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A Natural Hulk: Australia’s Carceral Islands in the Colonial Period, 1788–1901

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 June 2018

Katherine Roscoe*
Affiliation:
Institute of Historical Research, University of London Senate House, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HU, UK
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Abstract

During the British colonial period, at least eleven islands off the coast of Australia were used as sites of “punitive relocation” for transported European convicts and Indigenous Australians. This article traces the networks of correspondence between the officials and the Colonial Office in London as they debated the merits of various offshore islands to incarcerate different populations. It identifies three roles that carceral islands served for colonial governance and economic expansion. First, the use of convicts as colonizers of strategic islands for territorial and commercial expansion. Second, to punish transported convicts found guilty of “misconduct” to maintain order in colonial society. Third, to expel Indigenous Australians who resisted colonization from their homeland. It explores how, as “colonial peripheries”, islands were part of a colonial system of punishment based around mobility and distance, which mirrored in microcosm convict flows between the metropole and the Australian colonies.

Figure 0

Figure 1 Australia’s Carceral Islands, 1788–1901, with insets of Sydney Harbour and the Western Australian coast.

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