The resentment that the whites had against the Chinese was fuelled by perceptions held by the former about the latter being a threat to their jobs. According to Racism No Way (2013), the non-white people were willing to accept lower wages and lower living and working conditions, hence meaning that they were too competitive for the white workers. In other words, the White Australia policy was meant to clear competition for British workers in Australia. Robertson, K., Hohmann, J. & Stewart, I. (2005). Dictating to one of ‘us’: The migration of Mrs Freer.
Macquarie Law Journal 5, 241-275. In this primary source, Robertson, Hohmann and Stewart (2012) argue that the White Australia policy was not only meant to keep Australia’s population homogenously European, but also predominantly British. The article looks at the case of one Mrs Freer who appealed against the dictation test that had earlier denied her entry into Australia. In this article, the writers indicate that the main reason for the White Australia policy was to enforce a racial bar, without explicitly mentioning race.
According to Robertson et al. (2005), the policy was meant to preserve the purity of the European race and their equality in standards of living. Specifically, the authors indicate that between the Pacific Islanders and the white men, there was a perceived ineradicable difference both in character and human stature and hence the white people did not want to integrate with their ‘coloured’ counterparts. Stephenson, P. (2007). The Outsiders within: Telling Australia’s indigenous-Asian story.
Sydney, NSW: New South Publishing. In this secondary source, Stephenson (2007) indicates that the White Australia policy was designed and enacted to serve two functions; the first function was to prohibit non-Europeans from entering Australia, while the second function was to prohibit Aborigines from intermarrying with Islanders. Through the two functions, the White population was trying to secure a homogenous white population in Australia. According to Stephenson (2007), the White Australia policy was driven by anxiety among the white population in Australia, because they allegedly knew that the Asian population had a collective desire to “take Australia for themselves.
by infiltrating the country.wrestling control” (p. 10). Stephenson (2007) further notes that the White Australia policy was to a great part inspired by the fear that whites had towards “being ‘swamped’ by outsiders” (p. 7). Stephenson notes that the growth of the Chinese population in Australia was especially alarming to the white population since it had grown to 30,000 people from 1848 to 1900. In some territories (e.g. the Northern Territory), the Chinese had outnumbered the indigenous populations and white settlers.
Griffiths, P. G. (2006). The making of white Australia: Ruling class agendas, 1876-1888. Retrieved September 16, 2013, from http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:265385/Griffiths_thesis.pdf This thesis, which is another secondary source, argues that the White Australia policy was not inspired by working-class mobilisation or working-class racism, but by three major objectives namely: a need by Anglo-Australians to colonise the continent; a need to develop a modern labour economy in the continent; and the need to have a homogenous population.
Griffith further notes that there is an inadequate literature investigation as to the reasons why the White Australia policy was enacted. Griffith however acknowledges that the policy was a result of an alliance formed among small employers, the self-employed and political organisations representing the white working class population, since they perceived Chinese labour as a threat. The thesis concludes by noting that a ruling class policy that intended to construct a homogenous population, drawn predominantly from a British background formed a major reason why Australia introduced the White Australia policy in 1901.
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