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 (2)
  • Report (2)
  • Book (2)
  • Information Sheet (1)
  • Workbook (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 8 of 8 results.
Title Author /s Summary Date Tag(s) Type
Indigenous partnerships in protected area management in Australia: three case studies Toni Bauman, Dr Dermot Smyth

AIATSIS completed three case studies in the joint management of conservation and Indigenous Protected Areas (IPAs) in partnership with the Australian Collaboration, the Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) and the Poola Foundation (Tom Kantor Fund), as part of the AIATSIS 'Success in Aboriginal Organisations' Project.

Within this project, Ms Toni Bauman completed a case study of Nitmiluk (Katherine Gorge) National Park. Mr Dermot Smyth carried out two case studies on the Dhimurru Indigenous Protected Area and the Booderee National Park in the ACT.

2007 AIATSIS, Environment, IPA (Indigenous Protected Areas), Joint Management Book
Joint management of protected areas in Australia: native title and other pathways towards a community of practice Toni Bauman, Claire Stacey, Gabrielle Lauder

On 3 and 4 April 2012, the Northern Territory Department of Natural Resources, Environment, The Arts and Sport (NRETAS) and the Native Title Research Unit (NTRU) at the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) convened a workshop of state, territory and Commonwealth government staff working in joint management and native title at the Alice Springs Desert Park. The workshop was titled Joint Management of Protected Areas in Australia: Native Title and Other Pathways towards a Community of Practice.

This report captures the workshop where government staff working in joint management shared information about their approach and identified practical issues in developing a community of practice.

 

2012 AIATSIS, Community development, IPA (Indigenous Protected Areas), Joint Management Report
Living with native title: the experiences of registered native title corporations Toni Bauman, Lisa M Strelein, Jessica K Weir

Much of the attention paid to native title in Australia has focused on court proceedings and other legalities, but what does it actually mean to live with native title? This book presents the experiences of native title holders and the corporations they have established to look after their native title interests.

The influence of the renowned High Court Mabo case is such that there are already more than 100 Registered Native Title Bodies Corporate (RNTBCs) across Australia with responsibilities for about 18 per cent of the continent. RNTBCs operate in a profoundly intercultural context where ‘western’ and Indigenous laws are constantly interpreted and negotiated as part of a new suite of landholding and land management practices for contemporary Australia.

Through seven case studies from the Torres Strait, Far North Queensland, the Kimberley and Central Australia, Living with native title documents the experiences of RNTBCs, including those that are parties to large mining agreements. Each case study is accompanied by a short update written immediately prior to publication.

Living with native title is a product of the AIATSIS research project Prescribed Bodies Corporate: Research Action Partnerships.

2013 Agreements, AIATSIS, Future acts, ILUA (Indigenous Land Use Agreement), Indigenous knowledge, Indigenous law, Joint Management, Native Title Act, NTRB (Native Title Representative Body), Partnerships Book
Negotiating the shared management of Matuwa and Kurrara Kurrara Dr Tran Tran, Lindsey Langford

One of the key aspirations of native title holders is the ability to independently make decisions about and take care of country. This aspiration is often realised through collaborative management arrangements such as joint management. For many native title groups, joint management is often the only substantive land management outcome, yet there has been little research into either its planning process or its drivers.

Between October 2013 and December 2014, AIATSIS undertook case study research in partnership with Central Desert Native Title Services and the Wiluna native title holders — Martu people — to document their land management journey and the critical success factors that have contributed to positive outcomes in Matuwa (Lorna Glen) and Kurrara Kurrara (Earaheedy). This report describes the research and planning undertaken as a part of the partnership.

2018 AIATSIS, Capacity building, Caring for Country, Collaboration, Joint Management, Land and sea management Report
Pathways to the co-management of protected areas and native title in Australia Toni Bauman, Chris Haynes, Gabrielle Lauder

In recent decades, various forms of co-management of national parks and other protected areas1 by governments and Indigenous people have come to the fore. This has occurred as Indigenous peoples have progressively demanded greater access to and decisionmaking power over their traditional lands. The response of governments has also seen the aligning of a number of policy approaches that have contributed to an increase in attention to co-management. In the first instance, there has been a rapid rise in the number of protected areas in Australia since the 1960s, and this is continuing as the Commonwealth Government aims to increase the size of the Australian National Reserve System (NRS) by 25 per cent and Australia’s network of terrestrial protected areas to 125 million hectares by 2013 (Caring for Our Country 2013a).2 In addition, at least 16 per cent of Australia’s land area is now held by Indigenous peoples under a range of tenures, with much of this land being of high biodiversity value (Altman & Kerins 2012). As a mechanism for adding new protected areas to the NRS, the Commonwealth Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities (SEWPaC) has an Indigenous Protected Area (IPA) program that supports traditional owners of lands or seas who voluntarily dedicate their lands as protected areas to promote biodiversity and cultural resource conservation. IPAs now form the second largest component of the National Reserve System, covering over 3 per cent of Australia and making up 23 per cent of the NRS (SEWPaC 2013b).

2013 AIATSIS, IPA (Indigenous Protected Areas), Joint Management Article / paper
Top tips for assessing joint ventures Forum for Directors of Indigenous Organisations

Short factsheet about joint ventures.

2014 Agreements, Joint Management Information Sheet
Wearing two hats: The conflicting governance roles of native title corporations and community/shire councils in remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities Dr Tran Tran, Clair Stacey

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community governance can be greatly impacted by the nature of the land tenure held or managed by the community. The fragmented system of national and state regimes which provide grants or titles of land to Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people has enabled a governance landscape where there are often overlapping rights to land. This creates a situation where relationships within an Indigenous community – and even within a traditional owner group – are competing for power and control. This is most notable with respect to how different community organisations compete for community funding, the durability of culturally appropriate governance structures and the taking of natural resources.

The ability of an Indigenous community to resolve potential conflicts, created by the recognition of native title and adapt to the post-determination landscape also impacts upon a communities’ ability to respond to external pressures such as land use planning, water management and government initiated tenure reform processes. Often these conflicts appear between Registered Native Title Bodies Corporate and community or local shire councils – who have historically played the role of land manager and program administrator. This paper looks at the role of cultural governance in supporting the recognition of Indigenous landholdings and the reasons that Indigenous landholdings, in their current form, have failed to be effective in adequately mobilising economic, social and cultural resources to achieve social, cultural, environmental and health benefits in remote Indigenous communities in Western Australia and Queensland.

2016 Governance, ILUA (Indigenous Land Use Agreement), Joint Management, Legal, Native Title Act, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) Article / paper
Zoom set up procedure and FAQ workbook PBC website

This workbook provides you with information on how to set up Zoom meetings and answers some of the frequently asked questions.

2020 Emergency, Meetings, Secretary Workbook

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.