New South Wales
- An Act to provide for the
Care and Education of Infants who may be convicted of Felony or
Misdemeanour 1849
Where a child under the age of 19 is
convicted, court may assign care and custody of the child to such persons
as make application where the court is satisfied it is for the benefit of
the child. Repealed by Infants Conviction
Act 1901.
- State Children Relief Act
1881
Established State Children's Relief Board. `Boarding out'
officers may remove children from charitable institutions and arrange for
them to be boarded out in licensed homes. Regulations may be made
prescribing terms and conditions upon which State children may be
`adopted' by fit persons. Repealed by
State Children Relief Act 1901.
- Protection of Children Act
1892
Unlawful for certain persons without a written order of a
Justice of the Peace to receive into care a child under the age of three
`to adopt, rear, nurse or otherwise raise for payment'. Repealed by Children's Protection Act
1902.
- Custody of Children and
Children's Settlements Act 1894
Where a parent applies for an
order for the return of a child the court may refuse the order where it is
of the opinion that the parent has abandoned or deserted or neglected the
child or otherwise so conducted himself or herself that the court should
refuse to enforce the parent's right to custody; or where the tender age
or state of health of the child render it expedient that the child should
remain with the child's mother or some other person. Repealed by Infants Custody and Settlements
Act 1899.
- Infants Custody and
Settlements Act 1899
Similar to 1894 Act. Repealed by Children's Protection Act
1902.
- Infant Convicts Adoption Act
1901
Where an infant under 19 years is convicted of a felony or
misdemeanour, the court may assign the care or custody of the child to an
applicant willing to take charge of him and provide for his maintenance if
judged to be for infant's benefit. Repealed by Child Welfare Act
1939.
- State Children Relief Act
1901
Established State Children's Relief Board with authority to
direct the removal of State children; grant licences for the reception of
State children as boarders; apprentice any child; approve persons applying
to `adopt' State children; and arrange terms of `adoption'. Boarding out
officer may remove State child from asylum, reformatory school, and
arrange for a child to be boarded out. Repealed by Child Welfare Act
1923.
- Children's Protection Act
1902
An offence for any person to receive a child under three to
adopt, rear, nurse or otherwise maintain for payment a child, other than a
guardian, manager or officer of an institution or private charity or a
person exempted by Minister. An offence also to neglect or ill-treat a
child. A child so found may be boarded out, sent to an industrial school
or committed to the care of a relation or other person. Repealed by Child Welfare Act
1923.
- Neglected Children and
Juvenile Offenders Act 1905
A `neglected' or `uncontrollable'
child may be apprehended and brought before a court which can release the
child on probation, commit the child to an institution until the age of 18
years or to the care of a willing person. A child in an institution may be
apprenticed in accordance with the Apprentices Act 1901. Repealed by Child Welfare Act
1923.
- Aborigines Protection Act
1909
This Act gave the Board for the Protection of Aborigines
statutory powers in relation to all reserves. Duty of the Board to provide
for the custody, maintenance and education of the children of
`aborigines'. Board may apprentice `the child of any aborigine or the
neglected child of any person apparently having an admixture of aboriginal
blood in his veins' subject to the Apprentices Act 1901. (The Apprentices
Act 1901 provided for a minimum age of 14 years for apprentices and
regulated the terms and conditions of apprenticeships.) The Board vested
with power over all reserves including power to remove people from them.
Entry onto reserves by non-Aborigines forbidden. Regulations may be made
for the care, custody and education of Aborigines and prescribing the
conditions on which certain children may be apprenticed under the
Act.
- Aborigines Protection
Amending Act 1915
Removed the
requirement that an Aboriginal child had to be found to be neglected
before the Board could remove him/her. `The Board may assume full control
and custody of the child of any aborigine, if after due inquiry it is
satisfied that such a course is in the interest of the moral or physical
welfare of such child' and remove such child to such control and care as
it thinks best. Parents of a child removed in this way may appeal to a
court. Apprenticeship of children by the Board no longer subject to the
Apprentices Act 1901. The Board may apprentice children `on such terms and
conditions as it may think under the circumstances of the case to be
desirable'. Every child so apprenticed who refuses to go to the person to
whom the Board has apprenticed him/her may be removed, for the purpose of
being trained, to some home or institution as the Board may arrange. Repealed by Aborigines Act
1969.
Governor Macquarie: Proclamation dated
4 May 1816
Aborigines declared subject to the protection
of British law, but any infractions may render them outlawed and lead to
loss of privileges.
- Aborigines Protection
(Amendment) Act 1918
Provisions in
1909 Act giving Board power over a person `apparently having an admixture
of aboriginal blood in his veins' removed. Repealed by Aborigines Act 1969.
-
Child Welfare Act 1923
Court given similar power as in 1905 Act
to commit a `neglected' or `uncontrollable' child. All children committed
to or inmates of an institution in the custody are under the control of
the superintendent of the institution until they attain the age of 18 or
are discharged, removed, apprenticed or placed out. A child may be adopted
if the child's parents or guardian consent. Consent may be dispensed with
if the court is of the opinion that the parent or guardian has deserted or
abandoned the child. Amended by Child Welfare (Amendment) Act 1924 - court
may dispense with consent in any special circumstances where it deems it
expedient to do so. Repealed by Child
Welfare Act 1939.
- Aborigines
Protection (Amendment) Act 1936
Court
may order the removal of an `aborigine' who is `living in insanitary or
undesirable conditions' to a reserve or a place controlled by the Board or
to the State from whence he/she came. Repealed by Aborigines Act 1969.
-
Child Welfare Act 1939
Replaced the Child Welfare Act 1923.
Where a court finds that a child is neglected it may release the child on
certain conditions; commit the child to the care of the Minister to be
dealt with as a State ward or commit the child to the care of an
institution. The Minister of Child Welfare is the guardian `of every
child...who becomes a ward to the exclusion of the parent or other
guardian'. Minister may direct the removal or transfer of any ward; remove
any child from any charitable institution, depot, home or hostel and cause
him/her to be apprenticed, boarded out, placed out or placed as an adopted
boarder. An adoption order may be made if it promotes the welfare and
interests of child. Parents or guardian must consent to adoption but
consent may be dispensed with where the court deems it just and reasonable
to do so. Amended by Child Welfare Amendment Act 1961 - where payment of
maintenance for child who is an inmate of a charitable depot, home or
hostel has not been paid for 1-6 months, the child may be admitted to
State control and the person in charge of the charitable depot, home or
hostel deemed to be the child's foster parent. Child Welfare (Amendment)
Act 1966 - where it appears to an officer or person in charge of a depot,
home or hostel that the welfare of the child may be promoted, the child
may be committed by a court to the care of Minister to be dealt with as a
ward admitted to State control; apprenticed, boarded out, placed out or
placed as an adopted boarder. Repealed by
Children (Care and Protection) Act 1987.
-
Aborigines Protection (Amendment) Act 1940
Aborigines Protection Board replaced by
Aborigines Welfare Board. An Aboriginal child found to be neglected under
the Child Welfare Act 1939 to be committed to the Board as a `ward of the
Board'. Duties of the Board include `assisting aborigines in obtaining
employment' and `maintaining or assisting to maintain them whilst so
employed, or otherwise for the purpose of assisting aborigines to become
assimilated into the general life of the community'. The Board no longer
has duty of education of Aboriginal children but still has duty of custody
and maintenance. It may establish homes for the reception, maintenance,
education and training of wards. Where in the opinion of the Board a ward
is not ready for employment or apprenticeship `the ward may be placed in a
home for the purpose of being maintained, educated and trained'. Wages of
children to be paid to the Board and kept in a trust account for use by
the Board for the ward's benefit until the ward turns 21. An offence to
try to communicate with a ward in a home or enter any such home without
the consent of the Board. Where a children's court finds that a child is
neglected or uncontrollable under the Child Welfare Act, the court may
deal with the child in accordance with that Act, except that where the
court decides that the child should be admitted to State control the child
shall be committed to the care of the Board as a ward; and where the court
decides to commit the child to an institution the child shall be committed
to an institution established under this Act. Repealed by Aborigines Act 1969.
-
Aborigines Protection (Amendment) Act 1943
The Board may issue (and cancel) exemption
certificates whereby an Aboriginal person `shall be deemed not to be an
aborigine or a person apparently having an admixture of aboriginal blood'.
The Board may board-out children admitted to its control. Once an
Aboriginal child has attained the minimum school leaving age the child is
to be apprenticed or placed in employment. The Board is the authority in
relation to children admitted to its control with power over removal and
transfer of wards, apprenticing wards and approving custody of wards. Repealed by Aborigines Act
1969.
- Aborigines Protection
(Amendment) Act 1963
Repeal of provisions allowing a magistrate
to send `mixed blood' Aboriginal people to a place controlled by the
Board; and those which made it an offence to take an adult Aboriginal
person away from NSW and for non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal people to live
together. Repealed by Aborigines Act
1969.
- Aborigines Act
1969
Abolition of Aborigines Welfare Board. Aboriginal children
under the care of the Aborigines Welfare Board to become wards of the
State. Aboriginal children's institutions deemed to be depots under the
Child Welfare Act 1939 and subsequent child welfare legislation. After
Aboriginal Protection (Amendment) Act 1940, Aboriginal children were
removed under the Child Welfare Act 1939 and subsequent child welfare
legislation.
- Adoption of Children Act
1965
The welfare and interests of child are the paramount
consideration. In making an adoption order the Court may dispense with
consent if a person cannot be found or identified; the person is not
capable of properly considering the question; the person is unfit to
discharge the obligations of parent or guardian having abandoned,
deserted, neglected or ill treated a child; the person failed to discharge
obligations of parent or guardian; or there are any other special
circumstances by reason of which consent may be dispensed with. Amended by
Adoption of Children Amendment 1966 - court power to dispense with consent
due to `other special circumstances' removed. Court may dispense with
consent where the interests and welfare of child are promoted by the
adoption order.
Adoption of Children (Amendment) Act 1980 -
established the Adoption Tribunal.
- Children (Care and
Protection) Act 1987
Introduced Aboriginal Child Placement
Principle. Concept of `neglect' replaced by `behaviour that harms the
child'.
- Community Welfare Act
1987
The objects of community welfare legislation include the
promotion of the welfare of Aborigines on the basis of a recognition of
Aboriginal culture, identity, community structures and standards, the
rights of Aborigines to raise and protect their own children and to be
involved in decision making processes that affect them and their
children.
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