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Topic 12.4History (2028+) HL36 flashcards

Indigenous societies and national identity in Australia and New Zealand (c.1770–2020)

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Card 1 of 3612.4.1
12.4.1
Question

What does 'terra nullius' mean and how was it used in Australia?

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All Flashcards in Topic 12.4

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12.4.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What does 'terra nullius' mean and how was it used in Australia?

Answer

'Land belonging to no one' — Britain used this legal idea to claim Australia in 1770/1788 without recognising Aboriginal sovereignty or signing any treaty.

Card 2concept
Question

When did British settlement of Australia begin, and how?

Answer

1788, with the First Fleet landing at Sydney Cove, carrying convicts, soldiers and officials — Australia began as a penal colony.

Card 3process
Question

What effect did the gold rushes (from 1851) have on Australia?

Answer

They triggered mass immigration — e.g. Victoria's population grew from about 77,000 (1851) to over 500,000 (1861) — overwhelming Aboriginal communities and land.

Card 4example
Question

Name two events of the Australian Frontier Wars.

Answer

Pemulwuy's resistance near Sydney (1790s–1802) and the Myall Creek massacre (1838), where at least 28 unarmed Aboriginal people were killed and several perpetrators were tried and hanged.

Card 5example
Question

What was the Black War in Tasmania?

Answer

Intense frontier violence in the 1820s–1832, including a government-ordered military operation ('Black Line'), that devastated the Palawa Aboriginal population.

Card 6concept
Question

When and where was the Treaty of Waitangi signed, and by whom?

Answer

6 February 1840, New Zealand; signed by British officials and around 540 Māori rangatira (chiefs).

Card 7process
Question

Why did the Treaty of Waitangi cause lasting disputes?

Answer

The English text ceded full sovereignty to Britain, but the Māori text used 'kāwanatanga' (governance), which many rangatira understood as allowing administration while Māori kept authority (rangatiratanga) over their land.

Card 8concept
Question

What were the New Zealand Wars, and roughly when were they fought?

Answer

A series of conflicts (1840s–1870s), mainly over land, including the Northern War, Taranaki Wars and Waikato War, fought between Māori and British/colonial forces.

Card 9concept
Question

What was the Kīngitanga and why did it matter?

Answer

The Māori King Movement — it united multiple tribes to resist further land sales, giving Māori more collective political and military strength than Aboriginal groups had.

Card 10definition
Question

What was 'raupatu' and roughly how much land did it involve?

Answer

The government confiscation of Māori land as punishment after the New Zealand Wars — around 1.2 million hectares, even from tribes that had stayed neutral.

Card 11comparison
Question

Compare the legal starting points for Indigenous rights claims in Australia and New Zealand.

Answer

Australia: no treaty, so terra nullius had to be overturned by a court case (Mabo, 1992). New Zealand: an existing (if breached) treaty, investigated by the Waitangi Tribunal (set up 1975).

Card 12comparison
Question

Give two reasons historians offer for why settler-Indigenous relations differed between Australia and New Zealand.

Answer

1) Legal factor — Waitangi gave Māori a treaty to invoke; Aboriginal peoples had none. 2) Power-balance factor — organised iwi, the Kīngitanga, and pā fortifications gave Māori more military and demographic leverage.

12.4.212 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What was Federation, and when did it happen for Australia?

Answer

On 1 January 1901, six separate British colonies united to form the self-governing Commonwealth of Australia, still under the British Crown.

Card 14definition
Question

What did Dominion status (1907) give New Zealand?

Answer

Self-government over domestic affairs, while Britain retained control of New Zealand's defence and foreign policy.

Card 15concept
Question

Why didn't New Zealand join the Australian federation?

Answer

It was geographically distant from Australia and had its own distinct relationship with Māori, so it chose Dominion status separately in 1907.

Card 16example
Question

Name two pioneering social/democratic reforms of early Australia and New Zealand.

Answer

New Zealand gave women the vote in 1893 (world first); Australia set a national minimum wage via the 1907 Harvester Judgement.

Card 17definition
Question

What was ANZAC?

Answer

The Australian and New Zealand Army Corps, formed by combining troops from both Dominions for the First World War.

Card 18process
Question

Walk through the Gallipoli campaign in three steps.

Answer

1) ANZAC lands at the wrong beach on 25 April 1915 under heavy fire. 2) Eight months of trench-warfare stalemate follow. 3) Allies evacuate Dec 1915–Jan 1916 with no strategic gain.

Card 19example
Question

Roughly how many Australians and New Zealanders died at Gallipoli?

Answer

About 8,700 Australians and 2,700 New Zealanders died, out of roughly 130,000 total Allied and Ottoman deaths.

Card 20concept
Question

What is the Anzac legend?

Answer

The founding national myth that Gallipoli revealed distinctly Australian/New Zealand qualities — courage, mateship, resourcefulness — despite the campaign's military failure.

Card 21comparison
Question

Compare the two views of the Anzac legend.

Answer

Unifying view: gave both nations a shared founding story and enduring values. Critical view: it commemorates a British-planned disaster and sidelines Indigenous service and the war's true social cost.

Card 22comparison
Question

How did Australia's and New Zealand's home fronts differ on conscription?

Answer

Australia held two referendums (1916, 1917) on conscription, both narrowly defeated, exposing deep divisions; New Zealand introduced conscription in 1916, controversial especially for Māori.

Card 23example
Question

What was the unequal reward faced by Indigenous servicemen after WWI?

Answer

Around 1,000 Māori and hundreds of Aboriginal/Torres Strait Islander men served, yet returned to face continued land loss and exclusion from full citizenship rights.

Card 24process
Question

What structure should a Paper 3 'to what extent' essay follow?

Answer

A thesis engaging the claim, an argument for, an argument against, and a substantiated final judgement — description alone is not enough.

12.4.312 cards

Card 25concept
Question

What does 'populate or perish' refer to?

Answer

Arthur Calwell's post-1945 slogan justifying mass immigration to Australia, driven by fear of Japan and the need to grow the economy and defence.

Card 26definition
Question

When did Australia's White Australia Policy formally end?

Answer

1973, when the Whitlam government removed race as a factor in immigration selection.

Card 27example
Question

What happened after the Vietnam War ended in 1975 regarding immigration?

Answer

Australia accepted tens of thousands of Vietnamese 'boat people' refugees, the first major wave of Asian immigration under non-discriminatory rules.

Card 28definition
Question

What did the 1967 referendum actually achieve?

Answer

Over 90% Yes vote; gave the federal government power to legislate for Aboriginal people and included them in the census — not citizenship or land rights.

Card 29example
Question

What was the Wave Hill walk-off?

Answer

An 8-year strike (1966-75) by Gurindji stockmen demanding fair wages and return of traditional land, ending with Whitlam symbolically returning land in 1975.

Card 30concept
Question

What did the 1992 Mabo decision establish?

Answer

The High Court overturned terra nullius, recognising that Aboriginal peoples held native title to land before European colonisation.

Card 31definition
Question

What is the Waitangi Tribunal?

Answer

A body created in New Zealand in 1975 (powers extended in 1985) to investigate breaches of the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi and hear Māori land/resource claims.

Card 32comparison
Question

Compare Australia's and New Zealand's paths to Indigenous rights.

Answer

Australia had no treaty, so change came via referendum and courts (1967, Mabo 1992); New Zealand had the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, so change came via enforcing/reinterpreting it (Waitangi Tribunal, 1975).

Card 33definition
Question

What was the ANZUS Treaty (1951)?

Answer

A mutual-defence pact between Australia, New Zealand, and the USA, marking the shift from Britain to America as the region's protector.

Card 34definition
Question

What was SEATO (1954)?

Answer

The South East Asia Treaty Organisation — a wider Cold War alliance (AUS, NZ, USA, UK, France, Thailand, Philippines, Pakistan) aimed at containing communism after France's defeat in Indochina.

Card 35process
Question

Why did New Zealand's ANZUS relationship with the USA fracture in the 1980s?

Answer

NZ's 1984-85 refusal to allow nuclear-armed/powered US ships to dock led the US to suspend its ANZUS defence obligations to NZ in 1986.

Card 36process
Question

What historical process explains the shift from Britain to the USA as protector?

Answer

Japan's WWII advance (fall of Singapore 1942) proved Britain could not defend the region, pushing Australia and NZ toward reliance on US power, formalised in ANZUS and SEATO.

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IB History (2028+) HL Topic 12.4 Flashcards | Indigenous societies and national identity in Australia and New Zealand (c.1770–2020) | Aimnova | Aimnova