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Resources and publications

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Displaying 21 to 34 of 34 results.
Title Author /s Summary Date Tag(s) Type
NAILSMA Information Hub North Australian Indigenous Land and Sea Management Alliance

The North Australian Indigenous Land and Sea Management Alliance Ltd (NAILSMA) is a leader in finding practical solutions to support Indigenous people manage their land and sea resources into the future. NAILSMA, a not-for-profit company, has over a decade of experience in delivering complex and challenging programs across north Australia.

2017 Carbon farming, Commercial development, Community development, Indigenous knowledge, Rangers / caring for country, Water Website
Native Nations Institute Native Nations Institute

NNI assists in building capable Native nations that can effectively pursue and ultimately realize their own political, economic, and community development objectives. NNI provides Native nations and other policy makers with accessible research and policy analysis of governance and development in Indian Country and with comprehensive, professional training and development programs designed to meet the needs of Indigenous leadership and management.

This Institute is based at the University of Arizona.

2017 Capacity building, Commercial development, Community development Website
Native Title Corporations: A Legal and Anthropological Analysis Christos Mantziaris, David E Morrison

In this book, Mantziaris, a barrister, and Martin, an anthropologist, explore the question of the legal framework for native title management following a determination of native title in favour of a particular indigenous group. The book clarifies, for native title practitioners, what is involved in establishing native title corporations and the legal and policy problems that will be faced.

2000 Native Title Act, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) Book
Native title story: Introduction to native title and prescribed bodies corporate Central Land Council

In 2018, the Central Land Council released the Native Title Story: Introduction to Native Title and Prescribed Bodies Corporate information resource for native title holders in Central Australia.

This booklet explains in plain English the process of native title, what PBCs do, the difference between the Aboriginal Land Rights Act and the Native Title Act, and some hard words commonly used in native title.

For more information about this publication, contact the Central Land Council PBC Support Unit via corporations@clc.org.au.

2018 Book
Nothing Succeeds Like Succession: Succession Planning for Not-for-Profits Our Community

Ourcommunity.com.au provides useful resources for succession planning in Not-for-Profit organisations. 

This website details the changes and processes of the board, staffing, and donors, whilst also covering topics on documentation, recruitment, and induction.

2017 Governance, Succession Planning, Youth Website
Our Community - Resource Bank - Board, Governance & Leadership ourcommunity.com.au

The Community Tool Box contains a range of information about community development including resources on strategic planning, leadership and communication.

2017 Communication, Leadership, Strategic planning Website
Overturning aqua nullius: Securing Aboriginal water rights Virginia Marshall

Overturning aqua nullius aims to cultivate a new understanding of Aboriginal water rights and interests in the context of Aboriginal water concepts and water policy development in Australia.

2017 Water, Water rights Book
PBCs Working in Two Worlds Aurora

The first document sets out some background information about what a lawyer is and their duty to you as a client. The second document outlines some questions that you may like to ask a lawyer when you are seeking advice on native title matters.

2012 Governance, Government, Indigenous knowledge, Indigenous law, Legal, PBCs (Prescribed Body / Bodies Corporate) Website
People on Country: Vital Landscapes, Indigenous Futures Jon Altman, Seán Kerins (eds)

This serious of essays draws on a diversity of perspectives to document a significant social and environmental movement that is quietly gathering momentum across this vast Indigenous estate. This series of essays, drawn from an unusual collaboration between university researchers and Indigenous land owners, tells a little-known story about Aboriginal people who are living on, working on and caring for the lands and seas that they own and manage. The ongoing struggles by Indigenous people to conserve and rehabilitate the outstanding natural and cultural values of their ancestral lands deserve wide recognition and acclaim.

 

Information on the volume can be found here. 

This volume can be purchased directly from The Federation Press by following the link below. 

2012 Rangers / caring for country Book
Re-awakening languages: Theory and practice in the revitalisation of Australia’s Indigenous languages John Hobson, Kevin Lowe, Susan Poetsch, Michael Walsh

This book seeks to provide the first comprehensive snapshot of the actions and aspirations of Indigenous people and their supporters for the revitalisation of Australian languages in the twenty-first century. 

2010 Language Book
The politics of identity: who counts as Aboriginal today? Bronwyn Carlson

In this award-winning work Carlson explores the complexities surrounding Aboriginal identity today. Drawing on a range of historical and research literature, interviews and surveys, The politics of identity explores Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal understandings of Aboriginality and the way these are produced and reproduced across a range of sites and contexts.

Emphasising Indigenous debates and claims about Aboriginality, The politics of identity explores both the community and external tensions around appropriate measures of identity and the pressures and effects of identification. An analysis of online Indigenous communities on social media that have emerged as sites of contestation adds to the growing knowledge in this area, both nationally and globally.

This is a brave and personal contribution to the often vexed subject of Aboriginal identity and offers a distinctive and fresh line of analysis.

2016 AIATSIS, Community, Culture, Indigenous knowledge Book
The right to protect sites: Indigenous heritage management in the era of native title Dr Pamela McGrath

A large and profitable Indigenous heritage management industry has emerged in the wake of the resources boom of recent decades, with thousands of Indigenous heritage impact assessments conducted every year. Yet few governments have successfully reformed heritage laws to accommodate native title rights, and conflict over site destruction is regularly front page news.

The right to protect sites brings together a range of authors who explore native title and Indigenous heritage regimes around the country, and charts the history of advocacy and policy development, highlighting the successes, limitations, inequalities and opportunities of current arrangements.

2016 AIATSIS, Culture, Heritage, Native Title Act Book
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
Understanding Governance Indigenous Governance Toolkit

The topic 'Understanding Governance' from the Indigenous Governance toolkit has five sections,

  1. Understanding governance
  2. The important parts of governance
  3. Indigenous governance
  4. Governance in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations
  5. Case studies
2017 Governance, Leadership Website

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