Government and society

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Constitutional framework

The Constitution Act of 1889 granted self-government and a parliament to Western Australia. Since its promulgation in 1890 the constitution has been modified many times; the contemporary document consists of those sections of the original constitution that have remained unchanged and all subsequent amendments. The state government is seated in Perth, and Western Australians are represented at the federal level in Canberra.

The British crown is represented by a governor. The parliament, a bicameral body comprising a Legislative Council as its upper house and a Legislative Assembly as its lower house, constitutes the legislature of the state. Executive government is based on the cabinet system, led by a premier who represents the majority party (or coalition) in the legislature. A third tier, that of local government, functions through some 140 elected city, town, and shire (county) councils.

The state’s highest judicial body is the Supreme Court of Western Australia, which handles the most serious civil and criminal cases. There are also district courts and magistrate courts, as well as specialized courts for cases concerning families and children. Lower courts are bound by the rulings of higher ones; should a case remain unresolved by the Supreme Court, it is passed to the High Court of Australia, decisions from which cannot be appealed. The Federal Court of Australia also holds authority within the state.

The party system in Western Australia mirrors that of the federal level. Conservatives generally vote for the Liberal or National (previously Country) parties, and the left wing is represented by the Labor Party and such smaller parties as the Australian Democrats and the Greens. A compulsory proportional voting system gives independents and minor parties an opportunity to gain some legislative seats. Since the end of the 20th century, these smaller parties have typically held the balance of power in the upper house. It is rare for representatives to vote against the party line in either house.

Health and welfare

The federal and state government health authorities, together with boards of health under local governments, maintain health services and work to prevent and control infectious diseases. Basic public hospital services are provided free of charge, although many private facilities offer fee-based treatment. In addition to several large, full-service hospitals, most of which are in or near Perth, the state operates an extensive rural health system that provides medical care to Western Australians in smaller towns and remote regions. The federal Medicare program is supplemented by private health insurance schemes.

The federal government provides pensions and benefits, repatriation services, and, along with the state and hundreds of voluntary agencies, a wide range of welfare services. State agencies operate child welfare programs and distribute emergency relief in situations where federal assistance is unavailable. Employers are required by law to provide workers (and their families) with compensation for any injuries incurred in job-related activities.

Education

Education in Western Australia is compulsory from age 5 to 15, although an increasing number of children continue beyond the upper age. Most children are educated in government (public) schools, but a sizable number attend private schools, typically operated by religious institutions. For children of high-school age in rural areas, there is often no choice but to be sent to private boarding schools in the city. Primary-school children in rural areas, on the other hand, are bused to school. In remote pastoral and mining areas education is provided through the government-operated Schools of Isolated and Distance Education (SIDE). The SIDE program consists of a primary and secondary school in Leederville and several Schools of the Air—centres that conduct lessons largely through telecommunications media—at Carnarvon, Derby, Kalgoorlie, Meekatharra, and Port Hedland.

Some two dozen institutions in Western Australia offer post-secondary courses. Of these, four are federally funded but state-legislated universities, all located in the Perth metropolitan region: the University of Western Australia (1911), Murdoch University (1973), Curtin University of Technology (1987; formerly the Western Australian Institute of Technology), and the multicampus Edith Cowan University (1991; formerly the Western Australian College of Advanced Education). The privately funded University of Notre Dame opened in 1992. Government-owned Technical and Further Education (TAFE) institutes provide vocational training programs for adults and children of upper school age at a number of locations throughout the state. Many private institutions also offer practical and vocational training.

Cultural life

The annual Perth International Arts Festival attracts contributions in drama, music, ballet, film, and visual arts. The University of Western Australia has several theatres, including the only Southern Hemisphere replica of the Fortune Shakespearean theatre in London. In addition to the Western Australian Symphony Orchestra, there is a youth orchestra, a large choral society, and opera and ballet companies, which perform at the Perth Concert Hall and at the superbly renovated His Majesty’s Theatre (also in Perth) and which also make tours to country centres. There has long been a thriving local popular music industry centred mainly in pubs and hotels. Bands seeking broader market success, however, usually relocate either to Sydney or to Melbourne.

Western Australia’s most acclaimed writers have included the poet Fay Zwicky, the poet and playwright Dorothy Hewett, the historical authors Mary Durack and Katharine Susannah Prichard, the novelists Randolph Stow and Elizabeth Jolley, the Aboriginal autobiographical author Sally Morgan, and the playwright Jack Davis. The state has produced some outstanding artists, including Guy Grey-Smith, whose modernist paintings were inspired by the Western Australian landscape. The state art gallery, together with the state library and museum, constitute Perth’s central-city cultural heart.

Western Australia’s climate encourages outdoor recreation. The Perth-Fremantle area is an internationally recognized centre for yachting. In 1983 the Australia II of the Royal Perth Yacht Club became the first non-American vessel to win the America’s Cup yacht race; Fremantle then hosted the race in 1987 (won by an American yacht). Perth also maintains an array of nationally competitive sports teams, including those for men’s rugby and Australian rules football, as well as for men’s and women’s cricket and field hockey. Participation in football (soccer) has been growing since the end of the 20th century. Netball has for decades been a popular women’s team sport.

Western Australia’s nature parks draw many visitors each year. Among the most prominent parks are Rudall River National Park near the southwestern edge of the Great Sandy Desert, and Ningaloo Marine Park (including Ningaloo Reef), just off the coast to the west of the Cape Range. Shark Bay (1991), south of Carnarvon, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1990 in recognition of its unique combination of extensive beds of seagrass, a dugong breeding ground, and living stromatolite formations; Purnululu National Park, on the eastern edge of the Kimberley region, was added to the World Heritage list in 2003 for its unique natural towers of sandstone.

Arthur J. Conacher Charles Fox