Welcome to the upgraded BRAC University Institutional Repository. We are currently organizing collections after a recent system upgrade. Homepage category counters may temporarily show lower numbers while syncing, but over 27,000 repository items remain safe and accessible. Please use the search bar to find theses, scholarly outputs, and institutional documents.

Mackay revisited: the case of Javanese-Australian Muslims, 1880-1999

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Publisher

© 2007 Scalabrini Migration Center.

Citation

Kabir, N. (2007). Mackay revisited: The case of javanese-australian muslims, 1880-1999. Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 16(3), 405-424. doi:10.1177/011719680701600305

Abstract

The development of Queensland's sugar industry in the nineteenth century led to an influx of non-European laborers, such as Melanesians, Cingalese and Javanese. Years later, under the Immigration Restriction Act, 1901, many Asian people were expelled from Australia, but some Javanese remained in Mackay. This paper examines the Javanese settlement pattern during the colonial, "White Australia," and multicultural periods in terms of race, ethnicity, culture and religion. These accounts were derived largely from interviews with Australia-born second, third and fourth generation Muslims of Javanese origin in Mackay.

Description

This article was published in the Asian and Pacific Migration Journal [© 2007 Scalabrini Migration Center.] and the definite version is available at http://doi.org/10.1177/011719680701600305. The Article's website is at https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/011719680701600305.

Type

Article