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      Australia Day or Invasion Day? Perspectives on the Continuing Impact of Colonialism Underlies Public Contestations Around Australia's National Day

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      Political Psychology
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          The ways in which collective memories are constructed in the present is important in explaining how people choose to commemorate their nation's history. The present research focused on the context of Australia Day, a controversial national holiday that falls on January 26, which is a date that marks the beginning of colonization. We conducted field surveys of community members participating in an Invasion Day protest pushing for Indigenous rights ( n = 219) and community members enjoying the public holiday in a public park ( n = 174). We found that greater recognition of colonial history explained protesters' (vs. nonprotesters') greater support for changing the date of Australia Day. Further, protesters' lower levels of perceived continuity and higher levels of desired continuity of First Australian culture was linked to greater support for changing the date of Australia Day compared to the nonprotesters. These findings suggest that creating consensus over contested collective memories of a nation's history requires greater recognition of the ongoing impact of past atrocities.

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          Guilty by association: When one's group has a negative history.

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            ON THE COLONIALITY OF BEING

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              How the past weighs on the present: social representations of history and their role in identity politics.

              Socially shared representations of history have been important in creating, maintaining and changing a people's identity. Their management and negotiation are central to interethnic and international relations. We present a narrative framework to represent how collectively significant events become (selectively) incorporated in social representations that enable positioning of ethnic, national and supranational identities. This perspective creates diachronic (temporal) links between the functional (e.g. realistic conflict theory), social identity, and cognitive perspectives on intergroup relations. The charters embedded in these representations condition nations with similar interests to adopt different political stances in dealing with current events, and can influence the perceived stability and legitimacy of social orders. They are also instrumental in determining social identity strategies for reacting to negative social comparisons, and can influence the relationships between national and ethnic identities.
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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Political Psychology
                Political Psychology
                Wiley
                0162-895X
                1467-9221
                February 2023
                March 25 2022
                February 2023
                : 44
                : 1
                : 61-77
                Affiliations
                [1 ] The University of Queensland
                Article
                10.1111/pops.12818
                41818cb8-4435-4abd-81e5-9f696250e040
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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