Timeline of Anarchism in Oceania

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Revision as of 19:48, 28 June 2019 by imported>AlexJFrost
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This is a timeline of various political, legal, military, social, economic and environmental events that have occurred in Oceania (a region encompassing the states of Australia, Papua New Guinea, New Zealand, Fiji, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Samoa, Micronesia, Tonga, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Palau, Tuvalu, Nauru) that are relevant to libertarian socialism.

1900s

  • 1902: Prisoners at Fremantle Prison riot in protest of poor quality food.
  • 1908: American IWW activists help create partially self-managed workplaces among meat industry workers in Northern Queensland.

1910s

1920s

  • 1923: The police in Melbourne, Australia go on a three day strike which leads to the collapse of private property and the control of city streets by strikers.[2]
  • 1924: Dockworkers in Fremantle strike.
  • 1927: Indigenous Mau in Samoa begin a six-year campaign to resist occupation of the island by New Zealand.[3]

1930s

1940s

  • 1942: The Battle for Brisbane sees US and Australian soldiers fight as tensions had been raised.
  • 1942: The Townsville Mutiny occurs as black US soldiers attempt to kill their white commanders in response to racial abuse in Australia.
  • 1943: The Maasina Ruru movement for indigenous and workers rights on the Solomon Islands begins.
  • 1943: Soldiers from the Torres Strait Islands hold a sit-down strike for equal pay and greater rights.[5]
  • 1943: The Battle of Manners Street occurs in Wellington, New Zealand between white US soldiers and Maori NZ soldiers over access to military social centers.
  • 1945: Dockworkers across Australia refuse to serve Dutch ships as a gesture of solidarity to the Indonesian Revolution.
  • 1947: Villagers with the Maasina Ruru begin to declare villages around the Solomon Islands autonomous from the British Empire and refuse to pay taxes or work on plantations or in factories.
  • 1948: Railworkers' across Queensland, Australia strike for better wages.
  • 1949: Coalminers' across Australia strike for for a 35-hour workweek and wage increases.

1950s

  • 1951: Dockworkers in New Zealand attempt to strike for a 15% wage increase, but is defeated, marking the end of militant unionism in New Zealand.
  • 1956: Dockworkers in Fremantle, Western Australia, begin a strike in protest of a lack of wage increases.
  • 1959: Oilworkers' in Fiji strike for higher wages.[6]

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

  • 2001: Environmentalists occupy a nuclear power plant in Sydney, Australia, leading to a slow-down of operations at the site.[9]
  • 2001: The Hat Factory is squatted in Sydney, Australia serving as a shelter for homeless people, domestic violence survivors and mentally ill people.
  • 2005: Government workers in Tonga strike to win massive wage increases and democratic reforms.[10]

2010s

See Also

References