1960s , Australian of the Year 1960 During the 1960s, a network of state-based organisations worked hard to increase the profile of Australia Day. The most active and best resourced of these was the
Victorian Australia Day Council, which had grown out of the
Australian Natives' Association. In January 1960 the council's chairman, the unabashed patriot
Sir Norman Martin, announced the introduction of a new annual award for the 'Australian of the Year'. He explained that Australia Day was a fitting occasion on which to give proper recognition to a leading citizen, whose contribution to the nation's culture, economy, sciences or arts was particularly outstanding. , 1968 Australian of the Year For the first two decades the Australian of the Year was chosen by a panel of five, which included the
Victorian Premier, the
Anglican Archbishop of Melbourne, the vice-chancellor of
Melbourne University, the
Lord Mayor of Melbourne and the president of the National Council for Women. Although the panel was certainly distinguished, it would in time become too closely associated with
Melbourne to be appropriate for a national award. The panel's first choice of Nobel Prize winning immunologist
Sir Macfarlane Burnet gained general approval. The editors of
The Age proclaimed the new honour was symptomatic of Australia's growing confidence as a nation: 'We are beginning to count for something in the world and we should be intensely proud of this fact.' International achievement remained a key criterion during the award's first decade. Several sporting heroes were honoured, from America's Cup skipper
Jock Sturrock and swimmer
Dawn Fraser, to world champion motor racer
Sir Jack Brabham and boxer
Lionel Rose. The pioneering neurologist
Sir John Eccles followed Burnet's example, becoming the second of five Australians to take out the Nobel Prize/Australian of the Year double. Achievers in the artistic realm were also well represented, including opera singer Joan Sutherland, renowned dancer and choreographer
Robert Helpmann and the four members of the chart-topping singing group
The Seekers –
Judith Durham,
Athol Guy,
Keith Potger and
Bruce Woodley. The focus on international achievement reflected the philosophy of the award organisers, who described the Australian of the Year as 'the person who has brought the greatest honour to Australia in the year under review.'
1970s and 1980s During its first two decades, the Australian of the Year award grew steadily in national prominence, but it increasingly suffered from its close association with the Victorian Australia Day Council. A competing Australian of the Year award was established by newspaper
The Australian in 1971. In 1975 the newly formed
Canberra Australia Day Council also began to name a rival Australian of the Year. The Canberra council was run by a vibrant group of local inhabitants, who pursued a more
progressive agenda than their Victorian counterparts. In particular, the Canberra council was sympathetic to the emerging
republican movement, while the Victorian council was staunchly committed to constitutional ties with Britain. The Victorian council also battled a common perception that it was an exclusive organisation that represented the Melbourne Establishment. Australia's turbulent political climate nourished this division, and the Australian of the Year award was embroiled in a wider debate about Australian nationalism. Between 1975 and 1979, the Canberra Australia Day Council named four Australians of the Year. Prime Minister
Gough Whitlam lent his support to the Canberra award when he presented the inaugural honour to Major General
Alan Stretton, the commander of the emergency response to
Cyclone Tracy. The Canberra council also made good use of the federal parliamentary press boxes to promote its award to the national media. The Victorian council was singularly unimpressed that a rival Australia Day organisation had copied its idea – in 1977 it described its own winner, Dame
Raigh Roe, as 'the real Australian of the Year'. The impasse was only resolved when the
Fraser government created the
National Australia Day Council (NADC) in 1979. The Victorian council willingly transferred responsibility for its award to the new national body, while the Canberra council agreed to discontinue its rival program. In 1982, the Victorian council was further sidelined when that state's Australian Labor Party government led by
John Cain created a new Victorian Australia Day Committee within the
Premier's Department, which joined the NADC's official national network. The NADC made immediate changes to the selection process, appointing an independent panel of ten leading Australians from diverse fields. Despite this rigorous approach, the panel's first choice of historian
Manning Clark did not please conservative politicians, as Clark had been critical of the Fraser government's social policy. If nothing else, the controversy was a clear sign that the award had become a prominent and valued feature of the Australia Day celebrations. In time the selection of the annual winner fell to the board of the NADC itself, whose members are appointed by the Prime Minister of the day. Former NADC chairman
Phillip Adams recalls that heated debates were common. Typically the Australian of the Year was chosen at a special two-day board meeting, which Adams likened to the election of a Pope: 'We would go into conclave, there would be lots of hot air, then a puff of smoke.'
The Australian has continued to publish its own annual award, which sometimes coincides with the choice of the National Australia Day Council. During the 1980s, there was an expectation that corporate sponsorship would replace Government funding and that the NADC would become self-sufficient. The list of former Australians of the Year provides circumstantial evidence of this shift towards a more popular imperative. Economist
Sir John Crawford and judge
Sir Edward Williams thoroughly deserved their awards, but were perhaps not well placed to promote the importance of Australia Day to mainstream Australia, or to secure corporate sponsorship for the NADC. Subsequent winners included marathon runner
Robert de Castella, comedian and actor
Paul Hogan, singer
John Farnham and cricketer
Allan Border, who were far more likely to attract public attention. In 1988, the editor of the
Sydney Morning Herald expressed concern at this development: 'One worrying trend with the award is its attachment to ratings. This year's candidates appear to have been people who held high public profiles.' Yet the steadily rising numbers of nominations indicated that the award was capturing the public imagination.
1990s During the 1990s, the Australian of the Year award intersected noticeably with the politics of national identity. In its attempt to encourage unified national celebrations, the NADC was a strong promoter of both multiculturalism and reconciliation. The council was also linked to the growing republican movement and the campaign to change the national flag. Australians of the Year in this period included
Yothu Yindi lead singer and prominent Aboriginal identity
Mandawuy Yunupingu; environmentalist and republican
Ian Kiernan; and Chinese-Australian
paediatrician John Yu. Yunupingu's award continued a strong tradition of honouring
Indigenous Australians. The first Aboriginal winner was boxer
Lionel Rose, who quipped: "One hundred and eighty-two years ago one of my mob would have been a dead cert' for this." Since then a further seven Indigenous people have been named Australian of the Year, for achievements in sport, music, politics, law, public service and academia. Many have played a role in Indigenous advocacy and some have raised concerns about the celebration of Australia Day on 26 January, most notably the 1985 recipient
Lowitja O'Donoghue. Prior to 1994 the award was given for the outstanding Australian of the previous year; that is, the 1992 Australian of the Year was announced on Australia Day in 1993. From 1994 onward the award became one for the year ahead, so that the 1994 Australian of the Year was announced on Australia Day in 1994. This resulted in there being no Australian of the Year for 1993.
2000s onwards Debates about the Australian of the Year award often revolve around the relative balance between sport, science and
the arts. Fourteen winners have excelled in sports as diverse as
cricket, swimming, athletics, sailing, tennis,
boxing and
motor racing. A recurring criticism that sport features too regularly peaked in 2004, when
Steve Waugh was the fourth sporting winner in seven years and the third
Test Cricket captain to be honoured. Despite the perception of an over-emphasis on sport, the list of past winners reveals a strong endorsement for scientific achievement; as of 2009 thirteen Australian scientists have received the honour, including ten from the
medical sciences. A long-term view also reveals that Australia's talented artists have not been neglected; ten winners have excelled in creative pursuits, including six musicians, a dancer, a painter, a comedian and a Nobel Prize-winning novelist. Many Australians of the Year do not fit neatly into categories such as sport, science and the arts. Phillip Adams once described the past winners as "an eclectic collection of people who reflect the diversity of achievement in this country". Australians of the Year have also excelled in
public administration, the military, social and
community work, business enterprise, academia, religious leadership and philanthropy. There has been relatively little public debate about the
gender balance of past winners. In 1961 several news outlets incorrectly referred to
Sir Macfarlane Burnet as 'Man of the Year'; the mistake was not allowed to continue, as
Joan Sutherland took out the second award, but it is certainly true that women are under-represented. By 2009, 11 winners out of a total of 56 were women. In 2016,
Miranda Devine of
The Daily Telegraph criticised the selection process, with the national selection panel having to choose from the eight candidates appointed by variously structured, state-based selection panels. Devine also said, "the award, which ought to reflect and unite this great nation, has evolved into a mere plaything of social engineers", noting also that three of the eight finalists were jointly involved in the same events. Concern has also been raised as to how a person who has not lived in a state "for 40-something years" (
Cate McGregor) could be nominated as that state's representative. Following criticism of both the award process and the priorities of the 2016 recipient
David Morrison, an editorial in
The Sydney Morning Herald said, "The Herald knows the selection board will look closely at the 2016 process and work to improve public confidence in the awards in time for a better Australia Day in 2017". While the selection of a single Australian of the Year is bound to stimulate debate, the awards program as a whole recognises a much wider range of achievement. In 1979 the NADC named its first 'Young Australian of the Year',
community service volunteer
Julie Sochacki. Twenty years later the veteran country music star Slim Dusty received the inaugural 'Senior Australian of the Year' award. In 2003 the NADC introduced an award for '
Australia's Local Hero', which honours outstanding contributions to local communities. With four award categories and a system of state and national finals, the NADC now recognises a total of 128 inspiring Australian role models every year. ==Young Australian of the Year==