The White Australia
Policy
by Keith Windschuttle
Academic historians
today argue that Australia’s immigration policy was once so shamefully racist
it was comparable to South Africa under apartheid. They claim all the new white
settler societies established under the British Empire in Africa, the Pacific
and North America shared the same racist attitudes towards outsiders and
dispensed the same degree of violence against indigenous peoples. Some
historians label these societies ‘herrenvolk democracies’, making a direct comparison with
the ‘master race’ nationalism of Nazi Germany. They say the White Australia
Policy originated in sentiments of ‘blood and race’ and that the policy
represented a ‘messianic pursuit of racial purity’. Academics also claim the
most dominant racial concept in nineteenth century Australia was Social
Darwinism, the most brutal of all the theories about race that emerged at the
time.
However, the new book by
Keith Windschuttle, The White Australia
Policy, finds that these historians fundamentally mistake the Australian
character, Australian nationalism and the reasons for the introduction of the
White Australia Policy. The formal legislation of the policy was the
Immigration Restriction Bill of 1901, which provided a dictation test in a
European language as the requirement for immigration. It was preceded by a
series of entry taxes on Chinese immigration and a continuing debate over the
legitimacy of importing large numbers of Melanesian labourers
to work the sugar fields of Queensland. Windschuttle argues that none of this
even remotely resembled the racial policies of South Africa and Germany.
Windschuttle finds that Australia is not, and never has been, the racist
country its academic historians have condemned.
The author: Keith Windschuttle is a
Sydney writer and publisher whose previous books include The Killing of History: How Literary Critics and Social Theorists are
Murdering Our Past, now in its fourth edition since 1994, and The Fabrication of Aboriginal History: Volume
One, Van Diemen’s Land 1803–1847, now in its
third reprint since 2002. He is a frequent contributor to Quadrant, Sydney, and the New
Criterion, New York. From the 1970s to the 1990s he was a lecturer in
Australian history at the NSW Institute of Technology (now UTS) and the
University of New South Wales. He has also been a university lecturer in social
policy and journalism.
Publication information
Publication date: December 6, 2004
Recommended retail price: $34.95 (inc.GST)
Paperback, 370 pp, illustrations, notes,
bibliography, index
ISBN 1 876492 11 2
Publisher: Macleay Press, PO Box 477, Paddington
NSW 2021
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