An examination is undertaken of how the rhetoric of benevolence impedes concepts essential to property relationships acknowledged by the Australian common law tradition and thereby sunders attributes of ownership and personhood from Indigenous communities. It is argued that this rhetoric did not just perpetuate paternalism, a colonising strategy that subordinated Indigenous culture to non-Indigenous protectors but deflected debate from the harm caused by the distortion of Indigenous knowledge and appropriation of cultural rights
Discrimination against Australian Indigenous groups, including the right to own traditional lands, h...
Adequate protection and the proper management of Indigenous cultural heritage remains an area of con...
This article makes the case for the implementation of sui generis legislation in Australia for the ...
From the late nineteenth until the mid-twentieth century, non-Indigenous anthropologists and 'author...
International audienceLand claims, today called "Native Title Claims", have in Australia become the ...
This chapter first locates the fine promises given in the South Australian Letters Patents to respec...
This thesis engages in a critique of the concept of Australian native title law as a 'recognition sp...
The recognition of native title in Australia contained in the Mabo (No 2) decision, in theNative Tit...
On the television show Backyard Blitz, Australians judged as deserving by their families and friends...
British colonization of Australia had lasting consequences for Australia’s legal system. Although de...
British colonization of Australia had lasting consequences for Australia’s legal system. Although de...
The relationship between the common law of Canada and Australia and Indigenous peoples has been one ...
In order for Aboriginal rights and interests to be recognised under the Native Title Act (1993), suc...
In Australia, the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) provided the legislative means to resolve native title...
This thesis examines the issue of Aboriginal cultural heritage management and governance by Aborigin...
Discrimination against Australian Indigenous groups, including the right to own traditional lands, h...
Adequate protection and the proper management of Indigenous cultural heritage remains an area of con...
This article makes the case for the implementation of sui generis legislation in Australia for the ...
From the late nineteenth until the mid-twentieth century, non-Indigenous anthropologists and 'author...
International audienceLand claims, today called "Native Title Claims", have in Australia become the ...
This chapter first locates the fine promises given in the South Australian Letters Patents to respec...
This thesis engages in a critique of the concept of Australian native title law as a 'recognition sp...
The recognition of native title in Australia contained in the Mabo (No 2) decision, in theNative Tit...
On the television show Backyard Blitz, Australians judged as deserving by their families and friends...
British colonization of Australia had lasting consequences for Australia’s legal system. Although de...
British colonization of Australia had lasting consequences for Australia’s legal system. Although de...
The relationship between the common law of Canada and Australia and Indigenous peoples has been one ...
In order for Aboriginal rights and interests to be recognised under the Native Title Act (1993), suc...
In Australia, the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) provided the legislative means to resolve native title...
This thesis examines the issue of Aboriginal cultural heritage management and governance by Aborigin...
Discrimination against Australian Indigenous groups, including the right to own traditional lands, h...
Adequate protection and the proper management of Indigenous cultural heritage remains an area of con...
This article makes the case for the implementation of sui generis legislation in Australia for the ...