Skip to main content
Home
  • Learn
    • Native Title and PBCs
      • Native title, rights and interests
      • Interactive history of native title
      • ORIC and CATSI Act
      • PBC regulations
      • Alternative Settlements
      • Cultural heritage and native title
      • Compensation
      • Native title and land rights
      • Commercial Rights
      • Future Acts
        • ILUAs
    • Role and function of a PBC
      • PBC national snapshot
      • About PBCs
      • Setting up a PBC
        • Registering with ORIC
        • Tax
      • Meetings
      • PBC rule books
        • Rules about decision-making
        • Rules about directors
        • Rules about dispute resolution
        • Rules about meetings
        • Rules about members
      • Land and sea management and native title
      • Maintaining land and heritage
        • Native Title Research and Access Services
        • Return of native title materials
        • Language
      • Strategic planning in native title
      • Roles and functions of a PBC
    • Key players in a PBC
      • Directors
        • Board of directors
        • Independent directors
      • Members
      • Staff
        • CEO
        • Contact person or secretary
      • Succession planning
        • Youth engagement
        • Youth succession planning
    • PBCs making it work
      • About governance
        • Governance resources
        • PBC corporate governance
        • Tips for corporate governance
        • Two-way governance
      • Dispute management
      • Policies and the Code of Conduct
      • Communications strategy
        • Social Media
    • Building PBC Business
      • Research partnerships
      • Fees for services and PBCs
      • Commercial and community development
        • The Victorian experience
      • Funding applications
      • Best practice for agreement making
    • Key terms and glossary
  • Find
    • Find a PBC
      • View all
      • New South Wales
      • Northern Territory
      • Queensland
      • South Australia
      • Torres Strait Islands
      • Victoria
      • Western Australia
    • Find funding
    • Find training
    • News / Event
    • Find a partner
    • Resources and publications
      • Native Title Agencies Directory
    • COVID-19 resources
      • Technology solutions for working during COVID-19 restrictions

Type

  • Article / paper (10)
  • Presentation (5)
  • Report (11)
  • Book (2)
  • Information Sheet (2)
  • Website (3)
  • Policy statement (1)
  • Template (1)
  • Guide (2)
  • Toolkit (1)
  • Fact sheet (2)

Tags

  • AGM (Annual General Meeting) (4)
  • Agreements (15)
  • AIATSIS (49)
  • (-) AUSTLII (3)
  • Board (14)
  • Bookkeeping (3)
  • Business (10)
  • CAEPR (10)
  • Capacity building (15)
  • Carbon farming (5)
  • Caring for Country (8)
  • CATSI Act (25)
  • CEO (4)
  • Chairperson (3)
  • Charity (2)
  • Childhood (1)
  • Code of Conduct (1)
  • Collaboration (4)
  • Commercial development (24)
  • Communication (7)
  • Community (11)
  • Community development (31)
  • Compensation (8)
  • Compliance (2)
  • Constitutions (12)
  • Culture (11)
  • Database (2)
  • Data sovereignty (8)
  • Decision making (19)
  • Determinations (3)
  • Directors (14)
  • Disability (1)
  • Dispute management (24)
  • Education (8)
  • Emergency (1)
  • Employment (8)
  • Environment (12)
  • EPBC Act (Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation) (1)
  • Ethics (3)
  • Exemptible rules (4)
  • Federation of Victorian Traditional Owner Corporation (1)
  • Fee for service (6)
  • Finance (12)
  • Fire (3)
  • Fishing (7)
  • FPIC (Free Prior Informed Consent) (2)
  • Funding (11)
  • Future acts (9)
  • Governance (60)
  • Government (8)
  • Health (3)
  • (-) Heritage (12)
  • Human rights (7)
  • Hunting (1)
  • ICIP (Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property) (1)
  • ILUA (Indigenous Land Use Agreement) (19)
  • Independent directors (7)
  • Indigenous knowledge (35)
  • Indigenous law (11)
  • Induduction (4)
  • IPA (Indigenous Protected Areas) (12)
  • Joint Management (7)
  • Justice (2)
  • Land and sea management (29)
  • Land and water (7)
  • Land rights (9)
  • Language (9)
  • Leadership (18)
  • (-) Legal (19)
  • Making it work (1)
  • Meetings (16)
  • Members (11)
  • Mining (5)
  • Minutes (2)
  • Native Title Act (48)
  • Native title claim (1)
  • Native title holder (5)
  • Native title materials (15)
  • NFP (Not-For-Profit) (4)
  • NNTC (National Native Title Council) (5)
  • NTRB (Native Title Representative Body) (10)
  • NTSP (Native Title Service Provider) (3)
  • ORIC (47)
  • Partnerships (9)
  • Past acts (1)
  • PBC Regulations (13)
  • PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) (59)
  • Policies (7)
  • Rangers / caring for country (6)
  • Reporting (7)
  • Research (11)
  • Resolution (3)
  • Right to take (1)
  • Rule book (19)
  • Secretary (4)
  • Special administration (4)
  • Staff (8)
  • (-) Strategic planning (7)
  • Succession Planning (7)
  • Tax (2)
  • Technology (1)
  • Tourism (2)
  • Training (9)
  • Treaty (1)
  • Trusts (5)
  • Volunteering (2)
  • Water (4)
  • Water rights (11)
  • Youth (15)
Print

Resources and publications

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Resources and publications
Displaying 1 to 20 of 40 results.
Title Author /s Summary Date Tag(s) Type
A digital approach: Esperance Tjaltjraak Native Title Aboriginal Corporation (ETNTAC) case study report Christiane Keller, Ophelia Rubinich, Helen Wrigth and Jasmine Tearle

This report provides insights into a digital approach to returning native title materials using digital forensic analysis. Great volumes of hardcopy and digital materials can be interrogated with a keyword search once ingested into a NUIX database to retrieve relevant documents. It provides step-by step diagrams and the ETNTAC Native Title Materials Policy and Procedure.

2021 Database, Heritage, Policies, Technology Report
A Way Forward - Final report into the destruction of Indigenous heritage sites at Juukan Gorge Joint Standing Committee on Northern Australia

This report is the final report resulting from the federal parliamentary inquiry into the destruction of the Juukan Gorge Aboriginal heritage sites by Rio Tinto on 24 May 2020. This tragic event, and the national condemnation of the actions of Rio Tinto, has sparked action to address the legislative failings that allowed the destruction of the Juukan Gorge sites–and similar sites around the nation. The Juukan Gorge disaster is just one example of countless instances where cultural heritage has been the victim of the drive for development and commercial gain. The report makes a number of recommendations aimed at preventing future destruction.

 

2021 Caring for Country, Culture, Heritage, Mining Report
Aboriginal land claims in the Northern Territory: Documenting and preserving the records and memories - Report of a Focus Group Meeting Toni Bauman, David Parsons

This report shows the development of a user-friendly ‘first glance’ guide and template that will facilitate a broad assessment of an archive, particularly in the absence of the collection holder and provides the basis for discussions about deposits, returns and the legal status of particular documents.

2019 AIATSIS, Data sovereignty, Indigenous knowledge, Legal, Native title materials, Research Report
Anthropology and connection reports in native title claim applications Dr Julie Finlayson

This paper discusses the purposes and form of the reports, their differentiation from the NNTT registration process, considerations anticipating litigation, confidentiality and potential conflicts of interest by the State as respondent.

2001 AIATSIS, Dispute management, Government, Indigenous knowledge, Legal Article / paper
Brief list of online resources for preservation and information on Indigenous studies Grace Koch

This document provides a brief listing of resources for preservation and information on Indigenous studies.

2005 AIATSIS, Heritage, Indigenous knowledge, Native title materials Toolkit
Commercial opportunities from Native Title: The Antakirinja Matu-Yankunytjatjara peoples' journey to economic benefit Ian Crombie, John Hender

The Coober Pedy region of South Australia is the traditional country of the Antakirinja Matu-Yankunytjatjara people. The Native Title journey of the Antakirinja Matu-Yankunytjatjara people started in 1995 when their claim commenced. After achieving Native Title determination, successfully negotiating a number of ILUAs and winning their first major commercial contract, their journey continues today.

This session will discuss the experiences of the Antakirinja Matu-Yankunytjatjara people and how they have used Native Title to help achieve their community aspirations. Ian Crombie, Antakirinja Matu-Yankunytjatjara Aboriginal Corporation vice-chairman and Elder, will describe the many obstacles, decisions, learnings and successes, that have brought the Antakirinja Matu-Yankunytjatjara people to where they are in their journey today. Importantly, he will discuss the challenges of balancing immediate community needs with both commercial opportunities and future goals. 

2016 Commercial development, Community development, Future acts, Land and sea management, Mining, Strategic planning, Trusts Presentation
Developing a Strategic Plan Community Toolbox

Information about developing a strategic plan

2017 Governance, Strategic planning Website
Good governance guide Victorian Local Governance Association

The Good Governance Guide is a practical resource for anyone involved in the decision-making process in Victoria’s local government sector. It focuses on the areas where good governance has the most impact and offers suggestions for how it can work.

2012 Governance, Strategic planning, Succession Planning Guide
Governing the Organisation Indigenous Governance Toolkit

The topic 'Governing the Organisation' from the Indigenous Governance Toolkit has nine sections.

  1. Governing the organisation
  2. Roles, responsibilities and rights of a governing body
  3. Accountability: what is it, to whom and how?
  4. Decision-making by the governing body
  5. Governing finances and resources
  6. Communicating
  7. Future planning
  8. Building capacity and confidence for governing bodies
  9. Case studies
2017 Decision making, Governance, Leadership, Strategic planning Information Sheet
Gugu Badhun: People of the Valley of Lagoons Yvonne Cadet-James, Robert Andrew James, Sue McGinty, Russell McGregor

Bridging historical scholarship and Aboriginal oral tradition, this innovative book tells the story of the Gugu Badhun people of the Valley of Lagoons in North Queensland. It provides new insights into Aboriginal–European interactions, and new understandings of how Aboriginal people sustained their identities and exercised agency.

It lays bare violence and oppression, but also recognises the inter-racial cooperation and friendships which were equally part of Gugu Badhun experience. It tells of a people whose options were limited by state power and public racism but who remained proud and undaunted, making their own decisions for their collective and individual benefit.

Much of the story is told in the words of Gugu Badhun people themselves. Interviews are interspersed with commentary and analysis by the four authors, one of whom, Yvonne Cadet-James, is herself a Gugu Badhun elder.

This collaborative approach has produced a timely book for an Australia in which notions of Indigenous autonomy and self-determination are being re-imagined and re-configured.

To purchase this book please visit the AIATSIS shop via think link.

2017 AIATSIS, Collaboration, Heritage, Indigenous knowledge, Land and water Book
Information for PBCs on changes to native title laws and obligations 2021 CATSI Act, Decision making, Dispute management, Exemptible rules, Future acts, ILUA (Indigenous Land Use Agreement), Legal, Native Title Act, Native title holder, PBC Regulations, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate), Reporting Fact sheet
International laws and developments relating to Indigenous knowledge in Australia Maiko Sentina, Elizabeth Mason, Terri Janke, David Wenitong

This paper provides a snapshot of international instruments that Australia is a member to or is involved with across intellectual property, environment, human rights, cultural heritage and trade, shedding light on the discussions around Indigenous Knowledge protection and management. 

2018 Environment, Heritage, Human rights, Indigenous knowledge, Legal Article / paper
Kooyang Sea Country Plan Members of the Framlingham Aboriginal Trust and Winda Mara Aboriginal Corporation

This Sea Country Plan is an important step in re-asserting our responsibilities for the management and protection of the natural resources of our country. 

2004 Heritage, Land and sea management, Land and water, Land rights Report
Legal context for PBC decision making Aurora

Information sheet about decision-making for PBCs.

2012 Decision making, Governance, Legal, Meetings, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) Information Sheet
Legal issues in transferring research materials from NTRB/SPs to RNTBCs Angus Frith

Native title materials created in the process of native title, land claim and cultural heritage work include individual statements, expert reports, genealogies, field notes and other materials. This paper addresses some of the legal issues arising in relation to the transfer of research material from NTRB/SPs to RNTBCs.

2021 Compliance, ICIP (Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property), Legal, Native title holder, Native title materials, NTRB (Native Title Representative Body), NTSP (Native Title Service Provider), PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) Presentation
Legal protection of Indigenous Knowledge in Australia Maiko Sentina, Elizabeth Mason, Terri Janke, David Wenitong

This supplementary paper provides an overview of the Australian laws that are currently used to recognise and protect Indigenous Knowledge.

2018 Indigenous knowledge, Indigenous law, Legal Article / paper
Mornington Island Restorative Justice Project report Queensland Government

The Mornington Island Restorative Justice (MIRJ) Project has worked with families to establish a community-based alternative dispute resolution (mediation or peacemaking) service inclusive of Island culture and conforming to the requirements of the criminal justice system.

2015 Community, Culture, Dispute management, Legal Report
Native title and commercial fisheries: the Torres Strait sea claim Gabrielle Lauder, Lisa Strelein

For native title holders, the ability to exercise native title rights for commercial purposes is crucial to full and meaningful participation in the social, cultural and economic life of Australia. This article examines the extent to which native title gives its holders the power to manage resources, govern their use and exploit them commercially.

2013 AUSTLII, Fishing, Native Title Act, Water rights Article / paper
Native Title and Tax: Understanding the Issues Miranda Stewart

Outlines the treatment of income tax under native title agreements

2013 AUSTLII, Native Title Act, Tax Article / paper
Native Title Anthropology after the Timber Creek Decision Pamela Faye McGrath

In August 2016, the traditional owners of Timber Creek in the Northern Territory, the Ngaliwurru and Nungali peoples, were awarded over $3.3 million for the loss of their native title rights. $1.3 million of this award was a solatium payment, that is, compensation for hurt arising from damage caused by the loss of connection to the land. Griffiths v Northern Territory of Australia (No 3) [2016] FCA 900 (Timber Creek), which was heard by Justice John Mansfield, is the courts first litigated award of compensation for the loss or impairment of native title rights. In making his decision, Justice Mansfield relied on the evidence of anthropologists when assessing not only connections to country, but also the qualities and consequences of the social impacts that accompany the loss of connections to country. This paper considers the implications of the Timber Creek decision for the work of native title anthropologists and highlights some of the conceptual and methodological shifts required for research on native title compensation claims. The author draws attention to the demanding nature of native title compensation cases and the potential for research to aggravate existing trauma associated with loss of country, arguing for the need for all involved to be attentive to this risk when pursuing future claims.

Recommended citation: 

McGrath, PF 2017, Native Title Anthropology after the Timber Creek Decision, Land, Rights, Laws: Issues of Native Title series, vol. 6, no. 5, AIATSIS Research Publications, Canberra.

2017 Compensation, Legal, Native Title Act Article / paper

Pagination

  • Page 1
  • Next page ››

Footer menu

  • Sitemap
  • Contact AIATSIS
  • Disclaimer

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this website may contain images, voices or names of deceased persons in photographs, film, audio recordings or printed material.

The PBC website acknowledges the traditional owners of country throughout Australia and their continuing connection to land, culture and community.

We pay our respects to elders past, present and emerging.

  • PBC logo
  • National Native Title Tribunal logo
  • Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet

Managed by the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) and produced with the funding support of the National Indigenous Australians Agency.

Geospatial data has been provided by the National Native Title Tribunal.

User account menu

  • Log in

Acknowledgment

The PBC website acknowledges the traditional owners of country throughout Australia and their continuing connection to land, culture and community.

We pay our respects to elders past, present and emerging.

Sensitivity disclaimer

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this website may contain images, voices or names of deceased persons in photographs, film, audio recordings or printed material.

Content disclaimer

While the PBC website has used all reasonable endeavours to ensure that the information on this website is as accurate as possible, it does not guarantee and accepts no legal liability arising from or connected to, the accuracy, reliability, currency or completeness of any material contained on this website or any linked sites.

Links to external websites are inserted for convenience and do not constitute endorsement of material within those sites, or any associated organisation, product or service. The owners of these external websites are solely responsible for the operation and information found on their sites.

We recommend that users exercise their own skill and care in their use of this website and carefully evaluate the accuracy, currency, completeness and relevance of the material for their purposes.