Speaker: A/Prof Julie Moschion

Affiliation: The University of Queensland

Location: Level 6 Boardroom (629), Colin Clark Building (#39), St Lucia Campus

Zoom: https://uqz.zoom.us/j/82603079317

Abstract: 

In April 2024, three weeks of curfew brought the world’s attention to the social problems of the Australian Outback town of Alice Springs. ‘Alice’, like many regional and remote towns, has a dark colonial history of land theft and massacre of Indigenous peoples. Yet Australians resist the idea that today’s community problems originate from their past. In this study, we undertake the first quantitative study of the link between contemporary community outcomes and historical massacres, defined as the deliberate killing of 6 or more undefended people in one operation.

To do this, we build community-level data on: over 400 verified massacre sites of Indigenous people (1788-1930), historical composition of settler populations, locations of historical institutions (missions, reserves, stations and prisons), geography (e.g. rainfall, topography, rivers, soil types) and contemporary outcomes. Using regression to adjust for historical and geographical confounders, our preliminary analysis suggests that communities affected by massacres have higher historical rates of Indigenous institutionalisation, are more segregated by race, are more likely to oppose Indigenous self-determination, measured by the proportion who voted “no” in the 2023 referendum on an Indigenous voice to parliament, and display higher levels of intra-racial social capital.

About School of Economics Brown Bag Seminar

Venue

Colin Clark Building (#39), St Lucia Campus
Room: 
628