A comprehensive account of the native title system in Australia, and a balanced assessment of the extent to which it has fulfilled the hopes of Aboriginal communities for land rights.
A comprehensive account of the native title system in Australia, and a balanced assessment of the extent to which it has fulfilled the hopes of Aboriginal communities for land rights.
David Ritter teaches at the Faculty of Law at the University of Western Australia. He is currently working in a senior campaigns position with Greenpeace in London.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword Prologue Acknowledgements 1 Reading the porridge: Introducing the native title system 2 The dilemmas of the black leadership: ATSIC, the native title working groups and their successors 3 Like unacknowledged bastards: The native title representative bodies 4 State expectations: Executive government of the states and territories 5 Mining rules and the sheep's back: Non-government third party respondents 6 Poets and slaves: The National Native Title Tribunal 7 You can take the judge out of the court... The Federal Court of Australia 8 The end of uncertainty: The native title system in retrospect Notes Index
Foreword Prologue Acknowledgements 1 Reading the porridge: Introducing the native title system 2 The dilemmas of the black leadership: ATSIC, the native title working groups and their successors 3 Like unacknowledged bastards: The native title representative bodies 4 State expectations: Executive government of the states and territories 5 Mining rules and the sheep's back: Non-government third party respondents 6 Poets and slaves: The National Native Title Tribunal 7 You can take the judge out of the court... The Federal Court of Australia 8 The end of uncertainty: The native title system in retrospect Notes Index
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