'Some five years ago, when 250 First Peoples’ delegates from around Australia met at
Uluru to discuss proposals for the constitutional recognition of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander peoples, they acknowledged the importance of recognising the truth
about the past. They did so in the Uluru Statement from the Heart, signed by most but
not all of those delegates, which calls for a process of ‘truth-telling about our history’
that would provide the basis for a ‘fair and truthful relationship with the people of
Australia’. In so doing, they were responding to the insistence of participants in the
2016–17 First Nations Regional Dialogues that ‘people need to know more about
Australian and Aboriginal history’. Though calls for true histories have been heard
across a range of forums for decades at least, these dialogues and the Uluru Statement
have given them a new impetus. We are now seeing the fruits of these moments in
both scholarly research and public institutions.' (Introduction)