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Resources and publications

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Displaying 21 to 40 of 47 results.
Title Author /s Summary Date Tag(s) Type
Native title and governance: The emerging corporate sector prescribed for Native Title holders Jessica Weir

This paper discusses how the governance potential of PBCs is challenged by the PBC governance context.

2007 Commercial development, Governance, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) 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
Native title newsletter AIATSIS Research

This native title newsletter provides an overview of PBCs' pricing structure. 

2011 Fee for service, PBC Regulations, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) Newsletter
ORACLE - AGM Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter with advice about running Annual General Meetings.

2014 Meetings, ORIC Newsletter
ORACLE - Complaints and how to manage them Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter about managing complaints

2015 Dispute management, ORIC Newsletter
ORACLE - Directors at the Helm Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter about the role of directors.

2013 Directors, ORIC Newsletter
ORACLE - Does your rulebook need a spring clean? Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter about making changes to a corporation rulebook (constitution)

2015 CATSI Act, Constitutions, ORIC, Rule book Newsletter
ORACLE - Experience and Good Order Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter with advice about chairing meetings.

2013 Chairperson Newsletter
ORACLE - Independent Directors Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter about independent directors. Includes interviews with independent directors.

2014 Independent directors, ORIC Newsletter
ORACLE - Independent Directors- can add a skill set Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter about independent directors.

2016 Independent directors, ORIC Newsletter
ORACLE - It's your corporation, get involved Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter outlining some of their different roles and responsibilities.

2016 ORIC Newsletter
ORACLE - Selecting Senior Staff Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter with advice about selecting senior staff.

2016 ORIC, Staff Newsletter
ORACLE - Separation of Roles Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter about the separation of roles in a corporation.

2014 Directors, Members, ORIC, Staff Newsletter
ORACLE - The vital role of your CEO/Manager Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter about the role of the CEO

2013 CEO, ORIC, Staff Newsletter
ORACLE- Choosing your directors Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations

ORIC newsletter about choosing directors for the board.

2015 Directors, ORIC Newsletter
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
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
Prescribed Bodies Corporate: Charging fees for services Lisa Strelein

An outline of some of the legal issues surrounding PBCs charging fees for service and what PBCs can and cannot charge fees for.

2011 AIATSIS, AUSTLII, Fee for service 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

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