Showing 1952 results

Authority record
Corporate body

Friends of the Earth

  • AU NLA 35104812
  • Corporate body
  • 1973-

Friends of the Earth (FOE) (1973- ).
Objectives - To conserve, restore and rationally utilize the ecosphere; to stimulate a movement towards an ecologically stable and self-managed society; to preserve the natural environment in Australia; to promote public awareness of environmental issues in Australia.

Australian Conservation Foundation

  • US DC n80046795
  • Corporate body
  • 1967-

Australian Conservation Foundation (1967- ).
Objectives - To conserve the natural resources of the country including air, water, soil, forests, minerals, wildlife and the natural beauty of the landscape; to influence those who make decisions affecting the environment; to oppose developments which threaten major environmental degradation.

Pauline Hanson Support Movement

  • AU QU
  • Corporate body
  • 1996-1997

The Pauline Hanson Support Movement was a community organisation launched in October 1996 by Gold Coast resident Bruce Whiteside. Impressed by Pauline Hanson's hostility to Asian immigration, multiculturalism and government support for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Whiteside's goal was to organise active community support for Hanson and her politics. In April 1997 the Support Movement's membership list was used to register the political party, Pauline Hanson's One Nation, with Hanson as the leader.

Australians for Native Title & Reconciliation

  • US DLC n 2008183100
  • Corporate body
  • 1997-

Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation (ANTaR) is a nationwide coalition of organisations and individuals formed to support justice for Indigenous Australians.

OPAL (Organisation)

  • AU NLA 35249756
  • Corporate body
  • 1961-198-

One People of Australia League was established in 1961 as an Aboriginal advancement organisation. It was based in Queensland. The OPAL House on Russell Street in Brisbane was established about 1960 by Joyce Wilding, to accommodate underprivileged Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in need of shelter, but was later demolished around 1970 to make way for Expo 88. Residents were transferred to the Joyce Wilding Home at Eight Mile Plains (now the Joyce Wilding Hostel). The OPAL Centre was opened on Anne Street in Brisbane in 1971. It focused on welfare and housing. James (Jim or Jimmy) Hamilton was the first president, serving from 1961 to 1970. Neville Bonner was president from 1970 to 1974. Unable to determine when the organisation disbanded; there is no recent information online about it.

Publicists - Neville Bonner, Caroline Archer, Owen Fletcher, Jim Hamilton, Muriel Langford, Olive Murphy, E. Rallah, Joyce Wilding.

Justice '88

  • AU QU
  • Corporate body
  • 1987-

Justice '88 (or Justice 88), a non-Indigenous coalition in support of sovereignty for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, was formed in November 1987 and was based out of West End, Brisbane. It was connected to the Foundation for Aboriginal and Islander Research Action (FAIRA). It provided a focus for non-Indigenous support for the struggle of land rights and aimed to build support for bicentennial protests. Justice '88 held meetings every Sunday at 69 Thomas Street in West End, which was, in 1980s, a house that belonged to a Christian community called House of Freedom. The weekly meetings continued until an unknown date. Justice '88 no longer appears to be in existence. Unable to determine when the organisation disbanded.

Foundation for Aboriginal and Islander Research Action

  • US DLC n 99264411
  • Corporate body
  • 1977-

The Foundation for Aboriginal and Islander Research Action (FAIRA) was formed in Queensland in 1977 after Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community delegates from across Queensland, including from rural towns and isolated reserve communities, decided to establish a functional organisation to change legislation referred to as the 'Black Acts'. In 1981 FAIRA was involved in an extended tent embassy in the King George Square and in 1982 played a major role in organising protests around the Brisbane Commonwealth Games. After the Black Acts were terminated in 1984, FAIRA continued to campaign for the rights of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples at the local, national and international levels. FAIRA was founded and continues to be operated by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. It is funded independently, and its purpose is to fight racism, have the rights of Indigenous Peoples recognised and respected in Australian law and secure Land Rights. FAIRA utilises research-based actions to address exploitation and empower Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

Publicists - Paul Braddy, Don Davidson, Shane Hoffman, Morgan B. Howe, Liz Johnson, P Jones, Les Malezer, Steve Mam, Noel Preston, John Warby.

Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement

  • US DLC n 93065407
  • Corporate body
  • 1972-

The Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement (ALRM) is a not-for-profit charity, Aboriginal community organisation and law practice based in Adelaide, South Australia. ALRM has both a criminal case section and civil section. The organisation receives funding under the National Legal Assistance Program. Additionally, ALRM organises social programs to assist Aboriginal people persons recently released from custody, and advocates on legal and policy questions that affect Aboriginal people.

Australia. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission

  • US DLC no 93014250
  • Corporate body
  • 1990-2005

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), established in 1990 under the Hawke government, was an Indigenous-elected national representative body with both administrative and representative functions that aimed to increase Indigenous participation in the public sector, particularly in regard to government processes that affected the lives of Australian Indigenous peoples.

University of Tasmania

  • US DLC n 79115475
  • Corporate body
  • 1890-

Established in Hobart on 1 January 1890. Christ College, a residential college of the University of Tasmania, was founded in 1846 and is the oldest tertiary institution in Australia.

Results 1931 to 1940 of 1952