After World War I, Australia participated in the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. During the 1920s, high prices for wool and wheat supported an expansion of the Australian economy. Manufacturing industries received protection from newly introduced tariffs, while primary producers gained subsidies. Hughes united with the Liberals to form the Nationalist Party, and remained in office until 1923, when he was succeeded by Stanley Bruce. Hughes became one of the longest serving members of parliament in Australian history.

The Depression of the 1930s hit hard in Australia, but rising prices for wool and gold, combined with preferential trade terms within the British Commonwealth, enabled it to recover from the Depression faster than many other nations. Australia had, in 1931, become a dominion with the Commonwealth of Nations (sometimes called the British Commonwealth) by virtue of the passage of the Statute of Westminster.

World War II

Almost a million Australians, men and women, served during World War II.[29][30] Of those, around 30,000 died. Australians fought Germany and Italy in Europe, the Mediterranean and North Africa, and Japan in South-East Asia and elsewhere in the Pacific. For the first time the Australian mainland was directly attacked, and Australia conducted its war accordingly.

The Australian Army first saw combat in early 1941, against the Italians in the Mediterranean and North Africa. After the Germans entered the war, Australian troops conducted a desperate defence of the Libyan port of Tobruk, earning the nickname "the Rats of Tobruk". Upon being relieved, most returned to Australia to take up the war against Japan, who had swiftly and suddenly entered the war in December 1941.

By the end of March 1942 the Japanese occupied most of South-East Asia and large areas of the Pacific. When Singapore fell (February 1942) the entire Australian 8th Division became prisoners of war at Changi, and later on the Thai-Burma Railway. By now, though, Japan's southward advance was slowing. Australian invasion fears were eased as AIF veterans returned from the Mediterranean, and United States forces under General Douglas Macarthur took over responsibility for Australia's defence. The Allies also began to defeat the Japanese in a series of decisive land and sea battles, and the threat of invasion faded further still. During 1943 and early 1944 Australian troops were predominantly involved in land battles in New Guinea. They also began, in 1944, a series of campaigns against the Japanese from Bougainville to Borneo. Australians were still fighting in Borneo when the war ended in August 1945.

Robert Menzies became Prime Minister of Australia in 1939, until 1941. He returned to office in 1949, and became Australia's longest-serving prime minister and the dominant figure in Australian politics until the mid-1960s.

Living in a Cold War world

Australian troops took part in a number of Cold War conflicts, including the Korean War (1950–1953), the Malayan Emergency (1950–1960) and the Vietnam War (1962–1972). It was also a signatory to significant regional treaties and agreements such as ANZUS and SEATO. Cold War fears allowed Menzies to retain office, and in 1951 he narrowly failed to win a referendum to allow him to ban the Communist Party. Monarchist sentiment in Australia peaked during the Menzies era with the successful 1954 tour by Queen Elizabeth II. Menzies' policies were also responsible for expanding higher education and industrial development. Australia's participation in Vietnam, and particularly the use of conscription, became politically contentious and saw massive protests, though they were for the most part peaceful. The Liberal Party maintained power through Menzies' successors, Harold Holt (who disappeared in 1967, while swimming off Cheviot Beach in Victoria), John Gorton and William McMahon, though each Prime Minister was generally considered to be less popular and less politically skilled than his predecessor. In 1972, Labor leader Gough Whitlam was elected, marking the end of Australia's participation in the Vietnam War and changes to foreign policy, including formally recognizing the People's Republic of China. Whitlam's administration was troubled with high unemployment, uncontrolled inflation, political scandals, Indonesia's invasion of East Timor, and a hostile Senate which blocked supply leading to a constitutional crisis ending with the dismissal of the Prime Minister, in November 1975. The Liberal-National Country Party coalition under Malcolm Fraser won a landslide election victory in December 1975, with a record 55-seat majority.

The Howard era

In 1996, former Liberal Party treasurer John Howard was elected Prime Minister. The Howard government reduced Australia's government deficit and the influence of labour unions, placing more emphasis on workplace-based collective bargaining for wages. The government also accelerated the pace of privatisation, beginning with the government-owned telecommunications corporation, Telstra. Howard's coalition government continued some elements of the foreign policy of its predecessors, based on relations with four key countries: the United States of America, Japan, China, and Indonesia. Following the 9/11 attack in 2001, Australia aligned itself further with the United States, and participated in military campaigns in Iraq, and Afghanistan. The 2002 Bali bombings and the bombing of the Jakarta Marriott hotel in 2003, saw terrorism on Australia's doorstep, and the Howard government was returned to office comfortably on a strong national security platform in 2004. Changes to industrial relations policies proved unpopular and the Howard government subsequently lost the 2007 federal election, despite strong economic growth and low unemployment. Howard was Australia's second longest serving Prime Minister.

Many Aborigines exist today, and there is a large ethnically mixed population with Aboriginal inheritance as well. Some Aborigines are able to continue their native traditions and some have been assimilated into the larger society, while others remain at odds with society in general and feel that they have not been been adequately compensated for many years of disenfranchisement and mistreatment. Recently, many initiatives have been taken to increase the quality of life of the Aborigines. An important step in improving relations between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians was Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's speech of 13 February 2008. Rudd apologised for past wrongs against Aborigines and spoke of a future in which Australians of all races were united.[31] Rudd's Prime Ministership however was eroded, with disquiet over his autocratic style of management within his own party, the ALP, and falling popularity in the opinion polls after the apology. In 2013, it was revealed in leaked documents that Rudd had authorized spying on Asian neighbour Indonesia in 2009, the revelation of which resulted in widespread protests against Australia in that country.[32] Julia Gillard became the first female Prime Minister of Australia during an unprecedented leadership spill in 2010, motivated by the ALP's drop in the opinion polls and loss of union support for Rudd. It was the first time in Australian history that an elected Prime Minister had lost the leadership of their own party. Gillard's leadership was not without controversy including opposing support for same-sex marriage equality, and public criticism in January 2013 when she 'parachuted' Aboriginal sportswoman Nova Peris into the Northern Territory senate candidacy, overruling the party pre-selection of Trish Crossin, in what she termed a 'captain's pick'.[33] Gillard's popularity was steadily declining in the opinion polls, and in June 2013, in another unprecedented move, Gillard was removed as leader by a Caucus vote, and Rudd returned as Prime Minister. The ALP had become destabilised and at the 2013 Federal election, was swept out of office by the Liberal-National Party coalition, led by Tony Abbott.

Notes and references

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Population clock". Retrieved 17 January 2019 from http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/94713ad445ff1425ca25682000192af2/1647509ef7e25faaca2568a900154b63?OpenDocument
  2. Unless otherwise specified, information in this section, and its associated subsections, comes from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Population distribution", 4102.0 – Australian Social Trends, 2008. Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/Lookup/4102.0Chapter3002008
  3. This is throws into sharp relief the myth that Australia is a nation of bronze-skinned giants living in the outback – the nation has always been highly urbanised, with the stereotypical Australian "bushman" (farmer, stockman – the Australian version of the US cowboy – etc.) being very much in the minority.
  4. Information in this paragraph is from Australian Bureau of Statistics, 3235.0 – Population by age and sex, Australia, 2006. Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Latestproducts/3235.0Main%20Features32006?opendocument&tabname=Summary&prodno=3235.0&issue=2006&num=&view=
  5. "An Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander is a person of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent who identifies as an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander and is accepted as such by the community in which he (she) lives." Gardiner-Garden, J. 2000. The Definition of Aboriginality. Research Note 18 2000-01. Canberra: Department of the Parliamentary Library. Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.aph.gov.au/library/pubs/RN/2000-01/01rn18.pdf
  6. Information in this subsection is from ABS. 2008. Year Book Australia 2008 (cat. no. 1301.0). Canberra: ABS. pp. 460–1. Retrieved 30 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/DetailsPage/1301.02008?OpenDocument
  7. Includes Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and Australian of South Sea Islander descent
  8. ABS. 2008. Year Book Australia 2008. pp. 457–8. Retrieved 30 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/DetailsPage/1301.02008?OpenDocument
  9. ABS. 2008. Year Book Australia 2008". pp. 455–7
  10. CIA 2008.
  11. Unless otherwise specified, information in this section, including the subsections, comes from the Australian Government's Geoscience Australia website and the various pages contained therein. Retrieved 15 August 2008 from http://www.ga.gov.au/education/facts/
  12. Australian Bureau of Statistics (30 March 2013). 3101.0 - Australian Demographic Statistics, Mar 2013 - Main Features. Accessed 6 October 2013.
  13. Information in this subsection, is from SBS. 1995. The SBS World Guide. 4th edn. Melbourne: Reed Reference.
  14. Information in this paragraph is from Geoscience Australia. 2006. "Appendix E: Limits of Oceans and Seas", in Geoscience Australia Topographic Data and Map Specifications for TOPO250K and TOPO100K National Topographic Databases and NTMS Series 1:250 000 and 1:100 000 Scale Topographic Map Products. Retrieved 20 August 2008 from http://www.ga.gov.au/mapspecs/250k100k/pdfs/AppendixE.pdf
  15. Information and statistics in this section are from the CIA 2008 (see previous reference).
  16. Information in this section is from ABS. 2008. Year Book Australia 2008". p. 141.
  17. Unless otherwise specified, background information in this "History" section, including the subsections, comes from SBS. 1995. The SBS World Guide. 4th edn. Melbourne: Reed Reference.
  18. Thorne, A., et al. 1999. "Australia's oldest human remains: Age of the Lake Mungo 3 skeleton". Journal of Human Evolution 36, 591–612. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://medicalsciences.med.unsw.edu.au/somsweb.nsf/resources/citationclassic01/$file/Thorne+et+al.+1999.pdf
  19. Australian Government. 2008. "The Dreaming." Culture and Recreation Portal. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/indigenous/dreamtime/
  20. Australian Museum. 2004. "Introduction." Indigenous Australia. Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.dreamtime.net.au/indigenous/index.cfm
  21. See, for example, "Racism. Now Way: Key dates", http://www.racismnoway.com.au/library/history/keydates/index-1800s.html – a search for the term "massacre" in your browser will give an idea, albeit incomplete, of the scale of what is being referred to here.
  22. Northern Territory Government. 2007. "Monsoon traders (Macassans)." Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.nt.gov.au/nreta/heritage/maritime/monsoon.html
  23. People who settled on Crown (government-owned) land to run stock, particularly sheep, without government permission at first, but from 1836 with a lease or licence.
  24. https://humanrights.gov.au/our-work/bringing-them-home-report-1997
  25. https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/genocide-convention.shtml
  26. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-02-03/fears-rates-of-aboriginal-children-removed-from-families-rising/100772704
  27. https://www.dfat.gov.au/people-to-people/public-diplomacy/programs-activities/Pages/text-of-the-apology-to-the-stolen-generations
  28. Information in this subsection is from Australian War Memorial. n.d. "First World War I914–18". Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/ww1.asp
  29. Unless otherwise specified, information in this subsection is from Australian War Memorial. n.d. "Second World War I939–45". Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/ww2.asp
  30. Australia's population was only 7 million in 1939. Australian Bureau of Statistics, "Table 2. Population by sex, states and territories, 30 June, 1901 onwards", 3105.0.65.001 - Australian Historical Population Statistics, 2006 (Microsoft Excel spreadsheet). Retrieved 18 August 2008 from http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/ABS@Archive.nsf/log?openagent&3105065001_table2.xls&3105.0.65.001&Data%20Cubes&7BB5E247A5A2F416CA25717600229537&0&2006&23.05.2006&Latest
  31. Rudd, K., "Apology to Australia's Indigenous people". Retrieved 10 August 2008 from http://parlinfoweb.aph.gov.au/piweb/view_document.aspx?id=2815365&table=HANSARDR
  32. Henderson, Anna, George Roberts. Tony Abbott should promise not to tap Indonesian president's phone in future, Julia Gillard says, ABC News, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 22 November 2013. Retrieved on 22 November 2013.
  33. Staff writer. Gillard faces criticism over Peris Senate preselection, ABC News, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 23 January 2013. Retrieved on 13 November 2013.