Native Title

Native Tile
Looking for native tile? Find it from a Trusted Store at Exava.
www.exava.com

Native title - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The National Native Title Tribunal (NNTT) is the body that investigates and ... 2 Chronology of events leading to recognition of native title ...
en.wikipedia.org

Mabo/Mabo - The Native Title Revolution
... his claim that Murray Islanders held native title to land in the Torres Strait. ... Mabo - The Native Title Revolution delves into the Mabo legal case and the ...
mabonativetitle.com

Native Title Amendment Act 1998 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Native Title Amendment Act 1998 (Cth), also commonly referred to as the "10 ... Removal of the right to claim Native Title in or around urban areas ...
en.wikipedia.org

WorldLII - Categories - Countries - Australia - By Subject ...
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres ... This was a consent determination that native title exists in part of the area of ...
www.worldlii.org

Tag: Native Title - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
Tags: indigenous, land-rights, law-crime-and-justice, rights, native-title, nt, darwin-0800 ... courts-and-trials, native-title, cairns-4870, torres-strait ...
www.abc.net.au

NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC CDs
NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC CDs FROM SILVERLAKE MUSIC ... NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC-PAGE 1 OF 20. NATIVE AMERICAN MUSIC ALPHA BY TITLE LISTING. COVER ...
www.silverlakemusic.com

Native Land Claims
Present Methods of Acquiring Title. Alaska Native Land Claims: An Old Story. The Land Freeze ... Alaskan Native groups are seeking full legal title to, or ...
www.alaskool.org

Long Road | native title
... to be a rethink of the native title system, with open mind, and free ... Native Title Determination and Indigenous Land Use Agreement in Tennant Creek, Part 2 ...
www.kimberlychristen.com

PM - Confusion over Perth native title implications
Theres confusion tonight over the extent of a Federal Court decision that grants native title over Perth The court has recognised the Noongar people as the citys ...
www.abc.net.au




Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: Permission denied in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: fopen(/home/templatecore2cache//*cluesnet.com/dc/dc243d2cf8fd7a0fefc2cedbe4ff75ee58c2c17b.tc2cache) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 130

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 131

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 132



Native title is a concept in the law of Australia that recognises the continued ownership of land by local Indigenous Australians.

Native title can co-exist with non-indigenous proprietary rights and in some cases different indigenous groups can exercise their native title over the same land. In this way, it represents a local example of the fragmentation of proprietary interests. More particularly, it is also an example of two distinct systems of law operating within the same geographic, national and jurisdictional space. It is a recognition by the common law of customary Aboriginal law. However, to the extent of any inconsistency between Australian law and customary Aboriginal law, non-indigenous rights will generally prevail.

The National Native Title Tribunal (NNTT) is the body that investigates and mediates claims made by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Native title determinations are made by the Federal Court of Australia. Appeals against these determinations can be made to a full sitting of the Federal Court and then to the High Court of Australia. The National Native Title Register (NNTR) is a land registration of approved determinations and is maintained by the NNTT.

The clash of two legal systems Native title, in Australia, concerns the interaction of two systems of law:





Only Australian laws are enforced directly in Australian courts. Native title is not a concept that forms part of customary Aboriginal law - rather, it is the term adopted to describe the rights to land and waters possessed by indigenous Australians under their customary laws that are recognised by the Australian legal system.

Chronology of events leading to recognition of native title 1946 Aboriginal Stockmen's Strike On 1 May 1946, an estimated 600 Aboriginal stockmen throughout the north of Western Australia refused to work until they had been guaranteed a minimum wage of thirty shillings a week. Some had previously been receiving food and clothing but no pay; others had been paid up to twelve shillings a week.

It was organised by Dooley Bin Bin with his friend Don McLeod acting as consultant. The organisation was a mammoth task, requiring communication between stockmen throughout northern Western Australia.

Pitjantjatjara Lands Act 1956 The first Native Title legislation in Australia was the South Australian Pitjantjatjara Lands Act 1956, where land was transferred to the Pitjantjatjara people, who had maintained a continuous connection with their land. However, the act provided no basis for claims by other groups.

1963 – Yolngu Bark Petition The Yolngu of northeast Arnhem Land had retained a very strong connection with their land, culture and Law (Madayin), due to the remoteness of Arnhem Land to white Australia.

In 1963, the Robert Menzies government decided to excise a part of their land for a bauxite mine, Yolngu at Yirrkala sent a Yirrkala bark petitions to the Australian House of Representatives protesting the excision.

The bark petition attracted national and international attention and now hangs in Parliament House, Canberra as a testament to the Yolngu role in the birth of the land rights movement.

1966 – Wave Hill Walk-Off Three years later, in 1966, 200 Gurindji people cattle workers and their families, led by Vincent Lingiari, staged a The Gurindji Strike at Wave Hill Cattle Station, demanding equal wages and conditions to white stockmen.

At that time they were paid small amounts of money, or paid in kind. The nine-year strike developed into a successful claim for return of traditional Gurindji lands.

1971 – Gove Land Rights case Meanwhile, the Yolngu realised their bark petition had not been taken seriously by the politicians in Canberra, and instead took their grievances to the courts in 1971, in the case of Gove land rights case.

Yolngu lost the case because Australian courts were still bound to follow the terra nullius principle, which did not allow for the recognition of any “prior rights” to land to Indigenous people at the time of colonisation.

However, the Judge did acknowledge the claimants' ritual and economic use of the land and that they had an established system of law (Madayin). In this way, this was the first significant legal case for Indigenous Land Rights in Australia.

1973-4 – Woodward Inquiry These cases led to the establishment of the Woodward Commission into Aboriginal Land Rights from 1973-1974 in the Northern Territory.

1975 – Gurindji handback In 1975, Gough Whitlam handed back land to the Gurindji people.

The famous photograph, by Mervyn Bishop of Whitlam pouring sand into Vincent Lingiari's hand, has been etched onto the Australian psyche.

Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1976 As a result of the findings of the Royal Commission, the Malcolm Fraser Government enacted the Aboriginal Land Rights Act in 1976, after its drafting by the Gough Whitlam Australian Labor Party Government in 1975.

The four Land Councils were established under this law. Itestablished the basis upon which Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory could, for the first time, claim rights to land based on traditional occupation.

This Act was the first Australian law which allowed a claim of title if claimants could provide evidence of their traditional association with land.

1985 Gerhardy v Brown Stated that the original inhabitants should be recognised as having a legal, as well as a just, claim to retain occupancy of their traditional land.

1992 – Mabo Only in 1992 was the assumption that Australia was terra nullius rejected by the High Court of Australia in the Mabo decision, which granted Murray Island in the Torres Strait to its Torres Strait Islander residents.

As Justice Brennan stated in Mabo (No. 2), "native title has its origin and is given its content by the traditional laws acknowledged by and the customs observed by the indigenous inhabitants of a territory".

Developments since the recognition of native title Native Title Act 1993 The recognition of the legal concept of Native Title in Mabo in 1992 led its recognition by the legislative system a year later when the Paul Keating government enacted the Native Title Act, 1993. It attempted to clarify the legal position of landholders and the processes that must be followed for Native Title to be claimed, protected and recognised through the courts.

The concept of claiming Aboriginal land claims is independent of native title.

Native title is not the same as land rights Aboriginal Land Rights Acts. Land rights are new legal rights that are created and granted under Australian law to Indigenous Australians.

In a land rights claim Indigenous Australians can seek a grant of title to land from the Commonwealth, state or territory governments. That grant may recognise traditional interest in the land, and protect those interests by giving Indigenous people legal ownership of that land.

Pastoral leases The Mabo created uncertainty, particularly for pastoralists who held pastoral leases. Pastoral leases:



1996 – Wik Decision After the Mabo, there was concern that native title claims over pastoral leases would extinguish the pastoral leases. The Wik Decision in 1996 clarified the uncertainty. In that case, the High Court of Australia determined that pastoral leases that:



The decision found that native title could coexist with other land interests on pastoral leases, which cover some 40% of the Australian land mass.

That decision led to amendments to the Native Title Act (by the Native Title Amendment Act 1998) in 1998 which streamlined the claims system and provided security of tenure to non-indigenous holders of pastoral leases and other land title, where that land might potentially be claimed under the Native Title Act.

2006 – Noongar Decision On 19th Sept 2006 the Federal Court brought down a judgment in favour of Noongar Native Title over the Perth, Western Australia metropolitan area, it is known as Bennell v State of Western Australia FCA 1243.

Justice Wilcox found that Native Title continues to exist within an area in and around Perth. This is the first judgment in favour of Native Title over a capital city and its surrounds. The claim area itself is part of a much larger area included in the "Single Noongar Claim", which covers the south-western corner of Western Australia. It was determined separately from the wider Single Noongar Claim by the Federal Court at the request of the Commonwealth and State Governments, in order to obtain certainty about whether Native Title exists in the Perth metropolitan area. An appeal was subsequently lodged and is was heard in April 2007 (decision currently pending). The remainder of the larger Single Noongar Claim remains outstanding and will hinge on the outcome of the appeal process.

Wilcox's judgment is noteworthy for several reasons. It highlights Perth's wealth of post-European settlement writings which provide an insight into Aboriginal life, including laws and customs, around the time of settlement in 1829 and also into the beginning of the last century. These documents enabled Wilcox to find that laws and customs governing land throughout the whole Single Noongar Claim (taking in Perth, and many other towns in the greater South West) were those of a single community. The claimants shared a language and had extensive interaction with others in the claim area.

Importantly, Justice Wilcox found the Noongar community had continued to exist despite the disruption resulting from mixed marriage and people being forced off their land and dispersed to other areas as a result of white settlement and later Government policies. If it survives the forthcoming appeal, this is a very significant principle for other native title claims in Australia.

2007 Amendments to the Native Title Act On 7 September 2005 Attorney-General, the Hon. Philip Ruddock MP, announced a package of coordinated measures to improve the performance of the native title system. Later in December 2006, the Attorney General introduced technical amendments to the NTA (1993) in the Native Title Amendment Bill 2006. These are aimed at making the native title process 'more efficient' and to speed up the determination of whether native title exists on the 580 claims that have been registered but not yet determined.

See also



External links

References

Native title - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Native title is a concept in the law of Australia that recognises the continued ownership of land by local indigenous Australians. Native title can co-exist with non-indigenous ...

Willan Publishing - Native Title Corporations
We are independent publishers specializing in law, criminology, criminal justice, policing and forensic psychology books. Our aim is to offer the best in research, writing and ...

National Native Title Tribunal - Home
Facilitates the making of agreements among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, governments, industry and others whose rights or interests may co-exist with native title ...

Open Research Online - Contact archaeology and native title
Contact archaeology in Australia is emerging as an important tool in the independent verification of claimant’s testimony regarding the post-Sovereignty occupation and use of ...

Native Title Services Victoria - Home
Native Title Services Victoria Ltd represents Native Title claimant groups in Victoria, Australia. Our role is practical rather than political.

Willan Publishing - Mabo, Wik and Native Title
We are independent publishers specializing in law, criminology, criminal justice, policing and forensic psychology books. Our aim is to offer the best in research, writing and ...

Native Title and Land Rights - Aboriginal Art Online
Aboriginal Art Online offers quality paintings and limited edition prints by Australian Aboriginal artists - together with information and comment about Aboriginal art, cultures ...

Native Title in Australia - Cambridge University Press
Australian law recognised the existence of native title in the Mabo decision of 1992. Since then, many indigenous people have worked with anthropologists and other scholars in ...

Native Title Act 1993 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Native Title Act of 1993 provides for determinations of native title in Australia. The Act was passed in response to the High Court's decision in Mabo v Queensland.

Native Title
The Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission website provides information on a wide variety of Human Rights issues; including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander ...





 
Copyright © 2008 opini8.com - All rights reserved.
Home | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
All Trademarks belong to their repective owners.
Many aspects of this page are used under
commercial commons license from Yahoo!