Wm. Matthew Kennedy
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Australians and famine in India
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This chapter is a study of Australian participation in Indian famine relief schemes from 1874 to 1901 and the marked shift in Australians’ perceived obligations to help famine victims in British India. Initially Australians responded by organizing or collaborating with private philanthropic initiatives based on claims to individual moral responsibility. However, by the end of the nineteenth century, Australian responses had changed: imperial famine relief was seen more as a public duty to the imperial system in general and to Australians’ fellow imperial subjects in India in particular. Some middle-class Australians had even come to view Indian famines as the product of India’s backward colonial governance and took action to remedy what they increasingly saw as the Raj’s failings or inability to protect their fellow citizens of empire from ruin. In changing their rationale and methods of participating in Indian famine relief, Australian men, women, and children placed new collective responsibilities on themselves to help less capable colonial governments achieve their common imperial mission. They did so not only because of still-felt individual moral duties, but also because of a growing sense of imperial citizenship, in which they had a peculiar role to play as ‘experts’ in mitigating famine and providing social amenity. The chapter reveals how, through these efforts, Australians asserted a position of moral leadership that they felt their vision of empire required.

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The imperial Commonwealth

Australia and the project of empire, 1867–1914

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