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The Embryo-Politics of New Guinea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2014

Extract

AUSTRALIA ADMINISTERS THE GREATER PART OF THE NUMEROUS mountainous, volcanic, jungle-clad tropical islands to its north, collectively called New Guinea. Indonesia administers the lesser part west of the 141st meridian. There are about two and a quarter million people in the ‘Australian’ part, of whom only 35,000 are not indigenous Papuans or Melanesians. One-third of the population live in Papua, the more southerly section, which has been an Australian Territory since 1906; two-thirds in ‘New Guinea’, administered by Australia as a mandate since 1921, and a Trust Territory since 1946, when unified control of the two Territories under a single Administrator was confirmed by the Trusteeship agreement. The Australian administration has engaged in an active programme of economic and political development only since the end of the war with Japan (a good part of which was waged in the Territory).

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © Government and Opposition Ltd 1970

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References

1 According to informed opinion, this is a better guess than the 1966 census figure of 92–27 per cent of ‘Christians’ among the indigenous population (Population Census: 1966, 28).

2 Brown, Paula, ‘Social Change and Social Movements’ in Fisk, E. K. (ed.), New Guinea on the Threshold, Canberra, 1966, pp. 150–1.Google Scholar

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6 A. L. Epstein (personal communication).

7 Cf. I. Grosart, ‘Movement in the House’, New Guinea, I, 1, March/April 1965; ‘Native Members in the Legislative Council of the Territory of Papua and New Guinea, 1951–63’, Journal of Pacific History, I, 1966. Hughes, Colin A., ‘The Development of the Legislature: the Legislative Councils’ in Bettison, D. G., Hughes, C. A., van der Veur, P. (cds.), The Papua-New Guinea Elections, 1964, Canberra, 1965, pp. 1011 Google Scholar, 27; Lynch, C. J., ‘Appointed Members in the Legislative Council for Papua and New Guinea’, APSA Nelvs, VII, 3, 08 1962 Google Scholar; ‘Non-official Amendments to Bills in Papua and New Guinea’, APSA News, VIII, 1, May 1963; ‘Private Bills and Private Members’ Bills in the Legislative Council for Papua and New Guinea’, APSA News IX, 4, December 1964; R. S. Parker, ‘The Advancc to Responsible Government’ in E. K. Fisk (ed.) New Guinea on the Threshold; Sloan, B. P., ‘The Uncommitted Vote in the Legislative Council for Papua and New Guinca’, APSA News, VII, 4, 11 1962 Google Scholar; Wolfers, E., ‘Politics and the House’, New Guinea, II, 1, 03/04 1967 Google Scholar; 2, June/July 1967; N. Meller, Papers on the Papua-New Guinea House of Assembly, New Guinea Research Bulletin, No. 22, New Guinea Research Unit, Australian National University, January 1968.

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