Tasmania: Provisions of the legislations
- Industrial Schools Act 1867
Repealed by Youthful Offenders, Destitute and
Neglected Children's Act 1896.
- The Prevention of Cruelty to and Better
Protection of Children Act 1895
Repealed by Infants' Welfare
Act 1935.
- Youthful Offenders, Destitute and Neglected
Children's Act 1896
Repealed
by The Children of the State Act 1918.
- Infant Life Protection Act 1907
Repealed by The Children of the State Act
1918.
- Cape Barren Island Reserve Act 1912
An Act `to provide for the subdivision of the Cape Barren Island
reserve and for occupation of portion thereof by the descendants of
Aboriginal natives'. Secretary for Lands responsible for promoting welfare
and well-being of residents of the reserve. Cape Barren Island reserve,
which was created in 1881, to be subdivided into homestead and
agricultural blocks. Persons named in schedule and their widows and
descendants may make application for licences to occupy land free of rent.
Residents required to reside continuously in their houses for six months
each year. Licences may be bequeathed to widow or descendants but if widow
who is a licensee marries `a white man' all her rights to the licence
cease. Persons over 21 years who are not licensed occupiers or lessees may
be removed from reserve. `In order to encourage the settlement of the
half-castes in other parts of Tasmania outside the Reserve' an applicant
may be granted a licence to occupy Crown land elsewhere in Tasmania.
Regulations may be made for the control of residents upon the reserve. Repealed by Cape Barren Island Reserve
Act 1945.
- The Children of the State Act 1918
Repealed by Infants' Welfare
Act 1935.
- Adoption of Children Act 1920
Provided for the legal adoption of children under the age of 17
years for the first time in Tasmania. Police magistrates given the power
to make an adoption order but the Registrar-General may also exercise the
power. The written consent of parents or legal guardian required unless
the child is a child of the State or a `deserted child'. A deserted child
is `any child who, in the opinion of a police magistrate, is deserted and
has ceased to be cared for and maintained by its parents or by such one of
them as is living'. Amended by Adoption
of Children Act 1941 - age of a `child' for adoption raised to 21
years. Adoption of Children Act
1945 - if a police magistrate is satisfied that the parents or
guardian of a child are dead or their whereabouts are unknown for not less
than five years or it is impracticable to obtain the consent of the
parents or legal guardian and that it is in the interests of the child to
do so, the police magistrate may make an adoption order without their
consent. Repealed by Adoption of Children
Act 1968.
- Infants Welfare Act 1935
`An Act to
consolidate and amend the Law relating to Welfare of Children and the
Protection of Infant Life'. A child may be apprehended as neglected and
detained in a receiving home or other specified place to be taken before a
children's court. The court may commit a neglected or uncontrollable child
to the care of the Social Services Department or to an institution. Where
a child is charged with being neglected or uncontrollable, the parents
have a right to be heard, but if the parents do not appear the court can
hear the matter without them. A child may also be admitted to the care of
the director on the application of his/her parent or near relative or any
person of good repute to be dealt with in the same way as a neglected or
uncontrollable child. The Director of Social Services is the guardian of
every child of the State and may place a child in a receiving home or in
an institution; board-out, apprentice or place the child in service; or
place the child in the custody of a suitable person. An offence to
wilfully ill-treat, neglect, abandon or expose a child; communicate with a
child in an institution; or, being a near relative liable to maintain a
child, to desert the child or leave the child without adequate means of
support. Repealed by Child Welfare Act
1960.
- Cape Barren Island Reserve Act 1945
Islanders required to develop and cultivate land on Cape Barren
Island within the following 5 years or it reverts to the
Crown.Surveyor-General to `manage and regulate the use and enjoyment of
the Reserve' and `exercise a general supervision and care over all matters
affecting the interests and welfare of the residents of the Reserve'.
Leases to contain covenants that lessor will make substantial improvements
to the land, fence and cultivate the land and that his wife and family
will reside on it for at least nine months per year. Lessee may bequeath
lease to a member of his family, which comprises only his wife and
children, living on the reserve at the time of death. Any person over the
age of 21 who is not a lessee, or the son of a lessee who is permanently
employed by and receiving wages from a lessee, may be removed from the
reserve. Regulations may be made for the peace, order and good government
of the reserve. Expired 1951.
- Domestic Assistance Services Act 1947
Established a domestic assistance service to assist in homes
where the mother is unable to undertake `ordinary domestic duties by
reason of pregnancy or maternity, or by reason of accident, sickness or
infirmity of any kind' or where the lack of domestic assistance service in
the home is a cause of hardship.'
- Child Welfare Act 1960
Replaced the
1935 Act. Under this Act honorary child welfare officers may be appointed.
In 1966 there was an honorary child welfare officer appointed on Flinders
Island. Children's court may declare a child found to be neglected, or
brought before it `on the application of a parent, guardian or relative of
the child or a person of good repute having the care and custody of the
child', to be a ward or make a supervision order which requires the child
to be under the supervision of a child welfare officer or probation
officer. Amended by Child Welfare Act
1963 - deleted the power of a `person of good repute' to apply for
a child to be made a ward.
- Adoption of Children Act 1968
Consolidated and amended the previous laws relating to
adoption. The Registrar-General may no longer exercise the powers of a
police magistrate in relation to adoption. Before an adoption order is
made a report must be made regarding the proposed adoption by the
Department of Social Welfare or an approved private adoption agency. The
welfare and interests of the child must be served by the adoption. The
only agency approved under this Act was the Catholic Private Adoption
Agency. Repealed by Adoption of Children
Act 1988.
- Child Protection Act 1974
Where it
appears to a court that a child under 12 years may have suffered injury as
a result of cruel treatment the magistrate may order that the child be
taken to a `place of safety' for up to 30 days. Application may be heard
ex parte. Where a court is satisfied that the child has also suffered
injury through ill treatment the magistrate may declare the child to be a
ward of the State.
- Adoption of Children Act 1988
Replaced 1968 Act. Includes provisions enabling adult adoptees
to obtain information about themselves.
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