Difference between revisions of "Australia"

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Revision as of 12:26, March 26, 2007

The Commonwealth of Australia is part of Oceania, and a largely secular nation. Of Australia's population of over 20 million approximately 1.5 million attend weekly religious services [1]. It is about 7,500 miles from the United States. The mainland of Australia is about the same size as the mainland 48 states of the USA. Australia is the smallest continent in the world, it is 2400 miles, (3,860 km) from east to west and 2,000 miles (3,220 km) from north to south. It covers an area of 2,967,877 sq miles (7,686,810 sq km). The Australian coastline is 22,812 miles long (36,735 kilometers).

Australia has six states and two territories. The states are New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and Tasmania. The territories are the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory which is the location of Australia's capital city: Canberra.

History

Pre European Contact

Australia was originally inhabited by people who are commonly known as Aborigines although they come from a number of smaller nations each with their own national name. Over time, many of these nations and tribes lost their identity or were decimated by disease, poor nutrition, massacres by white settlers and the forced removal of children from their parents into white families or mission stations. Nevertheless, many Aboriginal languages and traditions have survived the more than 200 years of white settlement. Under recent legislation recognising native title, Aboriginal communities now have the right to claim back land dispossessed from them where they can prove that lasting cultural links still persist and where the native title has not been extinguished by freehold or leasehold title.

Post European Contact

The mainland of Australia was found by Dutch sailors heading to the spice isles of what is now Indonesia in the 16th Century. Most of their descriptions of Australia are based on the exploration of the North West coast which is very rugged and inhospitable. It wasn't until 1770 that Captain James Cook from England discovered the east coast of Australia which is much more capable of maintaining life and settlers. In 1788 the First Fleet arrived at Sydney Cove, New South Wales - comprising of officers, some free settlers and convicts. A number of later fleets settled convict areas around what is now Sydney Harbour.

As the 18th century came to a close convicts were given land packages and more free settlers came to the land in the hope of setting up farms and businesses. A number of colonies started to be formed - the most populated being New South Wales (whose capital city is Sydney). These colonies later became the states.

The 1850s saw the discovery of gold and large number of people moved to Australia to find new wealth. Most of these people were British and there was a significant number of Chinese immigrants during this rush. "Americans were drawn to Australia to participate in various enterprises such as the gold fields" [2]

System of Government

Australia became a federated country in 1901 with its parliament sitting in Melbourne, Victoria, while the capital city of Canberra was being built.

Australia has a parliamentary system of government based on the British system with a bicameral system: the House of Representatives and the Senate. Each state also has its own parliament.

Australia is a democracy which has allowed men of European descent to vote since federation, with women gaining the vote in the early 20th Century and Aboriginal men and women gaining suffrage in 1962. Voting is compulsory for all citizens who are 18 years old and over (with a few exceptions.)

Its Head of Government is called the Prime Minister; at the moment the Prime Minister is John Howard, the leader of the Liberal Party. The Head of State is Queen Elizabeth II, the Queen of Australia (who is the same person, but a different title, as the Queen of Great Britain), who acts through the Governor-General.

Despite the name, the Liberal Party, which has been in power in Australia since 1996, is actually conservative, a paradox established since the years that Sir Robert Menzies was Prime Minister. Menzies helped found the Liberal Party in 1944 and was the Prime Minister from 1939 until 1941 and then again from 1949 until 1966. [3] Unlike in the USA there is no limit on the time a person can lead the country—it is the people's choice.

Australia has preferential voting, which is designed to ensure that the candidates with the most support get into office, rather than the candidate with the most primary votes. So if three candidates, A, B, and C, get 40%, 35%, and 30% of the votes respectively (so no candidate has more than 50% of the votes), then the second preference of the voters who voted for C are distributed to the remaining candidates. The result might be that A ends up with 45% of the votes, and B with 55%, indicating that 55% of the voters prefer candidate B over A.

One consequence of this voting system is that it encourages a multiplicity of parties and even independent candidates. There have been times when the balance of power has been held my minor parties or independent individuals. The Federal opposition political party, which most Americans would recognize as "liberal", is the Labor Party whose leader is Kevin Rudd. The Labor Party is in government in all of the states and territories as of March, 2007. The Labor Party are social democrats while the Liberals are liberal conservatives, but some of the smaller parties are more liberal or more conservative than Labor and Liberal respectively.


Prime Ministers of Australia

[4]

Prime Minister

Dates

Sir Edmund Barton, PC, GCMG, KC
(Protectionist Party)

1 January 1901 - 24 September 1903
(2 years, 8 months, 24 days)

Alfred Deakin
(Protectionist Party)

24 September 1903 - 27 April 1904
(7 months, 4 days)

John Christian Watson
(Australian Labor Party)

27 April 1904 - 17 August 1904
(3 months, 21 days)

George Houstoun Reid (later Sir George), PC, KC
(Free Trade)

18 August 1904 - 5 July 1905
(10 months, 18 days)

Alfred Deakin
(Protectionist Party)

5 July 1905 - 13 November 1908
(3 years, 4 months, 9 days)

Andrew Fisher
(Australian Labor Party)

13 November 1908 - 2 June 1909
(6 months, 21 days)

Alfred Deakin
(Protectionist Party)

2 June 1909 - 29 April 1910
(10 months, 28 days)

Andrew Fisher
(Australian Labor Party)

29 April 1910 - 24 June 1913
(3 years, 1 month, 26 days)

Joseph Cook (later Sir Joseph)
(Liberal Party of Australia)

24 June 1913 - 17 September 1914
(1 year, 2 months, 25 days)

Andrew Fisher
(Australian Labor Party)

17 September 1914 - 27 October 1915
(1 year, 1 month, 11 days)

William Morris Hughes
(Australian Labor Party; Nationalist Party from 1917)

27 October 1915 - 9 February 1923
(7 years, 3 months, 14 days)

Stanley Melbourne Bruce, PC, CH, MC
(Nationalist Party)

9 February 1923 - 22 October 1929
(6 years, 8 months, 14 days)

James Henry Scullin, PC
(Australian Labor Party)

22 October 1929 - 6 January 1932
(2 years, 2 months, 16 days)

Joseph Aloysius Lyons, PC, CH
(United Australia Party)

6 January 1932 - 7 April 1939
(7 years, 3 months, 2 days)

Sir Earle Christmas Grafton Page, PC, GCMG
(Australian Country Party)

7 April 1939 - 26 April 1939
(20 days)

Robert Gordon Menzies, PC, KC
(United Australia Party)

26 April 1939 - 29 August 1941
(2 years, 4 months, 4 days)

Arthur William Fadden (later Sir Arthur)
(Country Party)

29 August 1941 - 7 October 1941
(1 month, 9 days)

John Curtin, PC
(Australian Labor Party)

7 October 1941 - 5 July 1945
(3 years, 8 months, 29 days)

Francis Michael Forde, PC
(Australian Labor Party)

6 July 1945 - 13 July 1945
(8 days)

Joseph Benedict Chifley, PC
(Australian Labor Party)

13 July 1945 - 19 December 1949
(4 years, 5 months, 7 days)

Robert Gordon Menzies (later Sir Robert), PC, KC
(Liberal Party of Australia)

19 December 1949 - 26 January 1966
(16 years, 1 month, 8 days)

Harold Edward Holt, PC, CH
(Liberal Party of Australia)

26 January 1966 - 19 December 1967
(1 year, 10 months, 23 days)

John McEwen (later Sir John), PC
(Country Party)

19 December 1967 - 10 January 1968
(23 days)

John Grey Gorton, PC
(Liberal Party of Australia)

10 January 1968 - 10 March 1971
(3 years, 2 months)

William McMahon (later Sir William), PC, CH
(Liberal Party of Australia)

10 March 1971 - 5 December 1972
(1 year, 8 months, 25 days)

Edward Gough Whitlam, QC
(Australian Labor Party)

5 December 1972 - 11 November 1975
(2 years, 11 months, 7 days)

John Malcolm Fraser, PC, CH
(Liberal Party of Australia)

11 November 1975 - 11 March 1983
(7 years, 4 months)

Robert James Lee Hawke, AC
(Australian Labor Party)

11 March 1983 - 20 December 1991
(8 years, 9 months, 10 days)

Paul John Keating
(Australian Labor Party)

20 December 1991 - 11 March 1996
(4 years, 2 months, 20 days)

John Winston Howard
(Liberal Party of Australia)

11 March 1996 -

Geography

Australia relies a great deal on industry, agriculture and tourism to foster its economy. It has a thriving film industry and very advanced technology. Most tourists visit places such as Sydney Harbour, Uluru (Ayers Rock) in Central Australia and the Great Barrier Reef in Queensland. Other favorite destinations are the wine making areas of South Australia and northern Victoria, the Great Ocean Road in Victoria, the natural wonders of Tasmania and the huge outback expanses of Western Australia and the Northern Territory. Some cattle stations in Australia rival Texas in size and the distance between towns in some areas is enormous.

80% of Australia's population, of just over 20,000,000 people, live on the coast line. It is one of the world's most sparsely populated countries (2.7 people per square kilometre)[5]. Water is scarce and some cities have some form of water restrictions in place.

Weather extremes are common in Australia with temperatures sometimes measured into the high 40s Celsius (45 degrees Celsius = 113 degrees Fahrenheit). The city of Darwin was destroyed by Cyclone Tracey in 1974 and bush fires often ravage the southern states - one of the worst occurring on Ash Wednesday in 1983 when over 2000 homes were destroyed and over 70 people lost their lives in Victoria and South Australia.

Australia is noted for its unique biodiversity. Many animals are found only in Australia, the most well known examples are the group of marsupials (kangaroos, wombats, wallabies and koalas), and the only two monotremes, the platypus and the echidna. Examples of plants that are native to Australia are the banksia, yellow wattle and gum tree.

Studies indicate that Australia's unique wildlife is the result of Australia becoming an island, being cut off from the Asian land bridge between 40,000–250,000 years ago on the uniformitarian timescale.

Sport

Australia is often known as a sporting nation with success worldwide in swimming, tennis, rugby league and rugby union, cricket, netball and even speed ice skating. Australians are very keen horse racers with the Melbourne Cup [6] attracting up to 120,000 spectators at Flemington Race Course. There is even a public holiday for the cup race in Melbourne.

Unique to Australia is a game known as Australian rules football or Aussie Rules which is played on a cricket oval in winter and draws huge crowds across Australia.

References

  1. National Church Life Survey 2004
  2. Australian Dept of Immigration and Citizenship
  3. History of the Liberal Party in Australia
  4. Prime Ministers of Australia
  5. ABS
  6. Melbourne Cup

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