"People the North": nation-building in 1960s Australia

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
McGregor, Russell
Abstract

The People the North Committee, founded in Townsville in 1962, was true to its name. It wanted to treble the population of northern Australia in a decade. Putting people before profits, the committee insisted that Australians had a moral obligation to prolifically populate their northern lands. Neither the ambition nor the rationale was new. In fact, the People the North Committee was the last gasp of a grand demographic aspiration that went back more than a hundred years. Thereafter, through to the present day, proposals for northern development have prioritised economic over demographic gains: profits before people. This article examines the ambitions and advocacy of the People the North Committee, setting them in the longer historical trajectory of the aspiration to people the north. In doing so, it offers a window onto a neglected facet of the nation-building project in Australia.

Journal

Australian Journal of Politics and History

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Volume

65

ISBN/ISSN

1467-8497

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Issue

2

Pages Count

15

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Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

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Publisher Location

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Publish Date

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Date

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1111/ajph.12565