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 (6)
  • Report (7)
  • Book (3)
  • Information Sheet (1)

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 17 of 17 results.
Title Author /s Summary Date Tag(s) Type
Barni-Wardimantha Awara (Don’t Spoil the Country) – Yanyuwa Sea Country Plan Dr John Bradley, Yanyuwa Families

The Yanyuwa people of the south-west Gulf of Carpentaria, have developed the Yanyuwa Sea Country Plan to explain the relationship between Yanyuwa people and our Sea Country; explain Yanyuwa people's concerns about current and future management of our Sea Country; set out objectives, strategies and actions to address Yanyuwa concerns and aspirations about sea country management; and propose options for working with government agencies, industry and other stakeholders to achieve our objectives, strategies and actions. 

2007 Land and sea management, Land and water, Land rights, Water rights Report
Caring for country and sustainable Indigenous development: Opportunities, constraints and innovation John Altman, Peter Whitehead

This paper explores how Indigenous community-based natural resource management can generate both conservation benefit and economic development opportunity. We begin by noting that much of the Indigenous estate in north Australia is either thinly populated or unpopulated. There is emerging evidence that, in situations where Indigenous people live on their country, ecological and wider benefits are generated via favourable fire regimes, control over weed infestations, and potentially through feral animal harvesting. When people are on country, they generate economic benefit for themselves by harvesting wildlife for consumption and engage with the market sector by using natural resources in commercial enterprise like arts and crafts production. We argue that there is a strong correlation between such activities and cost-effective natural resource management. Links between landcare, wildlife use and biodiversity conservation need to be recognized, celebrated and supported. The removal of many barriers to enhanced and innovative Indigenous participation in such activities, and equitable public support through programs like Landcare, will facilitate sustainable economic development options that are compatible with Indigenous priorities, while ameliorating Indigenous disadvantage.

2003 CAEPR, Caring for Country, Commercial development, Community development, Environment, Fire, Land and sea management Article / paper
Contested Governance: Culture, power and institutions in Indigenous Australia Janet Hunt, Diane Smith, Stephanie Garling, Will Sanders (eds)

This collection of papers examines the dilemmas and challenges involved in the Indigenous struggle for the development and recognition of systems of governance that they recognise as both legitimate and effective.

2008 CAEPR, Governance, Indigenous knowledge, Leadership Book
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
Indigenous Community Governance Project: Year Two Research Findings J. Hunt and D.E Smith

This is the second research report by the Indigenous Community Governance Project (ICGP). The ICGP is exploring the nature of Indigenous community governance in Australia - to understand what works, what doesn’t work, and why. The first report, based on 2005 fieldwork, was published as CAEPR Working Paper No. 31/2006.

This report brings together findings from the fieldwork conducted during 2006, based on evidence drawn from case studies of Indigenous governance in action within differing community, geographical, cultural and political settings across the nation.

2007 CAEPR, Governance Report
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
Kurtijar Land and Saltwater Country Plan Kurtijar People, Carpentaria Land Council Aboriginal Corporation

The Kurtijar Land and Saltwater Country Plan is a strategic document that provides a framework for our people and our partners to work together to care for all the natural and cultural values of our country, while providing a sustainable livelihood for our community and others with rights and interests in our land and saltwater country.

2014 Land and sea management, Land and water, Land rights Report
Let’s talk about success: exploring factors behind positive change in Aboriginal communities Janet Hunt

This paper draws on interviews with leaders of successful Aboriginal organisations to understand the factors behind the successes that they are achieving in their communities.

2016 CAEPR, Community development, Making it work Article / paper
Native Title Information Handbooks - PBC Funding and Training Guide

The Native Title Information Handbooks provide a summary of resources and information relating to key areas of native title.

The Handbooks provide information about:

  • Native title legislation and case law
  • Federal, state and territory governments' native title policies and procedures
  • Native title representative bodies, registered native title bodies corporate, government agencies and other organisations involved in native title
  • Native title applications and determinations
  • Indigenous land use agreements, future acts and other native title related agreements
  • Land rights legislation
  • Indigenous Land Corporation acquisitions, Indigenous land management and Indigenous protected areas
  • Indigenous population profiles.
2018 Agreements, Determinations, Future acts, IPA (Indigenous Protected Areas), Land and sea management, Land and water, NNTC (National Native Title Council), NTRB (Native Title Representative Body), NTSP (Native Title Service Provider), PBC Regulations, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) Information Sheet
Ngarrindjeri Nation Yaruwar-Ruwe Plan Ngarrindjeri people, South Australia

A key purpose of the plan was to better educate government and nongovernment agencies, researchers and the wider Australian public on Ngarrindjeri connection to Country and their associated rights and obligations to Yarluwar-Ruwe. 

Culture, Land and sea management, Land and water, Land rights, Water rights Report
Partnerships for Indigenous Development: International Development NGOs, Aboriginal Organisations and Communities Janet Hunt

This paper outlines two pilot case studies which examine how international development non-government organisations (INGOs) conduct their work with Aboriginal organisations and communities in Australia.

2010 CAEPR, Collaboration, Partnerships Article / paper
Researching Australian Indigenous Governance: A Methodological and Conceptual Framework Diane Smith

This paper sets out the methodological and conceptual framework for the Indigenous Community Governance (ICG) Project on Understanding, Building and Sustaining Effective Governance in Rural, Remote and Urban Indigenous Communities. The paper describes the Project’s research aims, questions, and techniques; explores key concepts; and discusses the ethnographic case-study and comparative approaches which form the core components of the methodological framework.

As an applied research project, the paper also considers the methodological issues inherent in participatory research, and for the dissemination and application of research findings within Indigenous and policy arenas. The framework draws on the multi-disciplinary expertise of the project team in areas such as anthropology, political science, demography, policy and legal studies, linguistics, and community development.

2005 CAEPR, Governance Article / paper
Statistics for Community Governance: The Yawuru Indigenous Population Survey of Broome John Taylor, Bruce Doran, Maria Parriman, Eunice Yu

This paper presents a case study of an exercise in Aboriginal community governance. It sets out the background events that led the Yawuru Native Title Holders Aboriginal Corporation to secure information for its own needs as an act of self-determination and essential governance, and it presents some of the key findings from that exercise

2012 CAEPR, Community development, Data sovereignty, Governance, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate), Strategic planning Article / paper
Ten key messages from the preliminary findings of the Indigenous Community Governance Project, 2005 Janet Hunt, Diane Smith

The Indigenous Community Governance Project (ICGP) is an Australian Research Council Linkage Project between the Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research (CAEPR) at the Australian National University, and Reconciliation Australia (RA). The Project is exploring the nature of Indigenous community governance in diverse contexts and locations across Australia through a series of case studies—to understand what works, what doesn’t work, and why.

This document presents some key messages emerging from a summary of the comparative analysis of the Project’s 11 current Indigenous case studies, after the first phase of a longer study.

2006 CAEPR, Governance Report
The power of data in Aboriginal hands Peter Yu

This paper explores the critical role that data can play in development scenarios when Aboriginal people are in control of collecting, managing and interpreting data. It was first presented as a pleniary paper at the conference Social Science Perspectives on the 2008 National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey, held at The ANU on 11–12 April 2011.

2012 CAEPR, Data sovereignty Article / paper
The Social Effects of Native Title: Recognition, Translation, Coexistence Benjamin Smith, Frances Morphy (eds)

The papers in this collection reflect on the various social effects of native title. In particular, the authors consider the ways in which the implementation of the Native Title Act 1993 (Cwlth), and the native title process for which this Act legislates, allow for the recognition and translation of Aboriginal law and custom, and facilitate particular kinds of coexistence between Aboriginal title holders and other Australians.

2007 CAEPR, Indigenous knowledge Book
Thuwathu / Bujimulla Sea Country Plan Peoples from the Wellesley Island region

This plan is to explain cultural relationship of the Aboriginal Traditional Owners of the Wellesley Islands region of the southern Gulf of Carpentaria and obligations to the Sea Country, and to outline their ideas and commitments for its sustainable use and management.

2006 Land and sea management, Land and water, Land rights, Water rights Report

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.