Invasion Day

Miranda Korzy, who wasÌýelected as a Greens councillor to the Northern Beaches Council, will not be celebrating Australia Day. Rachel Evans reports.

Gooniyandi womanÌýVivian Podesser Malo was a courageous fighter for justice, writes Sue Bolton.

This year's Invasion DayÌýcoincides with the 50th anniversary of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy. Here is a list of events that will be held to mark the occasion and protest ongoing oppression of First Nations peoples.

This year marks 30 years of Â鶹´«Ã½. Its longevity comes down to it being a people-powered project. With its expanding multimedia platforms, there's room for you too, writes Peter Boyle.

Rachel Evans writesÌý10,000 people streamed into Sydney DomainÌýfor the Invasion Day rally, it became very clear the NSW government had overplayed its hand — again,.

Tens of thousands have turned out around the country for Invasion Day protests, reports Kerry Smith.

The Prime Minister's pitiful one word change to the national anthem is a meaningless symbolic change that aims to bolster nationalism, argueÌýMarianne Mackay and Alex Bainbridge.

Find out what Invasion Day protests and events are happening across Australia on January 26 and how you can participate.

Zebedee Parkes reports that bigÌýnumbersÌýjoined Invasion Day protests across Australia on January 26, making them the largest in recent years.

A list of Invasion Day protests and events happening across Australia on January 26.

Several hundred people from the Yuin nation and their supporters gathered next to the fishing trawler wharf for Survival Day on January 26 and listened to poetry, rock bands and several solo musicians including a didgeridoo player.

Organiser Rodney Kelly told Â鶹´«Ã½ Weekly he wanted to bring the NSW South Coast Aboriginal and the wider community together to promote the South Coast Aboriginal community, its history and what it means to be Aboriginal in the region.

Celebrating January 26 is a state-sanctioned exercise that rubs salt into the wounds of Indigenous Australia. It proclaims, “You lost, we won. Know your place.â€

But the desire for an honest conversation about modern Australia's origins in the violent and ongoing dispossession of Indigenous people is not going away.

Across the country Invasion Day marches were both bigger than ever, and took place in many more places. More local governments have dropped their January 26 activities and finally the ABC allowed Triple J to shift its Hottest 100.