Wake Up Time

The main question of this book is: why have the billions of dollars spent on Aboriginal issues not closed the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians, and what should be done about this?
Wake Up Time is the, often very graphic and anecdotal, story of a personal journey through some remote areas of Australia's Outback, the Northern Territory, including Alice Springs, Uluru, Willowra, Ali Curung and Kakadu. In addition it offers an analysis of the confronting, sad, scary and puzzling life of Indigenous Australians in remote communities.
Wake Up Time questions whether two major issues are in the way of finding solutions to the problems in remote communities.
The first is the alleged system of compensations and royalties payments by mining companies. Does this system exist? If so, what are these payments and what is the role of the mining industry and of the federal government in the equitable distribution and use of these payments? Have they lead to appropriate solutions?
The second is the question of whether the present legal distinction between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians is beneficial. This policy appears to be a hangover from the days of the White Australia policy, something still engrained in legislation that is counterproductive for all Australians. Has our appreciation and support for an ancient and very much alive Indigenous culture led us to an acceptance of inappropriate legal distinctions and exceptions regarding race?
Finally, Wake Up Time questions the proposed changes to the Australian Constitution, to be decided in a referendum due in 2016.
Wake Up Time combines a an easy to read travel diary with thorough journalistic analysis.

1119992893
Wake Up Time

The main question of this book is: why have the billions of dollars spent on Aboriginal issues not closed the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians, and what should be done about this?
Wake Up Time is the, often very graphic and anecdotal, story of a personal journey through some remote areas of Australia's Outback, the Northern Territory, including Alice Springs, Uluru, Willowra, Ali Curung and Kakadu. In addition it offers an analysis of the confronting, sad, scary and puzzling life of Indigenous Australians in remote communities.
Wake Up Time questions whether two major issues are in the way of finding solutions to the problems in remote communities.
The first is the alleged system of compensations and royalties payments by mining companies. Does this system exist? If so, what are these payments and what is the role of the mining industry and of the federal government in the equitable distribution and use of these payments? Have they lead to appropriate solutions?
The second is the question of whether the present legal distinction between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians is beneficial. This policy appears to be a hangover from the days of the White Australia policy, something still engrained in legislation that is counterproductive for all Australians. Has our appreciation and support for an ancient and very much alive Indigenous culture led us to an acceptance of inappropriate legal distinctions and exceptions regarding race?
Finally, Wake Up Time questions the proposed changes to the Australian Constitution, to be decided in a referendum due in 2016.
Wake Up Time combines a an easy to read travel diary with thorough journalistic analysis.

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Wake Up Time

Wake Up Time

by Jaap Vogel
Wake Up Time

Wake Up Time

by Jaap Vogel

eBook

$2.99 

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Overview

The main question of this book is: why have the billions of dollars spent on Aboriginal issues not closed the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians, and what should be done about this?
Wake Up Time is the, often very graphic and anecdotal, story of a personal journey through some remote areas of Australia's Outback, the Northern Territory, including Alice Springs, Uluru, Willowra, Ali Curung and Kakadu. In addition it offers an analysis of the confronting, sad, scary and puzzling life of Indigenous Australians in remote communities.
Wake Up Time questions whether two major issues are in the way of finding solutions to the problems in remote communities.
The first is the alleged system of compensations and royalties payments by mining companies. Does this system exist? If so, what are these payments and what is the role of the mining industry and of the federal government in the equitable distribution and use of these payments? Have they lead to appropriate solutions?
The second is the question of whether the present legal distinction between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians is beneficial. This policy appears to be a hangover from the days of the White Australia policy, something still engrained in legislation that is counterproductive for all Australians. Has our appreciation and support for an ancient and very much alive Indigenous culture led us to an acceptance of inappropriate legal distinctions and exceptions regarding race?
Finally, Wake Up Time questions the proposed changes to the Australian Constitution, to be decided in a referendum due in 2016.
Wake Up Time combines a an easy to read travel diary with thorough journalistic analysis.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940045651080
Publisher: Jaap Vogel
Publication date: 07/11/2014
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 462 KB

About the Author

Jaap (Jacob) Vogel was born in the Netherlands in 1954. He was supposed to become a medical doctor but finally opted for journalism as social and political matters fascinated him from a young age.
Still in his teens he was collecting relevant, in particular controversial, articles from Dutch, and international newspapers and magazines, gluing them on large paper sheets and binding them together. These documents are still an interesting representation of the political, social and cultural issues of those years. They are one of his treasures!
Later he graduated at the Utrecht University in the Netherlands in Cognitive Artificial Intelligence. Writing and travelling and have always been his major interests together with science, photography and flying
In 1991 he travelled for the first time to Australia, fell in love with the country which he then started to visit regularly. In 2002 he sold his house in Holland, quit his then position as Chief Editor of the Dutch Journal of General Practice and moved for good to Down Under.
He settled down on Tamborine Mountain (QLD), continuing his journalistic work online. He participated actively to the community, as President of Landcare and the Chamber of Commerce.
As local snake catcher he wrote a booklet on the eighteen species of snakes of Tamborine Mountain.
On Australia Day 2008 he was granted the Special Mayor's award for his community contributions.
From his new Homeland, he continued to travel extensively in the Outback to get more acquainted with the first Australians' culture and their current way of life.
During the past three years he lived fulltime on the road in his bus 'The Spirit of Curiosity', together with his partner Elisabeth and two dogs Boris and Zilla. Together they spent most of the time in the Northern Territory, visiting Aboriginal communities and meeting many interesting and dedicated people living and working there.
Jaap continues to work as a journalist on political, economic and medical matters.

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