<Table> <Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> This section focuses too much on specific examples without explaining their importance to its main subject . Please help improve this section by citing reliable, secondary sources that evaluate and synthesize these or similar examples within a broader context . (March 2017) </Td> </Tr> </Table> <Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> This section focuses too much on specific examples without explaining their importance to its main subject . Please help improve this section by citing reliable, secondary sources that evaluate and synthesize these or similar examples within a broader context . (March 2017) </Td> </Tr> <P> Historian Professor Peter Read, then at the Australian National University, was the first to use the phrase "stolen generation". He published a magazine article on the topic with this title, based on his research . He expanded the article into a book, The Stolen Generations (1981). Widespread awareness of the Stolen Generations, and the practices which created it, grew in the late 1980s through the efforts of Aboriginal and white activists, artists, and musicians (Archie Roach's "Took the Children Away" and Midnight Oil's "The Dead Heart" being examples of the latter). The Mabo v Queensland (No 2) case (commonly known as the Mabo case) attracted great media and public attention to itself and to all issues related to the government treatment of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders in Australia, and most notably the Stolen Generations . </P> <P> In early 1995, Rob Riley, an activist with the Aboriginal Legal Service, published Telling Our Story . It described the large - scale negative effects of past government policies that resulted in the removal of thousands of mixed - race Aboriginal children from their families and their being reared in a variety of conditions in missions, orphanages, reserves, and white foster homes . </P>

When was the term stolen generation first introduced
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