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Tables of Contents for From Subject to Citizen
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
List of Figures
x
1
List of Tables
xi
1
Acknowledgments
xii
1
Abbreviations
xiii
 
Introduction
1
8
Part I: From Subject to Citizen 1901-1996
9
134
1 Civis Romanus Sum
13
32
Nation and State
19
13
Creating a National Identity
32
8
Definition of Citizenship
40
5
2 From Subject to Citizen I: to 1948
45
39
The Commonwealth of Australia
50
2
The Australian People
52
7
Formal Requirements before 1948
59
7
Public Discourse about Citizen Rights: 1901-1948
66
4
Unofficial Discourse on Citizenship
70
9
Civics for Schools
79
5
3 Nationality and the Citizen II: 1948-1986
84
29
Official Policy
87
7
Formal Requirements: 1948-1972
94
7
International Personality and Nationhood
101
2
Unofficial Discourse on Citizenship
103
2
Naturalisation Rates and Belonging
105
3
Closures to Theory
108
5
4 From Subject to Citizen III: 1983-1996
113
30
Formal Requirements: 1983-1994
118
2
Official Discourse about Citizenship
120
4
A Bill of Rights for Australia: 1973-1993
124
10
The Active Citizen
134
2
Unofficial Discourse on Citizenship: 1983-1993
136
3
The New Nationalism
139
4
Part II: Discourses of Exclusion
143
74
5 Discourses of Exclusion, Silencing the Migrant Voice
149
39
From Alien to Permanent Resident: 1945-1972
158
2
Aliens
160
2
Aliens from Whitlam to Hawke
162
3
Aliens and Permanent Residents: 1984-1995
165
2
From One Voice to Many: to Cacophony?
167
2
The Citizenship Conventions: 1950-1970
169
2
The Migrant Voice
171
4
Ethnic Spokesmen
175
4
Social, Economic and Educational Rights
179
6
Deep Culture and Racism
185
3
6 Aborigines and Citizenship: Discourses of Exclusion
188
29
The Colonial Period
189
1
The Franchise Act (1902): The Right to Vote
190
11
Land and Values
201
2
The Problem of `Belonging'
203
6
The Discourse of Exclusion
209
4
An Aborginal Contribution to Citizenship
213
4
Part III: The Active Citizen and Beyond
217
31
7 The Active Citizen and Direct Democracy in Australia
223
25
The Right to Vote
228
5
The Popular Sovereign and Direct Democracy
233
2
Local Government
235
2
Direct Democracy
237
3
Responsible Government
240
5
The Inactive Citizen
245
1
Overview
246
2
Conclusion
248
39
Looking Backward
248
7
Recrudescent Nationalism
255
1
What Is So Special About Our Fellow Countrymen?
256
3
Looking Forward to the Twenty-First Century
259
1
Regionalism and the Regional Citizen
260
3
The European Example
263
12
New Acts of Citizenship
275
1
Representative Democracy
276
4
Australia Learns?
280
7
Notes
287
25
Select Bibliography
312
19
Index
331