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‘That brotherhood may prevail’ : International House Brisbane, race and the humanitarian ethic in Cold War Australia

Piccini, Jon
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Abstract
International House opened its doors at the University of Queensland in early 1965 to an initial intake of some 66 residents, split between Australians and students from all over the Asia-Pacific and beyond. Based on college and governmental records, this article makes two arguments. Firstly, that the ‘everyday humanitarians’ in civil society organisations like Rotary International who championed International House at once critiqued and upheld colonial-era ideas towards Australia’s near neighbours. Secondly, that the students whom the college housed sat unsteadily between the two poles of humanitarian goodwill and developmental assistance that they were forced to inhabit, and indeed often rebelled against. In so doing, this article positions International House at the nexus of numerous discourses and practices associated with the Cold War and Australia’s geo-political position which muddied boundaries between altruistic assistance and politicised aid.
Keywords
history of humanitarianism, history of development, Australia and Asia, Australian history, international history
Date
2020
Type
Journal article
Journal
History Australia
Book
Volume
17
Issue
4
Page Range
695-710
Article Number
ACU Department
School of Arts and Humanities
Faculty of Education and Arts
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Source URL
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Open Access Status
License
All rights reserved
File Access
Controlled
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