Aboriginal survey, New South Wales and South Australia, 1965: File h
The object of the surveys, conducted in New South Wales and South Australia in 1965, was to gain some idea of the social and economic situation of persons identifying as Aboriginal in the more closely settled regions of Australia.
Data on households covered household composition, including sex of head of household, visitors, duration of residence, location of dwelling, type of dwelling, land ownership, rent and payments, details of type of construction, facilities, utilities, furnishings and appliances, consumer durables and books/musical instruments, interior and exterior care and maintenance and whether dwellings condemned.
Data on individuals included housing, age, sex, marital status, race,
relationship to household head, recent absences from home, illnesses, physical disabilities, medical advice sought, medical insurance cover,
whether a ward of an organisation, hospital admissions, employment,
education, sources of income and membership of community organisations.
Females were asked, in addition, about pregnancies, miscarriages, stillbirths and surviving offspring, attendance at pre-natal and baby health clinics and location of other relatives.
Males were asked about dependent children; military service; time spent in government institutions; ownership of vehicles, tools of trade, house, real estate, shares, livestock, insurance policies and property; and about trade union membership and hire purchase.
Dataset ID:
au.edu.anu.ada.ddi.00102-h
Document Description The Document Description consists of bibliographic information describing the DDI-compliant document itself as a whole.
Document Title:
Aboriginal survey, New South Wales and South Australia, 1965: File h
Document ID:
au.edu.anu.ada.ddi.00102-h
Production Production Place:
Australian Data Archive 18 Balmain Crescent Canberra ACT 0200
Copyright:
Copyright © 2005, The Australian National University. All rights reserved.
Bibliographic Citation:
Rowley, C. Aboriginal survey, New South Wales and South Australia, 1965 [computer file]. Canberra: Australian Data Archive, The Australian National University, .
Study Description The Study Description consists of information about the data collection, study, or compilation that the DDI-compliant documentation file describes. This section includes information about how the study should be cited, who collected or compiled the data, who distributes the data, keywords about the content of the data, summary (abstract) of the content of the data, data collection methods and processing, etc. Note that some content of the Study Description's Citation -- e.g., Responsibility Statement -- may be identical to that of the Documentation Citation. This is usually the case when the producer of a data collection also produced the print or electronic codebook for that data collection.
Other Identifications / Acknowledgements
Production Copyright:
Copyright © 2005, The Australian National University. All rights reserved.
Distribution Contact Persons:
Rowley, C. D.<br />
Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies<br />
Kendall Street<br />
Acton, ACT 2601
Affiliation:
Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies
Depositor:
Rowley, C. D.<br />
Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies<br />
Kendall Street<br />
Acton, ACT 2601
Affiliation:
Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies
Version Statement Responsibility Statement:
Methodology Time Method:
panel study<br />
<br />
This is the first of a two wave study.
Sampling Procedure:
non-probability sample<br />
<br />
The New South Wales survey was aimed at covering the State as a whole, except for Sydney. For reasons of time, costs and mobility of the population, no sampling of dwellings throughout the State was attempted. The method of selection was first to ascertain, within an area centred in a country town, the number of houses occupied by Aborigines. The houses were classified according to tenure under which the land on which they stood was held. As nearly as possible, one-third of dwellings in each category was then chosen for interview. Where there were two or three dwellings in a small township, one was selected for interview. The aim was to achieve a fairly representative section within each of the five area divisions. Attention was also paid to overall numbers, as far as they could be established, living in the different land tenure situations. Care was taken to avoid country towns which had, in the recent past, been centres of demonstrations, partly to avoid suspicion being cast on the researchers enquiries and mainly because the risk of understatement was preferred to that of exaggeration.<br />
<br />
In the South Australian component selection of areas was determined largely by locations where assistance from the Departments of Geography and Social Studies of the University of Adelaide was available. There was, nonetheless, good reason for selecting the Eyre Peninsula and some hinterland townships tied by rail or road to the main centres, because the results shed some light on the effects of Aboriginal living standards of urbanisation in a newly industrialised region. Interviews were conducted with twenty-four non-Aboriginal families living nextdoor or adjacent to Aborigines who had been interviewed.
Data Access Citation Requirements:
All manuscripts based in whole or in part on these data should:
(i) identify the data and original investigators by using the recommended bibliographic reference to the data file
(ii) acknowledge the Australian Data Archive and, where the data are made available through the Australian Data Archive by another archive, acknowledge that archive;
Rowley, C. Aboriginal survey, New South Wales and South Australia, 1965 [computer file]. Canberra: Australian Data Archive, The Australian National University, .
(iii) declare that those who carried out the original analysis and collection of the data bear no responsibility for the further analysis or interpretation of them.
Deposit Requirements:
In order to assemble essential information about archival resources and to facilitate the exchange of information about users research activities, individuals are required to email ADA (ada@anu.edu.au) with the bibliographic details and, where available, online links to any published work (including journal articles, books or book chapters, conference presentations, theses or any other publications or outputs) based wholly or in part on the material.
Disclaimer:
Use of the material is solely at the user's risk. The depositor, The Australian National University and the Australian Data Archive shall not be held responsible for the accuracy and completeness of the material supplied.
Other Study Materials Related Publications:
Rowley, Charles D. Outcasts in white Australia. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1972.
Rowley, Charles D. The Aboriginal householder. Quadrant, 11, 1967, pp.
90-96.