Scott Morrison may encourage Australians to “get around” the annual national celebration of 26 January, the day the First Fleet landed at Port Jackson in 1788, but for an increasing number of Australians it is a day of protest.

More than 100,000 people spent Australia Day at Invasion Day marches in 2018 and crowds are expected to be even bigger this year.

Here’s where you can find them.

Sydney

Events begin on Friday night, with the lighting of a fire at Barangaroo Reserve at 8pm.

At 7.45am on Saturday, crowds will return to Barangaroo Reserve for the WugulOra Morning Ceremony, a government-sponsored event commemorating both Aboriginal and settler Australia. It is followed by the Was and Will Be concert, running from 8.30am to 11.30am.

The Invasion Day march will begin at 11am, meeting in Hyde Park on the corner of Elizabeth and Liverpool streets. The march will head towards the Yabun festival in Victoria Park.

Yabun is the largest one-day gathering of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures in Australia, running from 10am to to 7pm and featuring live music, kids activities and a corroboree ground.

Melbourne (Birraranga)

Events at Melbourne begin at 5.30am with a dawn service at the Kings Domain Resting Place, a memorial that holds the remains of 38 Victorian Aboriginal people that represent the thousands of Aboriginal people whose bodies were taken for science or collections. The memorial is located off Linlithgow Avenue in the Domain, opposite the Janet Lady Clarke Rotunda.

The Invasion Day protest march will begin at 10.30am, with crowds to gather outside Parliament House on Spring Street before marching down Bourke and Swanston streets toward Flinders Street station. The theme of this year’s march is not change the date but abolish Australia Day.

After the march, from 1am to 5pm, is the Balit Narrun – Share the Spirit Festival in Treasury Gardens. It’s an all-ages family friendly concert featuring Mojo Juju, Birds, Stiff Gins, Jedda, Brothers in Arms, the Djirri Djirri Dancers and MC Monica Karo.

Brisbane (Meanjin)

The Invasion Day march will begin at 10am, with crowds gathering at Emma Miller Place in the CBD. Speeches will be held at 10.30am before the march through the city at 11.30am, ending at South Bank.

Canberra

The Invasion Day march in Canberra is hosted by the Aboriginal Tent Embassy. Marchers will meet at Garema Place and head toward the tent embassy for speeches, followed by music, yarning circles, and food.

Participants are advised to bring their own source of shade for the event.

Adelaide

The Tandanya Survival Day event begins at 11am Saturday on the Semaphore foreshore. The community event is jointly hosted by the Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute and the Port Adelaide Enfield council and will run to 6.30pm.

Perth

The Invasion Day rally in Perth begins at 12pm at Forrest Chase and runs until 3pm.

Noongar Radio is hosting the Wandjoo Birak concert from 3pm in the supreme court gardens in Perth, with guests including the Merindas and Ernie Dingo.

A second event, raising funds for Noongar Radio, will kick off at the Aardvark in Fremantle from 7pm.

On Sunday, Fremantle will host the One Day in Fremantle event, which is its annual community celebration. It begins with a smoking ceremony at 8am with activities throughout the day. Music at the main stage in Esplanade Reserve will run from 2pm to 7.30pm, headlined by Aria award-winner Montaigne.

Darwin

There will be a community event hosted by Community Solidarity Action NT in Civic Park, Darwin, from 11.30am to 2.30pm, with a free lunch and speakers addressing the need to change the date.

Hobart

A dawn service will be held at the Hobart Cenotaph from 5.30am to commemorate those killed in the frontier wars and in massacres.

The Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre is hosting an Invasion Day march and rally, which will begin at 11am at the TAC offices and head toward the Parliament House lawns, gathering there from midday to 1pm for the rally.