This article appears in a special issue of 'Law in Context', entitled "Law and Cultural Heritage", edited by Martin Chanock and Cheryl Simpson. As Australians' 'cultural cringe' has diminished in recent years there has been a developing interest in 'things' Australian. This interest is reflected in those laws which seek to preserve Australian culture. In particular indigenous heritage has been the focus of much protective legislation for it is thought to be distinctly Australian. The natural landscape too has actively been promoted and connected with an Australian identity and this is also apparent in laws which preserve the environment. Debate about what properly depicts 'Australia' indicate that while there may be much consensus as to the...
In 1992, UNESCO’s World Heritage Convention was the first global legal instrument to recognise and p...
In August 1968, conservative National Party leader Joh Bjelke-Petersen became Premier of the state o...
An earlier version of the present chapter first appeared in a discussion paper (Byrne, Brayshaw and ...
The protection of Australia’s natural and cultural heritage is one of the most challenging and contr...
In recent years, the protection of heritage has been discussed in many parts of the world. In Austra...
Whilst legislatures at all levels of Australian government have been slower to establish heritage pr...
Adequate protection and the proper management of Indigenous cultural heritage remains an area of con...
Exploring the importance of the protection and preservation of Australian Aboriginalcultural heritag...
This chapter considers the concept of intangible heritage and the uses to which it has been put, in ...
Cultural heritage management is now more than archaeology. There is a growing focus in cultural heri...
This article critically considers the legal regulation of Indigenous people's cultural heritage in W...
The need to protect and safeguard the world\u27s heritage has emerged as a concern for the internati...
Since 1959, various pieces of legislation have been enacted in Queensland which include provisions f...
There is insufficient legal protection for tangible but non-charismatic Aboriginal artefacts in New ...
The thesis involves an examination of the Convention for the Protection of the World Cultural and N...
In 1992, UNESCO’s World Heritage Convention was the first global legal instrument to recognise and p...
In August 1968, conservative National Party leader Joh Bjelke-Petersen became Premier of the state o...
An earlier version of the present chapter first appeared in a discussion paper (Byrne, Brayshaw and ...
The protection of Australia’s natural and cultural heritage is one of the most challenging and contr...
In recent years, the protection of heritage has been discussed in many parts of the world. In Austra...
Whilst legislatures at all levels of Australian government have been slower to establish heritage pr...
Adequate protection and the proper management of Indigenous cultural heritage remains an area of con...
Exploring the importance of the protection and preservation of Australian Aboriginalcultural heritag...
This chapter considers the concept of intangible heritage and the uses to which it has been put, in ...
Cultural heritage management is now more than archaeology. There is a growing focus in cultural heri...
This article critically considers the legal regulation of Indigenous people's cultural heritage in W...
The need to protect and safeguard the world\u27s heritage has emerged as a concern for the internati...
Since 1959, various pieces of legislation have been enacted in Queensland which include provisions f...
There is insufficient legal protection for tangible but non-charismatic Aboriginal artefacts in New ...
The thesis involves an examination of the Convention for the Protection of the World Cultural and N...
In 1992, UNESCO’s World Heritage Convention was the first global legal instrument to recognise and p...
In August 1968, conservative National Party leader Joh Bjelke-Petersen became Premier of the state o...
An earlier version of the present chapter first appeared in a discussion paper (Byrne, Brayshaw and ...