1. Did Australia listen to Indigenous people on constitutional recognition? A big data analysis.
- Author
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Parkinson, John, Franco-Guillén, Núria, and de Laile, Sebastian
- Subjects
- *
FIRST Nations of Canada , *INDIGENOUS Australians , *BIG data , *RACISM , *DATA analysis , *FRAMES (Social sciences) , *INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
This paper uses novel electronic tools to identify the degree to which Australia was listening to Indigenous peoples in a 'national conversation' about constitutional recognition between 2015 and late 2017. The results show that while there was a superficial overlap in themes, there were important differences of framing. Recognition remained a largely formal, elite and non-Indigenous concern, with First Nations focusing on treaties, sovereignty, listening and respect. Interaction was noticeably aggressive, but not exclusively so. Non-Indigenous people avoided discussing racism, and talked more frequently about history, framing issues in the past tense; First Nations talked about the here and now. And despite more focus on everyday racism, Indigenous peoples were consistently more positive and proud, rejecting 'plight' constructions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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