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・ Sam Wanamaker Award
・ Sam Wanamaker Playhouse
・ Sam Wang
・ Sam Wang (actor)
・ Sam Wang (neuroscientist)
・ Sam Warburg
・ Sam Warburton
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・ Sam Warner
・ Sam Washington
・ Sam Waters
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Sam Watson (activist)
・ Sam Watson (trade unionist)
・ Sam Watters
・ Sam Watters discography
・ Sam Weale
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・ Sam Weaver (baseball)
・ Sam Webb
・ Sam Webb (boxer)
・ Sam Webb (disambiguation)
・ Sam Webster
・ Sam Webster (cyclist)
・ Sam Webster (writer)
・ Sam Wedgbury
・ Sam Weerahandi


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Sam Watson (activist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Sam Watson (activist)

Samuel William "Sam" Watson (born 16 November 1952) is an Aboriginal Australian activist and a socialist politician. He is the grandson of Sam Watson who was of the Birri Gubba tribe. His grandfather worked in ring-barking camps and saved enough money to hire a lawyer to release him from the Aboriginal Protection Act. He was one of the first Aboriginal people to achieve this status. Watson's son is the poet Samuel Wagan Watson.
==Career==
Through work at the Brisbane Aboriginal Legal Service in the early nineties, Watson was involved in implementing the findings of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody. The film ''Black Man Down'' is a fictionalized exploration of the commission's findings.
Watson has run as the candidate of the Socialist Alliance in the 2004 and 2007 federal election in Queensland. He was a candidate for that party at the 2009 state election for the seat of South Brisbane, running against the ALP state premier Anna Bligh. Watson received 344 votes (1.36%).〔(2009 State General Election – South Brisbane – District Summary ), Electoral Commission Queensland〕 He represented the Socialist Alliance again as a candidate for the Senate in the 2010 federal election, where he received 3,806 votes (0.12%).〔(Senate Results – Queensland ), Australian Broadcasting Corporation
, Watson was a deputy director at the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit at the University of Queensland and taught two courses in Black Australian Literature.〔(Unit Staff ), Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit at the University of Queensland 〕 He is also a writer and a filmmaker. He has received honours for his 1990 novel ''The Kadaitcha Sung'' and acclaim for his 1995 film ''Black Man Down''.
In October 2009, the supermarket chain Coles announced that it would rename its house brand line of "Creole Creams" biscuits following a statement by Watson that "the word Creole comes from a period when people's humanity was measured by the amount of white blood they had in their bloodstream. This is the same kind of thought that underpinned horrific regimes like the Nazis."〔("Coles backs down over 'racist' biscuit" ) by Joshua Hoey, ''The Age'', 27 October 2009〕 This reading of the word "creole" was rejected by the Australian academic linguist Roland Sussex who could find no basis for this claim.〔"Whichever way, the cookie crumbles" by Roland Sussex, ''The Courier-Mail'', ''etc'' supplement, p. 22, 5–6 December 2009〕

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