This article examines the public discourse that emerged in the aftermath of the 2011 decision of the Federal Court of Australia in Eatock v Bolt. We characterise the narrative of ‘the Bolt case’ as a ‘mobilising discourse’ that countered rather than echoed the decision itself. This discourse had three main messages: encouraging scepticism about the authenticity of fair-skinned Aboriginal persons and judgment by non-Aboriginal persons about the legitimacy of Aboriginal identity according to skin colour; questioning the legitimacy of racial vilification laws and strengthening a libertarian conception of freedom of speech. We explain how such a contrary discourse became dominant in the wake of a successful racial vilification action and consider the implications of these events.
Funding
The Impact of Hate Speech Laws on Public Discourse in Australia
K. Gelber and L. J. McNamara, 'Freedom of speech and racial vilification in Australia: 'The Bolt case' in public discourse' (2013) 48 (4) Australian Journal of Political Science 470-484.