土著民族建设和土著头衔:一个令人担忧的定居者-殖民政权的战略用途

IF 1.1 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Anthea Compton, Alison Vivian, Theresa Petray, Matthew Walsh, Steve Hemming
{"title":"土著民族建设和土著头衔:一个令人担忧的定居者-殖民政权的战略用途","authors":"Anthea Compton, Alison Vivian, Theresa Petray, Matthew Walsh, Steve Hemming","doi":"10.1080/2201473x.2023.2267409","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTDespite the ongoing and destructive nature of invasion and settler-colonial institutions, laws and policies in Australia, many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander nations continue to assert their sovereignty; exercise their inherent rights to self-determination as self-defined, autonomous peoples; and pursue collective aspirations in highly constrained and contested environments. Many nations are engaged in Indigenous nation (re)building (INB). One key INB strategy utilised by such nations is to use settler-colonial policy for their own collective ends. This article analyses the relationship between a complex and highly fraught settler-colonial legal-political system, native title, and INB processes in Australia. Using the ‘Identify as a Nation, Organise as a Nation, Act as a Nation’ framework, we explore some of the actual and potential relationships between the native title system and INB. Despite the considerable harms of the native title system on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, we maintain that First Nations may be able to strategically engage in the system in a way that assists them to further their cultural and political autonomy.KEYWORDS: Indigenous nation buildingnative titleself-determinationsettler-colonialismIndigenous Affairs AcknowledgementsThanks to Simone Bignall for her helpful comments on this article.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1 Irene Watson, ‘Settled and Unsettled Spaces: Are We Free to Roam?’, in Sovereign Subjects: Indigenous Sovereignty Matters, ed. Aileen Moreton-Robinson (Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2007), 25.2 Jorgensen, ‘Editor’s Introduction’, in Rebuilding Native Nations, xii.3 INB research emerges from the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development and its sister organisation, the Native Nations Institute for Leadership, Management and Policy. For an overview of the research of the Harvard Project and the Native Nations, see Miriam Jorgensen, ed., Rebuilding Native Nations: Strategies for Governance and Development (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2007).4 See Stephen Cornell and Joe Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to the Development of Native Nations: One Works, the Other Doesn’t’, in Rebuilding Native Nations, 3–33.5 Stephen Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood: The Indigenous Politics of Self-Government’, The International Indigenous Policy Journal 6, no. 4, art. 4 (2015): 1–27. Cornell has since articulated that a fourth element of ‘Purpose’ is apparent in INB processes (IPOA). The authors of this paper maintain that ‘Purpose’ is sufficiently accounted for in the IOA framework.6 In this article, we refer to Indigenous Peoples, in line with the United Nations Declarations on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. We also use the terms First Nations and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander nations to denote the political nature of these collectives, and to reflect the experiences and preferences of the nations we work with.7 There is a vast range of literature on the global formations and tenets of settler-colonialism. For an overview, see Patrick Wolfe, ‘Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native’, Journal of Genocide Research 8, no. 4 (2006): 387–409; and Lorenzo Veracini, ‘Introducing Settler Colonial Studies’, Settler Colonial Studies 1, no. 1 (2011): 1–12.8 See Daryle Rigney, Simone Bignall, Alison Vivian and Steve Hemming, Indigenous Nation building and the Political Determinants of Health and Wellbeing (Melbourne: Lowitja, 2022); and also Michael J. Chandler and Christopher E. Lalonde 2008, ‘Cultural Continuity as a Moderator of Suicide Risk Among Canada’s First Nations’, in Healing Traditions: The Mental Health of Aboriginal Peoples in Canada, ed. Laurence Kirmayer and Gail Valaskakis (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2009), 221–48.9 Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, Walking Together: The First Steps (Canberra: Australian Government Printing Service, 1994), 4.10 For an overview, see Patrick Wolfe’s seminal text, Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology: The Politics and Poetics of an Ethnographic Event (London: Cassell, 1999). There is some evidence to suggest the state’s approach to First Nations may be shifting. In 2022, the Australian Labor Government committed to the 2017 Uluru Statement from the Heart, which calls for a First Nations Voice enshrined in the Constitution; an agreement making process between Australian governments and First Nations; and a truth-telling process. The current proposed amendment to the Australian Constitution to enable an Indigenous Voice to Parliament includes ‘recognition’ of ‘First Peoples’. See Uluru Statement 2023, ‘Design Principles of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice’, https://ulurustatement.org/education/design-principles/.11 Elizabeth Strakosch, ‘The Technical is Political: Settler Colonialism and the Australian Indigenous Policy System’, Australian Journal of Political Science 54, no. 1 (2019): 114–30, and Alison Vivian and Michael Halloran, ‘Dynamics of the Policy Environment and Trauma in Relations Between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples and the Settler-Colonial State’, Critical Social Policy 42, no. 4 (2022): 626–47.12 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 8. See also Simone Bignall, ‘What is “Postcolonial?”’, in Postcolonial Agency: Critique and Constructivism (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010).13 Articles 3–15 on self-determination are particularly relevant. For a discussion of the importance of the Declaration to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, see Asmi Wood, ‘Self-Determination Under International Law and Some Possibilities for Australia’s Indigenous Peoples’, in Indigenous Self-Determination in Australia: Histories and Historiography, ed. Laura Rademaker and Tim Rowse (Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2020), 269–92.14 Key First Nations theorists specifically engaged in INB research, working either within or in research partnerships with Australian universities include Daryle Rigney, Janine Gertz, Damein Bell, Matthew Walsh, Donna Murray, Debra Evans, Dennis Eggington and Larissa Behrendt. We also note that there are countless Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander researchers working on closely related matters around Indigenous self-determination, governance and autonomy.15 Research partnerships (including some authors) with the Gunditjmara People and Ngarrindjeri Nation, and later individuals and groups from the Wiradyuri, Gugu Badhun and Nyungar Nations found that the Harvard Project’s principles were highly relevant in Australia. Research projects have included Australian Research Council projects: ‘Negotiating a space in the nation: the case of Ngarrindjeri’ (DP1094869); ‘Indigenous nationhood in the absence of recognition: Self-governance insights and strategies from three Aboriginal communities’ (LP140100376); and ‘Prerequisite conditions for Indigenous nation self-government’ (DP190102060). A book detailing initial inquiries with the Ngarrindjeri and Gunditjmara nations is forthcoming (see Larissa Behrendt et al. in press, Resistance, Resilience, Resurgence: Indigenous Nation Building in Australia (Bloomsbury)). For further description of INB strategies and experiences in Australia, see Miriam Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time Is Now: Indigenous Nation Policy Making for Self-determined Futures’, in Public Policy and Indigenous Futures, ed. Nikki Moodie and Sarah Maddison (Melbourne: Springer, 2023), 129–47; Rigney et al., Indigenous Nation Building; Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology for Indigenous Nation Building’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development: International Case Studies of Indigenous Futures, ed. Diane Smith et al. (London: Rowman and Littlefield, 2021); Steve Hemming and Daryle Rigney, ‘Unsettling Sustainability: Ngarrindjeri Political Literacies, Strategies of Engagement and Transformation’, Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 22, no. 6 (2008): 757–75; Steve Hemming, Daryle Rigney and Shaun Berg, ‘Ngarrindjeri Futures: Negotiation, Governance and Environmental Management’, in Unsettling the Settler State: Creativity and Resistance in Indigenous Settler-State Governance, ed. Sarah Maddison and Morgan Brigg (Sydney: Federation Press, 2011), 104–109; Theresa Petray and Janine Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation: Gugu Badhun Self-Determination as Prefigurative Resistance’, Global Media Journal 12, no. 1 (2018): https://www.hca.westernsydney.edu.au/gmjau/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/GMJAU-Building-an-economy-and-buildin … ermination-as-prefigurative-resistance.pdf.pdf (accessed March 17, 2023); and Toni Bauman and Diane Smith, Indigenous Self-Governance and ‘Nation’ Building: Considerations For a Strategic Self-Analysis Tool, Discussion Paper (Canberra: Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, 2022), https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/269982 (accessed March 17, 2023).16 See Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’; Hemming et al., ‘Ngarrindjeri Futures’; and Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology’.17 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 15.18 Mabo v Queensland [No. 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1.19 See, for e.g. Lisa Strelein, ‘Conceptualising Native Title’, Sydney Law Review 23 (2001): 95–124; Kirsten Anker, ‘The Law of the Other: Exploring the Paradox of Legal Pluralism in Australian Native Title’, in Dealing with the Other: Australian Faces and Interfaces, ed. Pierre Lagayette (Paris: Sorbonne University Press, 2008); and Paul McHugh, Aboriginal Societies and the Common Law: A History of Sovereignty, Status and Self-Determination (London: Oxford University Press, London, 2005), 340.20 Noel Pearson, ‘The Concept of Native Title at Common Law’, Australian Humanities Review 5 (1997): http://australianhumanitiesreview.org/1997/03/01/the-concept-of-native-title-at-common-law/ (accessed March 17, 2023). See also Shaunnagh Dorsett and Shaun McVeigh, ‘Conduct of Laws: Native Title, Responsibility, and Some Limits of Jurisdictional Thinking’, Melbourne University Law Review 36 (2012): 470–93.21 See, for e.g. Aileen Moreton-Robinson, The White Possessive: Property, Power and Indigenous Sovereignty (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015); and for global analysis, J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, ‘“A Structure, Not an Event”: Settler Colonialism and Enduring Indigeneity’, Lateral 5, no. 1 (2016); and Audra Simpson, Mohawk Interrupts: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States (Durham: Duke University Press, 2014).22 National Native Title Council, ‘Current Applications’, http://www.nntt.gov.au/Pages/Statistics.aspx (viewed August 14, 2023); and for analysis of the size and location of PBCs, see Australian Institute for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS), ‘Prescribed Bodies Corporate National Snapshot’, https://nativetitle.org.au/learn/role-and-function-pbc/pbc-national-snapshot (viewed August 15, 2023).23 This was suggested at the time of Mabo and since. As Stephen Young writes, native title is a ‘cover colonial process … produced as a pragmatic, reasonable, and progressive step in the right direction’. See Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’, University of New South Wales Law Journal 44, no. 4 (2021): 1743.24 Most prominently by Patrick Wolfe in his seminal 1996 article ‘Settler Colonialism’. See also Stewart Motha, ‘The Failure of “Postcolonial” Sovereignty in Australia’, Australian Feminist Law Journal 22, no. 1 (2005): 107–25; Ben Silverstein, ‘Submerged Sovereignty: Native Title Within a History of Incorporation’, in Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility, ed. Julie Evans et al. (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2013), 60–85; and more recent analyses such as Catherine Howlett and Rebecca Lawrence, ‘Accumulating Minerals and Dispossessing Indigenous Australians: Native Title Recognition as Settler-Colonialism’, Antipode 51, no. 3 (2019): 818–37; and Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’, 1739–69.25 See Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 131–4.26 See, for example, Pamela McGrath, ‘The Work of Rights: The Nature of Native Title Labour’, in Engaging Indigenous Economy: Debating Diverse Approaches, ed. Will Sanders (Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2016), 251–63; and Alexander Page, ‘Fragile Positions in the New Paternalism: Indigenous Community Organisations During the ‘Advancement’ Era in Australia’, in The Neoliberal State, Recognition and Indigenous Rights: New Paternalism to New Imaginings, ed. Diedre Howard-Wagner et al. (Canberra: ANU Press, 2018), 185–200.27 See Ivan Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance and Native Title in Australia’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development, 29–46; Justin McCaul, ‘Caring for Country as Deliberate Policymaking’, in Public Policy and Indigenous Futures, 51–72; Lisa Strelein and Tran Tran, ‘Building Indigenous Governance from Native Title: Moving Away from ‘Fitting in’ to Creating a Decolonized Space’, Review of Constitutional Studies 18, no. 1 (2013): 19–48; Jessica Weir, ‘Karajarri: Native Title and Governance in the West Kimberley’, Living with Native Title: The Experiences of Registered Native Title Corporations, ed. Toni Bauman et al. (Canberra: AIATSIS, 2013), 147–74; Lisa Strelein, ‘Native Title Bodies Corporate in the Torres Strait: Finding a Place in the Governance of a Region’, in Living with Native Title, 65–108; Tran Tran and Claire Stacey, ‘Wearing Two Hats: The Conflicting Governance Roles of Native Title Corporations and Community/Shire Councils in Remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities’, Land, Rights, Laws: Issues of Native Title 6, no. 4 (2016): 1–20; and Jeremy Webber, ‘Native Title as Self-Government’, UNSW Law Journal 22 (1992): 2.28 We do not define First Nations sovereignty except to note that it is enduring and ongoing. Noting also that the term is contested amongst Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, we use ‘sovereignty’ here as an imperfect shorthand to place it in the same analytical frame as settler sovereignty, and to emphasise ongoing power relations in Australia.29 Our methodology for undertaking INB research partnerships is articulated in Alison Vivian et al., ‘Implementing a Project within the Research Paradigm: The Example of Nation Building Research’, Ngiya: Talk the Law 5 (2016): 47–74.30 For analysis of the term’s usage and history, see Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 131–4.31 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 18.32 See also Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 134.33 Irene Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces, Caring for Country, and the Homeless Position of Aboriginal Peoples’, South Atlantic Quarterly 108, no. 1 (2009): 45.34 Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces’, 44.35 Patrick Wolfe, Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology: The Politics and Poetics of an Ethnographic Event (London: Cassell, 1999), 203.36 As indicated by Justice North in dissent in Western Australia v Ward [2000] FCA 191 [688]. As Justice North put it, ‘Whilst native title is not recognised by the common law in circumstances amounting to extinguishment, and is therefore ineffective under the common law system, native title does not cease to exist as an operative force among aboriginal people. It does not cease to exist for all purposes, only for the purposes of the common law’. See also Irene Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces, caring for Country, and the Homeless Position of Aboriginal Peoples’, South Atlantic Quarterly 108, no. 1 (2009): 27; and See also Brenan Edgeworth, ‘Extinguishment of Native Title: Recent High Court Decisions’, Indigenous Law Bulletin 8, no. 22 (2016): 28–34.37 See, for e.g. Ingram ‘Indigenous Governance’, 33–6.38 Ibid., 36; Kingsley Palmer, Australian Native Title Anthropology: Strategic Practice, the Law and the State (Canberra: ANU Press, 2018); and Simon Young, The Trouble with Tradition. Native Title and Cultural Change (Sydney, Federation Press: 2008).39 Strelein and Tran, ‘Building Indigenous Governance’, 46.40 See Melissa Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey of Prescribed Bodies Corporate (PBCs) (Canberra: National Native Title Council, AIATSIS, 2020), 28–32; McGrath, ‘The Work of Rights’, 251–63; Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 38–39; Tran and Stacey, ‘Wearing Two Hats’; and also Elizabeth Strakosch, ‘The Technical is Political: Settler Colonialism and the Australian Indigenous Policy System’, Australian Journal of Political Science 54, no. 1 (2019): 114–30.41 See Howlett and Lawrence, ‘Accumulating Minerals and Dispossessing Indigenous Australians’, 1739–69; and Ed Wensing, ‘Dealings in Native Title and Statutory Aboriginal Land Rights in Australia: What Land Tenure Reform is Needed?’, in Engaging Indigenous Economy: Debating Diverse Approaches, CAEPR Monograph No. 35, ed. Will Sanders (Canberra: ANU Press, 2016). The destruction of Juukan Gorge in 2020 at the hands or Rio Tinto has brought these issues again to the fore. See Joint Standing Committee on Northern Australia, A Way Forward: Final Report into the Destruction of Indigenous Heritage Sites at Juukan Gorge (Canberra: Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2021), and Jon Altman, ‘The Native Title Act Supports Mineral Extraction and Heritage Destruction, Arena, June 16, 2020, https://arena.org.au/the-native-title-act-supports-mineral-extraction-and-heritage-destruction/.42 Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 149.43 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 43.44 See both Mick Gooda, ‘Chapter 2: Lateral violence in native title: our relationships over our lands, territories and resources’, Native Title Report 2011 (Sydney: Australian Human Rights Commission), 74–115, and Larissa Behrendt and Loretta Kelly, Resolving Indigenous Disputes: Land Conflict and Beyond (Sydney: The Federation Press, 2008), 27–56.45 See Stephen Cornell, ‘That’s the Story of Our Life’, in We are a People: Narrative and Multiplicity in Constructing Ethnic Identity, ed. Paul Spickard and W.J. Burroughs (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2000), 41–51.46 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 6.47 Donna Murray and Deb Evans, ‘Culturally Centred, Community Led: Wiradjuri Nation Rebuilding through Honouring the Wiradjuri Way’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development, 165–86.48 Murray and Evans, ‘Culturally Centered, Community Led’, 176.49 For discussion of constructions of Aboriginality as ‘homo religiosus’, see Jeremy Beckett, ‘The Past in the Present; the Present in the Past: Constructing a National Aboriginality’, in Past and Present: The Construction of Aboriginality (Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, 1988), 207; and, as ‘homo superorganicus’, see Patrick Wolfe, ‘Nation and MiscegeNation: Discursive Continuity in the Post-Mabo Era’, Social Analysis 36 (1994): 134.50 Mabo & Ors v The State of Queensland [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1 per Brennan J 64; also per Deane & Gaudron JJ at 89, per Dawson J at 133; The Wik Peoples v State of Queensland (1996) 187 CLR 1 per Kirby J at 215.51 Yorta Yorta (2002) 214 CLR 422 [52], [50].52 Mabo [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1, 54–57 (Brennan J); Western Australia v The Commonwealth (1995) 183 CLR 373 per Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Toohey, Gaudron & McHugh at 433.53 Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v Victoria [2002] HCA 58; 214 CLR 422 at [31].54 Alyawarr (FCA) [78]. There is no ‘technical, jurisprudential or social scientific criteria for the classification of groups as ‘societies’.55 For discussions on sovereignty and the legal gymnastics undertaken by the High Court to ensure it did not countenance findings that would challenge its own legitimacy or that of the Australian state, see, for e.g.: Silverstein, ‘Submerged Sovereignty’; Motha, ‘The Failure of “Postcolonial” Sovereignty in Australia’, 107; Ben Golder, ‘Law, History, Colonialism: An Orientalist Reading Of Australian Native Title Law’, Deakin Law Review 9, no. 1 (2004): 41–60; Peter Fitzpatrick, ‘“No Higher Duty”: Mabo and the Failure of Legal Foundation’, Law and Critique 13 (2002): 233–52. Importantly, some First Nations envisage native title as an expression of their sovereignty, regardless of assertions to the contrary (see Benjamin R. Smith and Frances Morphy, ‘The Social Effects of Native Title: Recognition, Translation, Coexistence’, in The Social Effects of Native Title: Recognition, Translation, Coexistence, ed. Benjamin R. Smith and Frances Morphy (Canberra: ANU E Press, 2007)).56 See, for e.g. Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 54. Weir describes how the Karajarri became ‘mobilised around native title’ after the building of a fence that ‘threatened access to culturally significant’ sites.57 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 43.58 Ibid., 36.59 Eggington, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, March 10, 2022. Eggington prefers ‘Nyungar’ to refer to his nation. Noongar is used elsewhere in this paper is the spelling used in the nation’s native title claim. Originally 78 claims were developed across Noongar Nation (Noongar Boodja/Country extends across much of the south-west of Western Australia). By 1998, these were amalgamated into 6, and by 2003, a singular claim was brought forward by the South West Aboriginal Land and Sea Council (SWALSC).60 This was not without significant challenges. See Manuhuia Barcham, ‘Noongar Nation’, in Contested Governance: Culture, Power and Institutions in Indigenous Australia, ed. Janet Hunt et al. (Canberra: ANU Press, 2008), 265–82.61 Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to Native Nation Development’, 28–29.62 Ibid.63 Native Title Act, s 61 Native Title Act, s 251B.64 Native Title Act, s 251B(a).65 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 37.66 Native Title Act, s 55. Following a positive determination, the PBC becomes a Registered Native Title Body Corporate (RNTBC). The terms are sometimes used interchangeably.67 See, for e.g. McCaul, ‘Caring for Country as Deliberate Policymaking’, 51–72; and Toni Bauman, ‘Nations and Tribes “Within”: Emerging Aboriginal “Nationalisms” in Katherine’, The Australian Journal of Anthropology 17, no. 3 (2006): 322–35.68 Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey, 37.69 Ibid., 7, 38.70 Gugu Badhun Country includes the upper Burdekin region in north Queensland. The Gugu Badhun Nation are also known as the ‘People of the Valley of Lagoons’.71 Petray and Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation’.72 Ibid.; and GBAC, Gugu Badhun Aboriginal Corporation Strategic Plan 2020–2025 (Townsville: GBAC, 2020), 5–6, http://www.gugubadhun.com/about-gbac. For analysis of the importance of cultural match, see Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to the Development of Native Nations’, 24–25.73 The Gunditjmara People is the self-identified name of the Gunditjmara nation. Their Country extends over the southwest of Victoria.74 For analysis of the Gunditjmara Full Group, see Daryle Rigney et al., ‘Gunditjmara and Ngarrindjeri: Case Studies of Indigenous Self-Government’, in Cambridge Legal History of Australia, ed. Peter Cane, Lisa Ford and Mark McMillan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022), 186–224.75 Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 135–7.76 In fact, one of KLC’s 4 strategic priorities for 2020–24 is ‘empowerment in Nation Building’ for the Traditional Owner groups in the regions. See KLC, KLC Strategic Plan 2020–2024 (Broome: KLC, 2020), 2, https://www.klc.org.au/klc-strategic-plan.77 As expressed by COO Felicity Thiessen in 2021. See CAEPR, ‘“People, Place and Partnership”: A Model for Leveraging and Governing Native Title’, https://caepr.cass.anu.edu.au/events/people-place-and-partnership-model-leveraging-and-governing-native-title (viewed March 30, 2023).78 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 12.79 Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to Native Nation Development’, 9–11.80 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements, between Indigenous Peoples and States, Including Peace Accords and Reconciliation Initiatives, and Their Constitutional Recognition’, UN Seminar of the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 29 November – 1 December 2021, https://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/IPeoples/EMRIP/Pages/EMRIP-Seminar-Treaties.aspx (viewed January 28, 2022).81 The Torres Strait, for example, now includes 19 PBCs alongside the pre-existing Torres Strait Regional Authority and the Torres Strait Islands Regional Council. These bodies have differing forms of representation and (settler-sanctioned) jurisdiction, ensuring a ‘struggle for autonomy’ has ensued (Strelein, ‘Native Title Bodies Corporate’, 66). Likewise, in the Kimberley, PBCs were added into a region where community councils already effectively functioned as ‘local governments’ (Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 148). In the first instance, this suggests that whether or not First Nations already have self-governance systems in place may affect the usefulness of PBC to collective decision-making.82 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 16–18.83 Rigney et al., Indigenous Nation Building, 2.84 See Merlan, ‘Australia’s First Nations’, American Anthropologist 124, no. 1 (2022): 175–86.85 Jessica Weir, The Gunditjmara Land Justice Story (Canberra: AIATSIS, 2009), 7.86 Weir, The Gunditjmara Land Justice Story, 27.87 There is a long history of First Nations using community organisations for collective action and political advocacy. The rise of the ‘Indigenous sector’ since the 1980s – a product of the so-called ‘self-determination’ era – has enabled significant political advocacy, leading to some shifts in health, housing and education policy and discourse. See Patrick Sullivan, ‘The Aboriginal Community Sector and the Effective Delivery of Services: Acknowledging the Role of Indigenous Sector Organisations’, Desert Knowledge CRC Working Paper Series 73 (2010), https://www.nintione.com.au/resource/DKCRC-Working-paper-73_Indigenous-sector-oganisations.pdf (viewed March 31, 2023).88 Rigney, quoted in Daryle Rigney, Damein Bell and Alison Vivian, ‘A Conversation on How Indigenous Nations Can Become Treaty Ready’, in Treaty Making: 250 Years Later, ed. Harry Hobbs, Alison Whittaker and Lindon Coombes (Sydney: Federation Press, 2021), 27.89 See, for e.g. Australian Institute of Indigenous Governance, ‘9.1 What is Nation Rebuilding?’ Indigenous Governance Toolkit, https://toolkit.aigi.com.au/toolkit/9-1-what-is-a-network (viewed March 14, 2022); and Agreements, Treaties and Negotiated Settlements, ATNS, Nation Building in Australia, https://www.atns.net.au/nation-building-landing.90 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 29.91 Altman, ‘Indigenous Rights, Mining Corporations and the Australian State’, in The Politics of Resource Extraction, ed. Suzana Sawyer and Edmund Terence Gomez (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), 46.92 As put by Ciaran O’Faircheallaigh, ‘There is now a broad policy consensus in Australia that mineral development should proceed with the agreement of, rather than over the opposition of, Aboriginal traditional owners’. See O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State in Contemporary Australia: A New Political Economy or ‘Business as Usual’, Australian Journal of Political Science 41, no. 1 (2006): 1–22. Significantly, and as laid out in Part 2, Division 3 of the NTA, ILUAs can be negotiated with native title claimant groups. A positive determination is not required.93 O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State’, 6.94 As O’Faircheallaigh explains, settler governments tend due to view Aboriginal land through a neoliberal lens, with a view to enabling particular types of development. See O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State’, 2.95 Petray and Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation’.96 Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey, 21.97 Ngarrindjeri Country includes the Coorong lagoon area on the coast of South Australia inland to the Murray River and Murray lakes. For descriptions of Kuti Co, see Jawun, ‘Kuti Co – Strengthening the Ngarrindjeri Nation Through their Pipi Harvest Enterprise’, Jawun, July 28, 2020, https://jawun.org.au/2020/07/kuti-co-strengthening-the-ngarrindjeri-nation-through-their-pipi-harvest-enterprise/; Indigenous Land & Sea Corporation, ‘Kuti Co Pipi Project’, https://www.ilsc.gov.au/home/project-profiles/kuti-co-pipi-project/; and Goolwa Pipi Co, ‘Back on Country. Ngarrindjeri: 19,000 Years on Country’, https://goolwapipico.com/ngarrindjeri/.98 See Murray and Evans, ‘Culturally Centered, Community Led’, 165–86.99 Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 138–9, and Donna Murray, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, 26 June 2023. Some Wiradyuri people are engaged in preliminary work around possible claim/s.100 See, for e.g. the National Native Title Council’s PBC Policy Reform project at https://nntc.com.au/our-agenda/pbc-policy-reform-nation-building/ (viewed March 14, 2022); or the comments of the QSNTS at the 2022 AIATSIS summit, at https://aiatsis.gov.au/whats-new/news/2022-aiatsis-summit-navigating-spaces-between (viewed December 1, 2022).101 See Gooda, Native Title Report 2011, 107–10, and Behrendt and Kelly, Resolving Indigenous Disputes.102 Janine Gertz’ recently completed doctoral thesis will be a highly significant resource in this regard. See Gertz, Gugu Badhun Sovereignty, Self-Determination, and Nationhood (PhD thesis, James Cook University, 2022), https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/77294/.103 In addition to PBCs, settler governments are also willing to engage with Aboriginal community-controlled service delivery organisations, including peak bodies, which are not necessarily linked to a particular First Nation. The National Agreement on Closing the Gap is one such example of such engagement.104 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements’.105 The Ngarrindjeri Nation entered into 2016–17 treaty negotiations with the South Australian Government through the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority (NRA), the peak decision-making body for the nation. The NRA cultivated long-standing effective relationships with state government public servants. See Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology for Indigenous Nation Building’, 119–40.106 The Barunga Agreement is a Memorandum of Understanding to negotiate framework for treaty development. While the Land Councils are established under the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976, the NLC and CLC are also NTRBs. See NT Treaty Commission, ‘History’, https://treatynt.com.au/history (viewed March 30, 2023).107 Victorian Government, ‘Applications and Registrations’, https://www.aboriginalheritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/applications-and-registration.108 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements’. As Gertz has described, if PBCs are used in place of other representative bodies in negotiations for treaties, this risk ensuring that negotiations are ‘corporate-to-sovereign’ rather than ‘sovereign-to-sovereign’, with the potential to reinscribe settle-colonial hierarchies.109 Griffiths v Northern Territory of Australia (No 3) [2016] FCA 900 has seen the Ngaliwurru and Nungali peoples awarded $2,530,350 in compensation for damage and extinguishment of their native title in and around the town of Timber Creek in the Northern Territory, plus interest. In turn, this has established a calculation for compensation claims and also set a precedent for historical ‘loss’ (since 1975) alongside future extinguishment. See Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’; and Young, ‘Computing Compensation for Extinguishing Native Title in Australia’, The New Zealand Law Journal 4 (2020): 153–57.110 See Shelley Marshall, Carla Chan Unger, and Suzi Hutchings, ‘When Native Title Fails: First Nations People are Turning to Human Rights Law to Keep Access to Cultural Sites’, The Conversation, October 22, 2021, https://theconversation.com/when-native-title-fails-first-nations-people-are-turning-to-human-rights-law-to-keep-access-to-cultural-sites-169634; Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation, ‘Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation’, https://yynac.com.au/.111 In 2022, the SWALSC reached an agreement with the WA Government resolving all native title claims in exchange for a package including 6 ILUAs (see SWALSC, Settlement Agreement, https://www.noongar.org.au/about-settlement-agreement). For analysis of some of the differences in Noongar views on the Settlement, including legal challenges against the ILUAs, see Hannah McGlade, ‘The McGlade Case: A Noongar History of Land, Social Justice and Activism’, Australian Feminist Law Journal 43, no. 2 (2017): 185–210.112 Collard, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, March 10, 2022.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Australian Research Council under a Discovery Grant (ARC DP190102060 Prerequisite Conditions for Indigenous Self-Government).","PeriodicalId":46232,"journal":{"name":"Settler Colonial Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Indigenous nation building and native title: strategic uses of a fraught settler-colonial regime\",\"authors\":\"Anthea Compton, Alison Vivian, Theresa Petray, Matthew Walsh, Steve Hemming\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/2201473x.2023.2267409\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTDespite the ongoing and destructive nature of invasion and settler-colonial institutions, laws and policies in Australia, many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander nations continue to assert their sovereignty; exercise their inherent rights to self-determination as self-defined, autonomous peoples; and pursue collective aspirations in highly constrained and contested environments. Many nations are engaged in Indigenous nation (re)building (INB). One key INB strategy utilised by such nations is to use settler-colonial policy for their own collective ends. This article analyses the relationship between a complex and highly fraught settler-colonial legal-political system, native title, and INB processes in Australia. Using the ‘Identify as a Nation, Organise as a Nation, Act as a Nation’ framework, we explore some of the actual and potential relationships between the native title system and INB. Despite the considerable harms of the native title system on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, we maintain that First Nations may be able to strategically engage in the system in a way that assists them to further their cultural and political autonomy.KEYWORDS: Indigenous nation buildingnative titleself-determinationsettler-colonialismIndigenous Affairs AcknowledgementsThanks to Simone Bignall for her helpful comments on this article.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1 Irene Watson, ‘Settled and Unsettled Spaces: Are We Free to Roam?’, in Sovereign Subjects: Indigenous Sovereignty Matters, ed. Aileen Moreton-Robinson (Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2007), 25.2 Jorgensen, ‘Editor’s Introduction’, in Rebuilding Native Nations, xii.3 INB research emerges from the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development and its sister organisation, the Native Nations Institute for Leadership, Management and Policy. For an overview of the research of the Harvard Project and the Native Nations, see Miriam Jorgensen, ed., Rebuilding Native Nations: Strategies for Governance and Development (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2007).4 See Stephen Cornell and Joe Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to the Development of Native Nations: One Works, the Other Doesn’t’, in Rebuilding Native Nations, 3–33.5 Stephen Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood: The Indigenous Politics of Self-Government’, The International Indigenous Policy Journal 6, no. 4, art. 4 (2015): 1–27. Cornell has since articulated that a fourth element of ‘Purpose’ is apparent in INB processes (IPOA). The authors of this paper maintain that ‘Purpose’ is sufficiently accounted for in the IOA framework.6 In this article, we refer to Indigenous Peoples, in line with the United Nations Declarations on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. We also use the terms First Nations and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander nations to denote the political nature of these collectives, and to reflect the experiences and preferences of the nations we work with.7 There is a vast range of literature on the global formations and tenets of settler-colonialism. For an overview, see Patrick Wolfe, ‘Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native’, Journal of Genocide Research 8, no. 4 (2006): 387–409; and Lorenzo Veracini, ‘Introducing Settler Colonial Studies’, Settler Colonial Studies 1, no. 1 (2011): 1–12.8 See Daryle Rigney, Simone Bignall, Alison Vivian and Steve Hemming, Indigenous Nation building and the Political Determinants of Health and Wellbeing (Melbourne: Lowitja, 2022); and also Michael J. Chandler and Christopher E. Lalonde 2008, ‘Cultural Continuity as a Moderator of Suicide Risk Among Canada’s First Nations’, in Healing Traditions: The Mental Health of Aboriginal Peoples in Canada, ed. Laurence Kirmayer and Gail Valaskakis (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2009), 221–48.9 Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, Walking Together: The First Steps (Canberra: Australian Government Printing Service, 1994), 4.10 For an overview, see Patrick Wolfe’s seminal text, Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology: The Politics and Poetics of an Ethnographic Event (London: Cassell, 1999). There is some evidence to suggest the state’s approach to First Nations may be shifting. In 2022, the Australian Labor Government committed to the 2017 Uluru Statement from the Heart, which calls for a First Nations Voice enshrined in the Constitution; an agreement making process between Australian governments and First Nations; and a truth-telling process. The current proposed amendment to the Australian Constitution to enable an Indigenous Voice to Parliament includes ‘recognition’ of ‘First Peoples’. See Uluru Statement 2023, ‘Design Principles of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice’, https://ulurustatement.org/education/design-principles/.11 Elizabeth Strakosch, ‘The Technical is Political: Settler Colonialism and the Australian Indigenous Policy System’, Australian Journal of Political Science 54, no. 1 (2019): 114–30, and Alison Vivian and Michael Halloran, ‘Dynamics of the Policy Environment and Trauma in Relations Between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples and the Settler-Colonial State’, Critical Social Policy 42, no. 4 (2022): 626–47.12 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 8. See also Simone Bignall, ‘What is “Postcolonial?”’, in Postcolonial Agency: Critique and Constructivism (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010).13 Articles 3–15 on self-determination are particularly relevant. For a discussion of the importance of the Declaration to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, see Asmi Wood, ‘Self-Determination Under International Law and Some Possibilities for Australia’s Indigenous Peoples’, in Indigenous Self-Determination in Australia: Histories and Historiography, ed. Laura Rademaker and Tim Rowse (Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2020), 269–92.14 Key First Nations theorists specifically engaged in INB research, working either within or in research partnerships with Australian universities include Daryle Rigney, Janine Gertz, Damein Bell, Matthew Walsh, Donna Murray, Debra Evans, Dennis Eggington and Larissa Behrendt. We also note that there are countless Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander researchers working on closely related matters around Indigenous self-determination, governance and autonomy.15 Research partnerships (including some authors) with the Gunditjmara People and Ngarrindjeri Nation, and later individuals and groups from the Wiradyuri, Gugu Badhun and Nyungar Nations found that the Harvard Project’s principles were highly relevant in Australia. Research projects have included Australian Research Council projects: ‘Negotiating a space in the nation: the case of Ngarrindjeri’ (DP1094869); ‘Indigenous nationhood in the absence of recognition: Self-governance insights and strategies from three Aboriginal communities’ (LP140100376); and ‘Prerequisite conditions for Indigenous nation self-government’ (DP190102060). A book detailing initial inquiries with the Ngarrindjeri and Gunditjmara nations is forthcoming (see Larissa Behrendt et al. in press, Resistance, Resilience, Resurgence: Indigenous Nation Building in Australia (Bloomsbury)). For further description of INB strategies and experiences in Australia, see Miriam Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time Is Now: Indigenous Nation Policy Making for Self-determined Futures’, in Public Policy and Indigenous Futures, ed. Nikki Moodie and Sarah Maddison (Melbourne: Springer, 2023), 129–47; Rigney et al., Indigenous Nation Building; Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology for Indigenous Nation Building’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development: International Case Studies of Indigenous Futures, ed. Diane Smith et al. (London: Rowman and Littlefield, 2021); Steve Hemming and Daryle Rigney, ‘Unsettling Sustainability: Ngarrindjeri Political Literacies, Strategies of Engagement and Transformation’, Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 22, no. 6 (2008): 757–75; Steve Hemming, Daryle Rigney and Shaun Berg, ‘Ngarrindjeri Futures: Negotiation, Governance and Environmental Management’, in Unsettling the Settler State: Creativity and Resistance in Indigenous Settler-State Governance, ed. Sarah Maddison and Morgan Brigg (Sydney: Federation Press, 2011), 104–109; Theresa Petray and Janine Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation: Gugu Badhun Self-Determination as Prefigurative Resistance’, Global Media Journal 12, no. 1 (2018): https://www.hca.westernsydney.edu.au/gmjau/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/GMJAU-Building-an-economy-and-buildin … ermination-as-prefigurative-resistance.pdf.pdf (accessed March 17, 2023); and Toni Bauman and Diane Smith, Indigenous Self-Governance and ‘Nation’ Building: Considerations For a Strategic Self-Analysis Tool, Discussion Paper (Canberra: Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, 2022), https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/269982 (accessed March 17, 2023).16 See Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’; Hemming et al., ‘Ngarrindjeri Futures’; and Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology’.17 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 15.18 Mabo v Queensland [No. 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1.19 See, for e.g. Lisa Strelein, ‘Conceptualising Native Title’, Sydney Law Review 23 (2001): 95–124; Kirsten Anker, ‘The Law of the Other: Exploring the Paradox of Legal Pluralism in Australian Native Title’, in Dealing with the Other: Australian Faces and Interfaces, ed. Pierre Lagayette (Paris: Sorbonne University Press, 2008); and Paul McHugh, Aboriginal Societies and the Common Law: A History of Sovereignty, Status and Self-Determination (London: Oxford University Press, London, 2005), 340.20 Noel Pearson, ‘The Concept of Native Title at Common Law’, Australian Humanities Review 5 (1997): http://australianhumanitiesreview.org/1997/03/01/the-concept-of-native-title-at-common-law/ (accessed March 17, 2023). See also Shaunnagh Dorsett and Shaun McVeigh, ‘Conduct of Laws: Native Title, Responsibility, and Some Limits of Jurisdictional Thinking’, Melbourne University Law Review 36 (2012): 470–93.21 See, for e.g. Aileen Moreton-Robinson, The White Possessive: Property, Power and Indigenous Sovereignty (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015); and for global analysis, J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, ‘“A Structure, Not an Event”: Settler Colonialism and Enduring Indigeneity’, Lateral 5, no. 1 (2016); and Audra Simpson, Mohawk Interrupts: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States (Durham: Duke University Press, 2014).22 National Native Title Council, ‘Current Applications’, http://www.nntt.gov.au/Pages/Statistics.aspx (viewed August 14, 2023); and for analysis of the size and location of PBCs, see Australian Institute for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS), ‘Prescribed Bodies Corporate National Snapshot’, https://nativetitle.org.au/learn/role-and-function-pbc/pbc-national-snapshot (viewed August 15, 2023).23 This was suggested at the time of Mabo and since. As Stephen Young writes, native title is a ‘cover colonial process … produced as a pragmatic, reasonable, and progressive step in the right direction’. See Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’, University of New South Wales Law Journal 44, no. 4 (2021): 1743.24 Most prominently by Patrick Wolfe in his seminal 1996 article ‘Settler Colonialism’. See also Stewart Motha, ‘The Failure of “Postcolonial” Sovereignty in Australia’, Australian Feminist Law Journal 22, no. 1 (2005): 107–25; Ben Silverstein, ‘Submerged Sovereignty: Native Title Within a History of Incorporation’, in Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility, ed. Julie Evans et al. (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2013), 60–85; and more recent analyses such as Catherine Howlett and Rebecca Lawrence, ‘Accumulating Minerals and Dispossessing Indigenous Australians: Native Title Recognition as Settler-Colonialism’, Antipode 51, no. 3 (2019): 818–37; and Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’, 1739–69.25 See Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 131–4.26 See, for example, Pamela McGrath, ‘The Work of Rights: The Nature of Native Title Labour’, in Engaging Indigenous Economy: Debating Diverse Approaches, ed. Will Sanders (Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2016), 251–63; and Alexander Page, ‘Fragile Positions in the New Paternalism: Indigenous Community Organisations During the ‘Advancement’ Era in Australia’, in The Neoliberal State, Recognition and Indigenous Rights: New Paternalism to New Imaginings, ed. Diedre Howard-Wagner et al. (Canberra: ANU Press, 2018), 185–200.27 See Ivan Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance and Native Title in Australia’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development, 29–46; Justin McCaul, ‘Caring for Country as Deliberate Policymaking’, in Public Policy and Indigenous Futures, 51–72; Lisa Strelein and Tran Tran, ‘Building Indigenous Governance from Native Title: Moving Away from ‘Fitting in’ to Creating a Decolonized Space’, Review of Constitutional Studies 18, no. 1 (2013): 19–48; Jessica Weir, ‘Karajarri: Native Title and Governance in the West Kimberley’, Living with Native Title: The Experiences of Registered Native Title Corporations, ed. Toni Bauman et al. (Canberra: AIATSIS, 2013), 147–74; Lisa Strelein, ‘Native Title Bodies Corporate in the Torres Strait: Finding a Place in the Governance of a Region’, in Living with Native Title, 65–108; Tran Tran and Claire Stacey, ‘Wearing Two Hats: The Conflicting Governance Roles of Native Title Corporations and Community/Shire Councils in Remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities’, Land, Rights, Laws: Issues of Native Title 6, no. 4 (2016): 1–20; and Jeremy Webber, ‘Native Title as Self-Government’, UNSW Law Journal 22 (1992): 2.28 We do not define First Nations sovereignty except to note that it is enduring and ongoing. Noting also that the term is contested amongst Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, we use ‘sovereignty’ here as an imperfect shorthand to place it in the same analytical frame as settler sovereignty, and to emphasise ongoing power relations in Australia.29 Our methodology for undertaking INB research partnerships is articulated in Alison Vivian et al., ‘Implementing a Project within the Research Paradigm: The Example of Nation Building Research’, Ngiya: Talk the Law 5 (2016): 47–74.30 For analysis of the term’s usage and history, see Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 131–4.31 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 18.32 See also Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 134.33 Irene Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces, Caring for Country, and the Homeless Position of Aboriginal Peoples’, South Atlantic Quarterly 108, no. 1 (2009): 45.34 Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces’, 44.35 Patrick Wolfe, Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology: The Politics and Poetics of an Ethnographic Event (London: Cassell, 1999), 203.36 As indicated by Justice North in dissent in Western Australia v Ward [2000] FCA 191 [688]. As Justice North put it, ‘Whilst native title is not recognised by the common law in circumstances amounting to extinguishment, and is therefore ineffective under the common law system, native title does not cease to exist as an operative force among aboriginal people. It does not cease to exist for all purposes, only for the purposes of the common law’. See also Irene Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces, caring for Country, and the Homeless Position of Aboriginal Peoples’, South Atlantic Quarterly 108, no. 1 (2009): 27; and See also Brenan Edgeworth, ‘Extinguishment of Native Title: Recent High Court Decisions’, Indigenous Law Bulletin 8, no. 22 (2016): 28–34.37 See, for e.g. Ingram ‘Indigenous Governance’, 33–6.38 Ibid., 36; Kingsley Palmer, Australian Native Title Anthropology: Strategic Practice, the Law and the State (Canberra: ANU Press, 2018); and Simon Young, The Trouble with Tradition. Native Title and Cultural Change (Sydney, Federation Press: 2008).39 Strelein and Tran, ‘Building Indigenous Governance’, 46.40 See Melissa Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey of Prescribed Bodies Corporate (PBCs) (Canberra: National Native Title Council, AIATSIS, 2020), 28–32; McGrath, ‘The Work of Rights’, 251–63; Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 38–39; Tran and Stacey, ‘Wearing Two Hats’; and also Elizabeth Strakosch, ‘The Technical is Political: Settler Colonialism and the Australian Indigenous Policy System’, Australian Journal of Political Science 54, no. 1 (2019): 114–30.41 See Howlett and Lawrence, ‘Accumulating Minerals and Dispossessing Indigenous Australians’, 1739–69; and Ed Wensing, ‘Dealings in Native Title and Statutory Aboriginal Land Rights in Australia: What Land Tenure Reform is Needed?’, in Engaging Indigenous Economy: Debating Diverse Approaches, CAEPR Monograph No. 35, ed. Will Sanders (Canberra: ANU Press, 2016). The destruction of Juukan Gorge in 2020 at the hands or Rio Tinto has brought these issues again to the fore. See Joint Standing Committee on Northern Australia, A Way Forward: Final Report into the Destruction of Indigenous Heritage Sites at Juukan Gorge (Canberra: Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2021), and Jon Altman, ‘The Native Title Act Supports Mineral Extraction and Heritage Destruction, Arena, June 16, 2020, https://arena.org.au/the-native-title-act-supports-mineral-extraction-and-heritage-destruction/.42 Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 149.43 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 43.44 See both Mick Gooda, ‘Chapter 2: Lateral violence in native title: our relationships over our lands, territories and resources’, Native Title Report 2011 (Sydney: Australian Human Rights Commission), 74–115, and Larissa Behrendt and Loretta Kelly, Resolving Indigenous Disputes: Land Conflict and Beyond (Sydney: The Federation Press, 2008), 27–56.45 See Stephen Cornell, ‘That’s the Story of Our Life’, in We are a People: Narrative and Multiplicity in Constructing Ethnic Identity, ed. Paul Spickard and W.J. Burroughs (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2000), 41–51.46 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 6.47 Donna Murray and Deb Evans, ‘Culturally Centred, Community Led: Wiradjuri Nation Rebuilding through Honouring the Wiradjuri Way’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development, 165–86.48 Murray and Evans, ‘Culturally Centered, Community Led’, 176.49 For discussion of constructions of Aboriginality as ‘homo religiosus’, see Jeremy Beckett, ‘The Past in the Present; the Present in the Past: Constructing a National Aboriginality’, in Past and Present: The Construction of Aboriginality (Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, 1988), 207; and, as ‘homo superorganicus’, see Patrick Wolfe, ‘Nation and MiscegeNation: Discursive Continuity in the Post-Mabo Era’, Social Analysis 36 (1994): 134.50 Mabo & Ors v The State of Queensland [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1 per Brennan J 64; also per Deane & Gaudron JJ at 89, per Dawson J at 133; The Wik Peoples v State of Queensland (1996) 187 CLR 1 per Kirby J at 215.51 Yorta Yorta (2002) 214 CLR 422 [52], [50].52 Mabo [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1, 54–57 (Brennan J); Western Australia v The Commonwealth (1995) 183 CLR 373 per Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Toohey, Gaudron & McHugh at 433.53 Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v Victoria [2002] HCA 58; 214 CLR 422 at [31].54 Alyawarr (FCA) [78]. There is no ‘technical, jurisprudential or social scientific criteria for the classification of groups as ‘societies’.55 For discussions on sovereignty and the legal gymnastics undertaken by the High Court to ensure it did not countenance findings that would challenge its own legitimacy or that of the Australian state, see, for e.g.: Silverstein, ‘Submerged Sovereignty’; Motha, ‘The Failure of “Postcolonial” Sovereignty in Australia’, 107; Ben Golder, ‘Law, History, Colonialism: An Orientalist Reading Of Australian Native Title Law’, Deakin Law Review 9, no. 1 (2004): 41–60; Peter Fitzpatrick, ‘“No Higher Duty”: Mabo and the Failure of Legal Foundation’, Law and Critique 13 (2002): 233–52. Importantly, some First Nations envisage native title as an expression of their sovereignty, regardless of assertions to the contrary (see Benjamin R. Smith and Frances Morphy, ‘The Social Effects of Native Title: Recognition, Translation, Coexistence’, in The Social Effects of Native Title: Recognition, Translation, Coexistence, ed. Benjamin R. Smith and Frances Morphy (Canberra: ANU E Press, 2007)).56 See, for e.g. Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 54. Weir describes how the Karajarri became ‘mobilised around native title’ after the building of a fence that ‘threatened access to culturally significant’ sites.57 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 43.58 Ibid., 36.59 Eggington, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, March 10, 2022. Eggington prefers ‘Nyungar’ to refer to his nation. Noongar is used elsewhere in this paper is the spelling used in the nation’s native title claim. Originally 78 claims were developed across Noongar Nation (Noongar Boodja/Country extends across much of the south-west of Western Australia). By 1998, these were amalgamated into 6, and by 2003, a singular claim was brought forward by the South West Aboriginal Land and Sea Council (SWALSC).60 This was not without significant challenges. See Manuhuia Barcham, ‘Noongar Nation’, in Contested Governance: Culture, Power and Institutions in Indigenous Australia, ed. Janet Hunt et al. (Canberra: ANU Press, 2008), 265–82.61 Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to Native Nation Development’, 28–29.62 Ibid.63 Native Title Act, s 61 Native Title Act, s 251B.64 Native Title Act, s 251B(a).65 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 37.66 Native Title Act, s 55. Following a positive determination, the PBC becomes a Registered Native Title Body Corporate (RNTBC). The terms are sometimes used interchangeably.67 See, for e.g. McCaul, ‘Caring for Country as Deliberate Policymaking’, 51–72; and Toni Bauman, ‘Nations and Tribes “Within”: Emerging Aboriginal “Nationalisms” in Katherine’, The Australian Journal of Anthropology 17, no. 3 (2006): 322–35.68 Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey, 37.69 Ibid., 7, 38.70 Gugu Badhun Country includes the upper Burdekin region in north Queensland. The Gugu Badhun Nation are also known as the ‘People of the Valley of Lagoons’.71 Petray and Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation’.72 Ibid.; and GBAC, Gugu Badhun Aboriginal Corporation Strategic Plan 2020–2025 (Townsville: GBAC, 2020), 5–6, http://www.gugubadhun.com/about-gbac. For analysis of the importance of cultural match, see Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to the Development of Native Nations’, 24–25.73 The Gunditjmara People is the self-identified name of the Gunditjmara nation. Their Country extends over the southwest of Victoria.74 For analysis of the Gunditjmara Full Group, see Daryle Rigney et al., ‘Gunditjmara and Ngarrindjeri: Case Studies of Indigenous Self-Government’, in Cambridge Legal History of Australia, ed. Peter Cane, Lisa Ford and Mark McMillan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022), 186–224.75 Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 135–7.76 In fact, one of KLC’s 4 strategic priorities for 2020–24 is ‘empowerment in Nation Building’ for the Traditional Owner groups in the regions. See KLC, KLC Strategic Plan 2020–2024 (Broome: KLC, 2020), 2, https://www.klc.org.au/klc-strategic-plan.77 As expressed by COO Felicity Thiessen in 2021. See CAEPR, ‘“People, Place and Partnership”: A Model for Leveraging and Governing Native Title’, https://caepr.cass.anu.edu.au/events/people-place-and-partnership-model-leveraging-and-governing-native-title (viewed March 30, 2023).78 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 12.79 Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to Native Nation Development’, 9–11.80 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements, between Indigenous Peoples and States, Including Peace Accords and Reconciliation Initiatives, and Their Constitutional Recognition’, UN Seminar of the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 29 November – 1 December 2021, https://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/IPeoples/EMRIP/Pages/EMRIP-Seminar-Treaties.aspx (viewed January 28, 2022).81 The Torres Strait, for example, now includes 19 PBCs alongside the pre-existing Torres Strait Regional Authority and the Torres Strait Islands Regional Council. These bodies have differing forms of representation and (settler-sanctioned) jurisdiction, ensuring a ‘struggle for autonomy’ has ensued (Strelein, ‘Native Title Bodies Corporate’, 66). Likewise, in the Kimberley, PBCs were added into a region where community councils already effectively functioned as ‘local governments’ (Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 148). In the first instance, this suggests that whether or not First Nations already have self-governance systems in place may affect the usefulness of PBC to collective decision-making.82 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 16–18.83 Rigney et al., Indigenous Nation Building, 2.84 See Merlan, ‘Australia’s First Nations’, American Anthropologist 124, no. 1 (2022): 175–86.85 Jessica Weir, The Gunditjmara Land Justice Story (Canberra: AIATSIS, 2009), 7.86 Weir, The Gunditjmara Land Justice Story, 27.87 There is a long history of First Nations using community organisations for collective action and political advocacy. The rise of the ‘Indigenous sector’ since the 1980s – a product of the so-called ‘self-determination’ era – has enabled significant political advocacy, leading to some shifts in health, housing and education policy and discourse. See Patrick Sullivan, ‘The Aboriginal Community Sector and the Effective Delivery of Services: Acknowledging the Role of Indigenous Sector Organisations’, Desert Knowledge CRC Working Paper Series 73 (2010), https://www.nintione.com.au/resource/DKCRC-Working-paper-73_Indigenous-sector-oganisations.pdf (viewed March 31, 2023).88 Rigney, quoted in Daryle Rigney, Damein Bell and Alison Vivian, ‘A Conversation on How Indigenous Nations Can Become Treaty Ready’, in Treaty Making: 250 Years Later, ed. Harry Hobbs, Alison Whittaker and Lindon Coombes (Sydney: Federation Press, 2021), 27.89 See, for e.g. Australian Institute of Indigenous Governance, ‘9.1 What is Nation Rebuilding?’ Indigenous Governance Toolkit, https://toolkit.aigi.com.au/toolkit/9-1-what-is-a-network (viewed March 14, 2022); and Agreements, Treaties and Negotiated Settlements, ATNS, Nation Building in Australia, https://www.atns.net.au/nation-building-landing.90 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 29.91 Altman, ‘Indigenous Rights, Mining Corporations and the Australian State’, in The Politics of Resource Extraction, ed. Suzana Sawyer and Edmund Terence Gomez (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), 46.92 As put by Ciaran O’Faircheallaigh, ‘There is now a broad policy consensus in Australia that mineral development should proceed with the agreement of, rather than over the opposition of, Aboriginal traditional owners’. See O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State in Contemporary Australia: A New Political Economy or ‘Business as Usual’, Australian Journal of Political Science 41, no. 1 (2006): 1–22. Significantly, and as laid out in Part 2, Division 3 of the NTA, ILUAs can be negotiated with native title claimant groups. A positive determination is not required.93 O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State’, 6.94 As O’Faircheallaigh explains, settler governments tend due to view Aboriginal land through a neoliberal lens, with a view to enabling particular types of development. See O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State’, 2.95 Petray and Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation’.96 Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey, 21.97 Ngarrindjeri Country includes the Coorong lagoon area on the coast of South Australia inland to the Murray River and Murray lakes. For descriptions of Kuti Co, see Jawun, ‘Kuti Co – Strengthening the Ngarrindjeri Nation Through their Pipi Harvest Enterprise’, Jawun, July 28, 2020, https://jawun.org.au/2020/07/kuti-co-strengthening-the-ngarrindjeri-nation-through-their-pipi-harvest-enterprise/; Indigenous Land & Sea Corporation, ‘Kuti Co Pipi Project’, https://www.ilsc.gov.au/home/project-profiles/kuti-co-pipi-project/; and Goolwa Pipi Co, ‘Back on Country. Ngarrindjeri: 19,000 Years on Country’, https://goolwapipico.com/ngarrindjeri/.98 See Murray and Evans, ‘Culturally Centered, Community Led’, 165–86.99 Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 138–9, and Donna Murray, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, 26 June 2023. Some Wiradyuri people are engaged in preliminary work around possible claim/s.100 See, for e.g. the National Native Title Council’s PBC Policy Reform project at https://nntc.com.au/our-agenda/pbc-policy-reform-nation-building/ (viewed March 14, 2022); or the comments of the QSNTS at the 2022 AIATSIS summit, at https://aiatsis.gov.au/whats-new/news/2022-aiatsis-summit-navigating-spaces-between (viewed December 1, 2022).101 See Gooda, Native Title Report 2011, 107–10, and Behrendt and Kelly, Resolving Indigenous Disputes.102 Janine Gertz’ recently completed doctoral thesis will be a highly significant resource in this regard. See Gertz, Gugu Badhun Sovereignty, Self-Determination, and Nationhood (PhD thesis, James Cook University, 2022), https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/77294/.103 In addition to PBCs, settler governments are also willing to engage with Aboriginal community-controlled service delivery organisations, including peak bodies, which are not necessarily linked to a particular First Nation. The National Agreement on Closing the Gap is one such example of such engagement.104 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements’.105 The Ngarrindjeri Nation entered into 2016–17 treaty negotiations with the South Australian Government through the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority (NRA), the peak decision-making body for the nation. The NRA cultivated long-standing effective relationships with state government public servants. See Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology for Indigenous Nation Building’, 119–40.106 The Barunga Agreement is a Memorandum of Understanding to negotiate framework for treaty development. While the Land Councils are established under the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976, the NLC and CLC are also NTRBs. See NT Treaty Commission, ‘History’, https://treatynt.com.au/history (viewed March 30, 2023).107 Victorian Government, ‘Applications and Registrations’, https://www.aboriginalheritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/applications-and-registration.108 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements’. As Gertz has described, if PBCs are used in place of other representative bodies in negotiations for treaties, this risk ensuring that negotiations are ‘corporate-to-sovereign’ rather than ‘sovereign-to-sovereign’, with the potential to reinscribe settle-colonial hierarchies.109 Griffiths v Northern Territory of Australia (No 3) [2016] FCA 900 has seen the Ngaliwurru and Nungali peoples awarded $2,530,350 in compensation for damage and extinguishment of their native title in and around the town of Timber Creek in the Northern Territory, plus interest. In turn, this has established a calculation for compensation claims and also set a precedent for historical ‘loss’ (since 1975) alongside future extinguishment. See Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’; and Young, ‘Computing Compensation for Extinguishing Native Title in Australia’, The New Zealand Law Journal 4 (2020): 153–57.110 See Shelley Marshall, Carla Chan Unger, and Suzi Hutchings, ‘When Native Title Fails: First Nations People are Turning to Human Rights Law to Keep Access to Cultural Sites’, The Conversation, October 22, 2021, https://theconversation.com/when-native-title-fails-first-nations-people-are-turning-to-human-rights-law-to-keep-access-to-cultural-sites-169634; Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation, ‘Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation’, https://yynac.com.au/.111 In 2022, the SWALSC reached an agreement with the WA Government resolving all native title claims in exchange for a package including 6 ILUAs (see SWALSC, Settlement Agreement, https://www.noongar.org.au/about-settlement-agreement). For analysis of some of the differences in Noongar views on the Settlement, including legal challenges against the ILUAs, see Hannah McGlade, ‘The McGlade Case: A Noongar History of Land, Social Justice and Activism’, Australian Feminist Law Journal 43, no. 2 (2017): 185–210.112 Collard, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, March 10, 2022.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Australian Research Council under a Discovery Grant (ARC DP190102060 Prerequisite Conditions for Indigenous Self-Government).\",\"PeriodicalId\":46232,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Settler Colonial Studies\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":1.1000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-10-11\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Settler Colonial Studies\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/2201473x.2023.2267409\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Settler Colonial Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/2201473x.2023.2267409","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要尽管澳大利亚的入侵和移民-殖民制度、法律和政策具有持续的破坏性,但许多原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民仍在坚持自己的主权;作为自我界定的自治人民行使其固有的自决权利;在高度受限和竞争激烈的环境中追求集体愿望。许多国家都在进行土著民族(再)建设。这些国家采用的一项关键国际移民组织战略是利用移民-殖民政策来实现它们自己的集体目的。本文分析了澳大利亚复杂且令人担忧的移民-殖民法律-政治体系、土著所有权和移民安置程序之间的关系。利用“作为一个国家的认同,作为一个国家的组织,作为一个国家的行动”的框架,我们探索了一些实际的和潜在的土著所有权制度和INB之间的关系。尽管土著所有权制度对土著和托雷斯海峡岛民造成了相当大的伤害,但我们认为,第一民族或许能够以一种帮助他们进一步实现文化和政治自治的方式,从战略上参与该制度。关键词:土著民族建设;土著部落;自决;定居者;殖民主义;土著事务感谢西蒙娜·比格纳尔对本文的有益评论。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1艾琳·沃森:《定居与未定居的空间:我们可以自由漫游吗?》,《主权主题:土著主权问题》,艾琳·莫顿-罗宾逊主编(悉尼:Allen & Unwin出版社,2007年);25.2乔根森,《编辑导言》,《重建土著民族》,第12卷第3页INB的研究来自哈佛美洲印第安人经济发展项目及其姊妹组织——土著民族领导、管理和政策研究所。有关哈佛项目和土著民族研究的概述,请参阅Miriam Jorgensen主编的《重建土著民族:治理与发展战略》(图森:亚利桑那大学出版社,2007年)参见Stephen Cornell和Joe Kalt,“土著民族发展的两种方法:一种有效,另一种不起作用”,见《重建土著民族》第3-33.5期Stephen Cornell,“土著民族的过程:自治的土著政治”,《国际土著政策杂志》第6期。4、艺术。4(2015): 1-27。康奈尔后来明确指出,“目的”的第四个要素在INB过程(IPOA)中很明显。本文的作者认为,“目的”在IOA框架中得到了充分的考虑在本文中,我们根据《联合国土著人民权利宣言》提到土著人民。我们还使用“第一民族”、“土著居民”和“托雷斯海峡岛民”等术语来表示这些集体的政治性质,并反映与我们合作的国家的经验和偏好关于移民殖民主义的全球形成和原则,有大量的文献。有关概述,请参阅帕特里克·沃尔夫,“移民殖民主义和土著的消除”,《种族灭绝研究杂志》第8期。4 (2006): 387-409;洛伦佐·维拉西尼,《移民殖民研究介绍》,《移民殖民研究》第1期,第2期。1(2011): 1 - 12.8见Daryle Rigney, Simone Bignall, Alison Vivian和Steve Hemming,土著民族建设和健康与福祉的政治决定因素(墨尔本:Lowitja, 2022);还有Michael J. Chandler和Christopher E. Lalonde 2008,“文化连续性作为加拿大第一民族自杀风险的调节因素”,在愈合传统中:加拿大土著人民的心理健康,Laurence Kirmayer和Gail Valaskakis编辑(温哥华:不列颠哥伦比亚大学出版社,2009),221-48.9土著和解委员会,一起走:第一步(堪培拉:澳大利亚政府印刷服务,1994),4.10的概述,见帕特里克·沃尔夫的开创性文本,移民殖民主义和人类学的转变:一个民族志事件的政治和诗学(伦敦:卡塞尔,1999)。有证据表明,该州对待原住民的态度可能正在转变。2022年,澳大利亚工党政府承诺遵守2017年《发自内心的乌鲁鲁声明》,该声明呼吁将原住民的声音写入宪法;澳大利亚政府与原住民之间的协议制定过程;还有一个说真话的过程。目前提出的澳大利亚宪法修正案旨在使土著人能够向议会发出声音,其中包括“承认”“第一民族”。参见Uluru声明2023,“土著和托雷斯海峡岛民声音的设计原则”,https://ulurustatement.org/education/design-principles/。 20诺埃尔·皮尔森,“普通法上的土著所有权概念”,《澳大利亚人文评论》第5期(1997):http://australianhumanitiesreview.org/1997/03/01/the-concept-of-native-title-at-common-law/(访问日期:2023年3月17日)。参见Shaunnagh Dorsett和Shaun McVeigh,“法律的行为:土著所有权、责任和司法思维的一些限制”,墨尔本大学法律评论36(2012):470-93.21参见,例如Aileen morton - robinson,《白人占有:财产、权力和土著主权》(明尼阿波利斯:明尼苏达大学出版社,2015);关于全球分析,J. Kēhaulani Kauanui,“一个结构,而不是一个事件”:定居者殖民主义和持久的土著”,第5期。1 (2016);和奥德拉·辛普森,莫霍克打断:跨越移民州边界的政治生活(达勒姆:杜克大学出版社,2014年)国家土著权利委员会,“当前申请”,http://www.nntt.gov.au/Pages/Statistics.aspx(查看于2023年8月14日);关于PBCs的规模和位置分析,请参见澳大利亚土著和托雷斯海峡岛民研究所(AIATSIS),“规定机构企业国家快照”,https://nativetitle.org.au/learn/role-and-function-pbc/pbc-national-snapshot(查看于2023年8月15日)这是在马波时期提出的。正如Stephen Young所写的那样,土著头衔是一个“掩盖的殖民过程……是朝着正确方向迈出的务实、合理和进步的一步”。参见Young,“作为流离失所的调解人的土著头衔”,《新南威尔士大学法律杂志》第44期,第2期。最突出的是帕特里克·沃尔夫在他1996年的开创性文章“定居者殖民主义”。参见Stewart Motha,“澳大利亚“后殖民”主权的失败”,《澳大利亚女权主义法律杂志》第22期。1 (2005): 107-25;本·西尔弗斯坦,“淹没主权:合并历史中的土著所有权”,在主权:可能性的前沿,编辑朱莉·埃文斯等人(檀香山:夏威夷大学出版社,2013),60-85;以及最近的一些分析,如凯瑟琳·豪利特和丽贝卡·劳伦斯,“积累矿产和剥夺土著澳大利亚人:作为定居者-殖民主义的土著所有权承认”,《对跖》第51期。3 (2019): 818-37;和杨,“作为流离失所的调解人的土著头衔”,1739-69.25见Jorgensen等人,“是的,时间就是现在”,131-4.26见例如,Pamela McGrath,“权利的工作:土著头衔劳工的性质”,参与土著经济:辩论不同的方法,编辑。Will Sanders(堪培拉:澳大利亚国立大学出版社,2016),251-63;和亚历山大·佩奇,“新家长制中的脆弱地位:澳大利亚“进步”时代的土著社区组织”,在新自由主义国家,承认和土著权利:新想象的新家长制,迪德雷·霍华德-瓦格纳等人(堪培拉:澳大利亚国立大学出版社,2018),185-200.27见伊万·英格拉姆,“澳大利亚的土著治理和土著头衔”,在发展治理和治理发展,29-46;贾斯汀·麦考尔,《作为审慎决策的国家关怀》,载于《公共政策与土著未来》第51-72期;Lisa Strelein和Tran Tran:“从原住民身分建立原住民治理:从“适应”到创造非殖民化空间”,《宪政研究评论》第18期。1 (2013): 19-48;Jessica Weir,“Karajarri:西金伯利的土著所有权和治理”,《与土著所有权共存:注册土著所有权公司的经验》,Toni Bauman等人编(堪培拉:AIATSIS, 2013), 147-74;Lisa Strelein,“托雷斯海峡的土著权利团体:在地区治理中寻找一席之地”,《与土著权利共存》,第65-108页;Tran Tran和Claire Stacey,“戴着两顶帽子:偏远原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民社区中土著产权公司和社区/郡议会的冲突治理角色”,《土地、权利、法律:土著产权问题》,第6期。4 (2016): 1-20;和杰里米·韦伯,“作为自治政府的土著头衔”,UNSW法律杂志22(1992):2.28我们没有定义第一民族的主权,只是注意到它是持久和持续的。还注意到该术语在原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民中存在争议,我们在这里使用“主权”作为不完美的简写,将其与定居者主权置于相同的分析框架中,并强调澳大利亚正在进行的权力关系。29我们开展INB研究伙伴关系的方法在Alison Vivian等人的“在研究范式中实施项目:国家建设研究的例子”中得到了阐述,Ngiya: Talk the Law 5(2016)。47-74.30关于这个词的用法和历史的分析,见Jorgensen et al.,“是的,时间是现在”,131-4.31康奈尔,“土著民族的过程”,18.32也见Jorgensen et al.,“是的,时间是现在”,134。 55关于主权的讨论和高等法院为确保其不支持可能挑战其自身合法性或澳大利亚国家合法性的调查结果而进行的法律活动,见西尔弗斯坦的“淹没主权”;莫塔,《“后殖民”主权在澳大利亚的失败》,1997;本·高德:《法律、历史、殖民主义:澳大利亚土著地产法的东方解读》,《迪肯法律评论》第9期。1 (2004): 41-60;彼得·菲茨帕特里克:“没有更高的责任”:马波与法律基础的失败”,《法律与批判》,2002年第13期,第233-52页。重要的是,一些第一民族设想土著头衔作为他们主权的表达,不管断言相反(见本杰明·r·史密斯和弗朗西斯·莫菲,“土著头衔的社会影响:承认,翻译,共存”,在土著头衔的社会影响:承认,翻译,共存,本杰明·r·史密斯和弗朗西斯·莫菲编辑(堪培拉:澳大利亚国立大学出版社,2007年))。56例如,Weir, ' Karajarri ', 54。Weir描述了Karajarri人是如何在建造了一道“威胁到进入具有重要文化意义的”遗址的栅栏之后“围绕土著头衔被动员起来”的英格拉姆,《土著治理》,43.58同上,36.59埃金顿,对安西娅·康普顿和艾莉森·维维安的采访,2022年3月10日。埃金顿更喜欢用“Nyungar”来称呼他的国家。Noongar在这篇文章的其他地方也被使用,这是在这个国家的土著所有权声明中使用的拼写。最初在Noongar Nation (Noongar Boodja/Country横跨西澳大利亚西南部的大部分地区)开发了78个主张。到1998年,这些被合并为6个,到2003年,西南土著土地和海洋委员会(SWALSC)提出了一个单独的要求这并非没有重大挑战。参见Manuhuia Barcham,“Noongar Nation”,在有争议的治理:文化,权力和制度在澳大利亚土著,编辑Janet Hunt等人(堪培拉:澳大利亚国立大学出版社,2008年),265-82.61康奈尔和Kalt,“土著民族发展的两种方法”,28-29.62同上,63土著权利法案,第61土著权利法案,第251B.64《土著所有权法》,第251B(a)条英格拉姆,“土著治理”,37.66土著所有权法案,第55条。在积极的决定之后,PBC成为注册土著业权团体法人(RNTBC)。这两个术语有时可以互换使用例如,参见麦考尔的《作为审慎决策的国家关怀》,第51-72页;Toni Bauman,“内在的民族和部落:凯瑟琳的新兴土著“民族主义””,《澳大利亚人类学杂志》第17期。3 (2006): 322-35.68 Burbidge et al., 2019年调查报告,37.69同上,7,38.70 Gugu Badhun Country包括昆士兰州北部的上Burdekin地区。Gugu Badhun民族也被称为“泻湖谷的人民”Petray和Gertz, <建设经济和建设国家>,72页同前。和GBAC,《古巴浑土著企业战略规划2020 - 2025》(汤斯维尔:GBAC, 2020), 5-6, http://www.gugubadhun.com/about-gbac。要分析文化匹配的重要性,请参见康奈尔和卡尔特,“土著民族发展的两种途径”,24-25.73 Gunditjmara人是Gunditjmara民族的自我认同的名称。他们的国家延伸到维多利亚州的西南部。74关于冈迪吉玛人的分析,见达利尔·里格尼等人,《冈迪吉玛人和恩加林杰里人:土著自治的案例研究》,载于《剑桥澳大利亚法律史》,彼得·凯恩、丽莎·福特和马克·麦克米兰主编(剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,2022),186-224.75 Jorgensen等人,“Yes, The Time is Now”,135-7.76事实上,KLC 2020-24年的四大战略重点之一是为该地区的传统所有者群体“赋予国家建设权力”。参见KLC,《KLC战略计划2020 - 2024》(Broome: KLC, 2020), 2, https://www.klc.org.au/klc-strategic-plan.77首席运营官Felicity Thiessen在2021年的表述。参见CAEPR,“人、地点和伙伴关系:利用和管理土著所有权的模型”,https://caepr.cass.anu.edu.au/events/people-place-and-partnership-model-leveraging-and-governing-native-title (March 30, 2023).78康奈尔,“土著民族地位的进程”,12.79康奈尔和卡尔特,“土著民族发展的两种途径”,9-11.80格茨,“土著人民与国家之间的条约、协定和其他建设性安排,包括和平协定与和解倡议及其宪法承认”,联合国土著人民权利专家机制研讨会,2021年11月29日至12月1日。https://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/IPeoples/EMRIP/Pages/EMRIP-Seminar-Treaties.aspx(观看2022年1月28日)以托雷斯海峡为例,除了原有的托雷斯海峡地区管理局和托雷斯海峡群岛地区委员会外,现在还包括19个PBCs。 这些机构有不同形式的代表和(定居者认可的)管辖权,确保“争取自治的斗争”随之而来(Strelein,“土著所有权机构公司”,66)。同样,在金伯利地区,PBCs被添加到一个社区委员会已经有效发挥“地方政府”作用的地区(Weir,“Karajarri”,148)。82 .首先,这表明第一民族是否已经有了自治制度可能会影响到PBC对集体决策的有用性康奈尔,“土著民族的过程”,16-18.83 Rigney等人,土著民族建设,2.84见Merlan,“澳大利亚的第一个民族”,美国人类学家,124号。Jessica Weir,《冈迪吉玛拉土地正义故事》(堪培拉:AIATSIS, 2009), 7.86 Weir,《冈迪吉玛拉土地正义故事》,27.87原住民利用社区组织进行集体行动和政治宣传有着悠久的历史。20世纪80年代以来"土著部门"的兴起————这是所谓"自决"时代的产物————使重大的政治宣传成为可能,导致卫生、住房和教育政策和话语的一些转变。见Patrick Sullivan,“土著社区部门和服务的有效提供:承认土著部门组织的作用”,沙漠知识CRC工作文件系列73 (2010),https://www.nintione.com.au/resource/DKCRC-Working-paper-73_Indigenous-sector-oganisations.pdf(查看于2023年3月31日)Rigney,引用于Daryle Rigney, damin Bell和Alison Vivian,“关于土著民族如何成为条约准备的对话”,《条约制定:250年后》,Harry Hobbs, Alison Whittaker和Lindon Coombes(悉尼:联邦出版社,2021),27.89见,例如澳大利亚土著治理研究所,“9.1什么是国家重建?土著治理工具包,https://toolkit.aigi.com.au/toolkit/9-1-what-is-a-network(2022年3月14日浏览);协议、条约和谈判解决,ATNS,澳大利亚的国家建设,https://www.atns.net.au/nation-building-landing.90英格拉姆,“土著治理”,29.91 Altman,“土著权利,矿业公司和澳大利亚国家”,资源开采的政治,Suzana Sawyer和Edmund Terence Gomez主编(伦敦:正如Ciaran O ' faircheallaigh所说,“现在澳大利亚有一个广泛的政策共识,即矿产开发应该在土著传统所有者的同意下进行,而不是反对。”参见O ' faircheallaigh,“当代澳大利亚的土著、矿业公司和国家:一种新的政治经济学或‘一切照旧’”,《澳大利亚政治科学杂志》第41期。1(2006): 1 - 22。重要的是,正如NTA第2部分第3部分所述,ilua可以与土著所有权索赔团体进行谈判。不需要肯定的测定O ' faircheallaigh, ' Aboriginal, Mining Companies and State ', 6.94正如O ' faircheallaigh所解释的,移民政府倾向于通过新自由主义的视角来看待原住民的土地,以实现特定类型的发展。参见O ' faircheallaigh, '土著人,矿业公司和国家',2.95 Petray和Gertz, '建设经济和建设国家',96Burbidge等人,2019年调查报告,21.97 Ngarrindjeri国家包括南澳大利亚内陆海岸的库荣泻湖地区到默里河和默里湖。有关库蒂公司的描述,请参见《库蒂公司——通过皮皮收获企业加强Ngarrindjeri民族》,《Jawun》,2020年7月28日,https://jawun.org.au/2020/07/kuti-co-strengthening-the-ngarrindjeri-nation-through-their-pipi-harvest-enterprise/;土著陆地和海洋公司,“库蒂公司皮皮项目”,https://www.ilsc.gov.au/home/project-profiles/kuti-co-pipi-project/;以及Goolwa Pipi Co的《Back on Country》。Ngarrindjeri: 19,000年的国家',https://goolwapipico.com/ngarrindjeri/.98见Murray和Evans, '文化为中心,社区领导',165-86.99 Jorgensen等人,'是的,时间是现在',138-9,和Donna Murray,采访安西娅康普顿和艾莉森维维安,2023年6月26日。一些Wiradyuri人正在就可能的索赔要求/s.100进行初步工作参见,例如,国家土著权利委员会的PBC政策改革项目,网址:https://nntc.com.au/our-agenda/pbc-policy-reform-nation-building/(查看于2022年3月14日);或QSNTS在2022年AIATSIS峰会上的评论,网址:https://aiatsis.gov.au/whats-new/news/2022-aiatsis-summit-navigating-spaces-between(浏览时间:2022年12月1日)参见Gooda,《土著权利报告2011》,107-10,以及Behrendt和Kelly,《解决土著争端》。Janine Gertz最近完成的博士论文将是这方面非常重要的资源。
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Indigenous nation building and native title: strategic uses of a fraught settler-colonial regime
ABSTRACTDespite the ongoing and destructive nature of invasion and settler-colonial institutions, laws and policies in Australia, many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander nations continue to assert their sovereignty; exercise their inherent rights to self-determination as self-defined, autonomous peoples; and pursue collective aspirations in highly constrained and contested environments. Many nations are engaged in Indigenous nation (re)building (INB). One key INB strategy utilised by such nations is to use settler-colonial policy for their own collective ends. This article analyses the relationship between a complex and highly fraught settler-colonial legal-political system, native title, and INB processes in Australia. Using the ‘Identify as a Nation, Organise as a Nation, Act as a Nation’ framework, we explore some of the actual and potential relationships between the native title system and INB. Despite the considerable harms of the native title system on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, we maintain that First Nations may be able to strategically engage in the system in a way that assists them to further their cultural and political autonomy.KEYWORDS: Indigenous nation buildingnative titleself-determinationsettler-colonialismIndigenous Affairs AcknowledgementsThanks to Simone Bignall for her helpful comments on this article.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1 Irene Watson, ‘Settled and Unsettled Spaces: Are We Free to Roam?’, in Sovereign Subjects: Indigenous Sovereignty Matters, ed. Aileen Moreton-Robinson (Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 2007), 25.2 Jorgensen, ‘Editor’s Introduction’, in Rebuilding Native Nations, xii.3 INB research emerges from the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development and its sister organisation, the Native Nations Institute for Leadership, Management and Policy. For an overview of the research of the Harvard Project and the Native Nations, see Miriam Jorgensen, ed., Rebuilding Native Nations: Strategies for Governance and Development (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2007).4 See Stephen Cornell and Joe Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to the Development of Native Nations: One Works, the Other Doesn’t’, in Rebuilding Native Nations, 3–33.5 Stephen Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood: The Indigenous Politics of Self-Government’, The International Indigenous Policy Journal 6, no. 4, art. 4 (2015): 1–27. Cornell has since articulated that a fourth element of ‘Purpose’ is apparent in INB processes (IPOA). The authors of this paper maintain that ‘Purpose’ is sufficiently accounted for in the IOA framework.6 In this article, we refer to Indigenous Peoples, in line with the United Nations Declarations on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. We also use the terms First Nations and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander nations to denote the political nature of these collectives, and to reflect the experiences and preferences of the nations we work with.7 There is a vast range of literature on the global formations and tenets of settler-colonialism. For an overview, see Patrick Wolfe, ‘Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native’, Journal of Genocide Research 8, no. 4 (2006): 387–409; and Lorenzo Veracini, ‘Introducing Settler Colonial Studies’, Settler Colonial Studies 1, no. 1 (2011): 1–12.8 See Daryle Rigney, Simone Bignall, Alison Vivian and Steve Hemming, Indigenous Nation building and the Political Determinants of Health and Wellbeing (Melbourne: Lowitja, 2022); and also Michael J. Chandler and Christopher E. Lalonde 2008, ‘Cultural Continuity as a Moderator of Suicide Risk Among Canada’s First Nations’, in Healing Traditions: The Mental Health of Aboriginal Peoples in Canada, ed. Laurence Kirmayer and Gail Valaskakis (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2009), 221–48.9 Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, Walking Together: The First Steps (Canberra: Australian Government Printing Service, 1994), 4.10 For an overview, see Patrick Wolfe’s seminal text, Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology: The Politics and Poetics of an Ethnographic Event (London: Cassell, 1999). There is some evidence to suggest the state’s approach to First Nations may be shifting. In 2022, the Australian Labor Government committed to the 2017 Uluru Statement from the Heart, which calls for a First Nations Voice enshrined in the Constitution; an agreement making process between Australian governments and First Nations; and a truth-telling process. The current proposed amendment to the Australian Constitution to enable an Indigenous Voice to Parliament includes ‘recognition’ of ‘First Peoples’. See Uluru Statement 2023, ‘Design Principles of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice’, https://ulurustatement.org/education/design-principles/.11 Elizabeth Strakosch, ‘The Technical is Political: Settler Colonialism and the Australian Indigenous Policy System’, Australian Journal of Political Science 54, no. 1 (2019): 114–30, and Alison Vivian and Michael Halloran, ‘Dynamics of the Policy Environment and Trauma in Relations Between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples and the Settler-Colonial State’, Critical Social Policy 42, no. 4 (2022): 626–47.12 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 8. See also Simone Bignall, ‘What is “Postcolonial?”’, in Postcolonial Agency: Critique and Constructivism (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010).13 Articles 3–15 on self-determination are particularly relevant. For a discussion of the importance of the Declaration to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, see Asmi Wood, ‘Self-Determination Under International Law and Some Possibilities for Australia’s Indigenous Peoples’, in Indigenous Self-Determination in Australia: Histories and Historiography, ed. Laura Rademaker and Tim Rowse (Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2020), 269–92.14 Key First Nations theorists specifically engaged in INB research, working either within or in research partnerships with Australian universities include Daryle Rigney, Janine Gertz, Damein Bell, Matthew Walsh, Donna Murray, Debra Evans, Dennis Eggington and Larissa Behrendt. We also note that there are countless Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander researchers working on closely related matters around Indigenous self-determination, governance and autonomy.15 Research partnerships (including some authors) with the Gunditjmara People and Ngarrindjeri Nation, and later individuals and groups from the Wiradyuri, Gugu Badhun and Nyungar Nations found that the Harvard Project’s principles were highly relevant in Australia. Research projects have included Australian Research Council projects: ‘Negotiating a space in the nation: the case of Ngarrindjeri’ (DP1094869); ‘Indigenous nationhood in the absence of recognition: Self-governance insights and strategies from three Aboriginal communities’ (LP140100376); and ‘Prerequisite conditions for Indigenous nation self-government’ (DP190102060). A book detailing initial inquiries with the Ngarrindjeri and Gunditjmara nations is forthcoming (see Larissa Behrendt et al. in press, Resistance, Resilience, Resurgence: Indigenous Nation Building in Australia (Bloomsbury)). For further description of INB strategies and experiences in Australia, see Miriam Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time Is Now: Indigenous Nation Policy Making for Self-determined Futures’, in Public Policy and Indigenous Futures, ed. Nikki Moodie and Sarah Maddison (Melbourne: Springer, 2023), 129–47; Rigney et al., Indigenous Nation Building; Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology for Indigenous Nation Building’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development: International Case Studies of Indigenous Futures, ed. Diane Smith et al. (London: Rowman and Littlefield, 2021); Steve Hemming and Daryle Rigney, ‘Unsettling Sustainability: Ngarrindjeri Political Literacies, Strategies of Engagement and Transformation’, Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 22, no. 6 (2008): 757–75; Steve Hemming, Daryle Rigney and Shaun Berg, ‘Ngarrindjeri Futures: Negotiation, Governance and Environmental Management’, in Unsettling the Settler State: Creativity and Resistance in Indigenous Settler-State Governance, ed. Sarah Maddison and Morgan Brigg (Sydney: Federation Press, 2011), 104–109; Theresa Petray and Janine Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation: Gugu Badhun Self-Determination as Prefigurative Resistance’, Global Media Journal 12, no. 1 (2018): https://www.hca.westernsydney.edu.au/gmjau/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/GMJAU-Building-an-economy-and-buildin … ermination-as-prefigurative-resistance.pdf.pdf (accessed March 17, 2023); and Toni Bauman and Diane Smith, Indigenous Self-Governance and ‘Nation’ Building: Considerations For a Strategic Self-Analysis Tool, Discussion Paper (Canberra: Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, 2022), https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/269982 (accessed March 17, 2023).16 See Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’; Hemming et al., ‘Ngarrindjeri Futures’; and Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology’.17 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 15.18 Mabo v Queensland [No. 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1.19 See, for e.g. Lisa Strelein, ‘Conceptualising Native Title’, Sydney Law Review 23 (2001): 95–124; Kirsten Anker, ‘The Law of the Other: Exploring the Paradox of Legal Pluralism in Australian Native Title’, in Dealing with the Other: Australian Faces and Interfaces, ed. Pierre Lagayette (Paris: Sorbonne University Press, 2008); and Paul McHugh, Aboriginal Societies and the Common Law: A History of Sovereignty, Status and Self-Determination (London: Oxford University Press, London, 2005), 340.20 Noel Pearson, ‘The Concept of Native Title at Common Law’, Australian Humanities Review 5 (1997): http://australianhumanitiesreview.org/1997/03/01/the-concept-of-native-title-at-common-law/ (accessed March 17, 2023). See also Shaunnagh Dorsett and Shaun McVeigh, ‘Conduct of Laws: Native Title, Responsibility, and Some Limits of Jurisdictional Thinking’, Melbourne University Law Review 36 (2012): 470–93.21 See, for e.g. Aileen Moreton-Robinson, The White Possessive: Property, Power and Indigenous Sovereignty (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015); and for global analysis, J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, ‘“A Structure, Not an Event”: Settler Colonialism and Enduring Indigeneity’, Lateral 5, no. 1 (2016); and Audra Simpson, Mohawk Interrupts: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States (Durham: Duke University Press, 2014).22 National Native Title Council, ‘Current Applications’, http://www.nntt.gov.au/Pages/Statistics.aspx (viewed August 14, 2023); and for analysis of the size and location of PBCs, see Australian Institute for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS), ‘Prescribed Bodies Corporate National Snapshot’, https://nativetitle.org.au/learn/role-and-function-pbc/pbc-national-snapshot (viewed August 15, 2023).23 This was suggested at the time of Mabo and since. As Stephen Young writes, native title is a ‘cover colonial process … produced as a pragmatic, reasonable, and progressive step in the right direction’. See Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’, University of New South Wales Law Journal 44, no. 4 (2021): 1743.24 Most prominently by Patrick Wolfe in his seminal 1996 article ‘Settler Colonialism’. See also Stewart Motha, ‘The Failure of “Postcolonial” Sovereignty in Australia’, Australian Feminist Law Journal 22, no. 1 (2005): 107–25; Ben Silverstein, ‘Submerged Sovereignty: Native Title Within a History of Incorporation’, in Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility, ed. Julie Evans et al. (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2013), 60–85; and more recent analyses such as Catherine Howlett and Rebecca Lawrence, ‘Accumulating Minerals and Dispossessing Indigenous Australians: Native Title Recognition as Settler-Colonialism’, Antipode 51, no. 3 (2019): 818–37; and Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’, 1739–69.25 See Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 131–4.26 See, for example, Pamela McGrath, ‘The Work of Rights: The Nature of Native Title Labour’, in Engaging Indigenous Economy: Debating Diverse Approaches, ed. Will Sanders (Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2016), 251–63; and Alexander Page, ‘Fragile Positions in the New Paternalism: Indigenous Community Organisations During the ‘Advancement’ Era in Australia’, in The Neoliberal State, Recognition and Indigenous Rights: New Paternalism to New Imaginings, ed. Diedre Howard-Wagner et al. (Canberra: ANU Press, 2018), 185–200.27 See Ivan Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance and Native Title in Australia’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development, 29–46; Justin McCaul, ‘Caring for Country as Deliberate Policymaking’, in Public Policy and Indigenous Futures, 51–72; Lisa Strelein and Tran Tran, ‘Building Indigenous Governance from Native Title: Moving Away from ‘Fitting in’ to Creating a Decolonized Space’, Review of Constitutional Studies 18, no. 1 (2013): 19–48; Jessica Weir, ‘Karajarri: Native Title and Governance in the West Kimberley’, Living with Native Title: The Experiences of Registered Native Title Corporations, ed. Toni Bauman et al. (Canberra: AIATSIS, 2013), 147–74; Lisa Strelein, ‘Native Title Bodies Corporate in the Torres Strait: Finding a Place in the Governance of a Region’, in Living with Native Title, 65–108; Tran Tran and Claire Stacey, ‘Wearing Two Hats: The Conflicting Governance Roles of Native Title Corporations and Community/Shire Councils in Remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities’, Land, Rights, Laws: Issues of Native Title 6, no. 4 (2016): 1–20; and Jeremy Webber, ‘Native Title as Self-Government’, UNSW Law Journal 22 (1992): 2.28 We do not define First Nations sovereignty except to note that it is enduring and ongoing. Noting also that the term is contested amongst Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, we use ‘sovereignty’ here as an imperfect shorthand to place it in the same analytical frame as settler sovereignty, and to emphasise ongoing power relations in Australia.29 Our methodology for undertaking INB research partnerships is articulated in Alison Vivian et al., ‘Implementing a Project within the Research Paradigm: The Example of Nation Building Research’, Ngiya: Talk the Law 5 (2016): 47–74.30 For analysis of the term’s usage and history, see Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 131–4.31 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 18.32 See also Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 134.33 Irene Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces, Caring for Country, and the Homeless Position of Aboriginal Peoples’, South Atlantic Quarterly 108, no. 1 (2009): 45.34 Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces’, 44.35 Patrick Wolfe, Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology: The Politics and Poetics of an Ethnographic Event (London: Cassell, 1999), 203.36 As indicated by Justice North in dissent in Western Australia v Ward [2000] FCA 191 [688]. As Justice North put it, ‘Whilst native title is not recognised by the common law in circumstances amounting to extinguishment, and is therefore ineffective under the common law system, native title does not cease to exist as an operative force among aboriginal people. It does not cease to exist for all purposes, only for the purposes of the common law’. See also Irene Watson, ‘Sovereign Spaces, caring for Country, and the Homeless Position of Aboriginal Peoples’, South Atlantic Quarterly 108, no. 1 (2009): 27; and See also Brenan Edgeworth, ‘Extinguishment of Native Title: Recent High Court Decisions’, Indigenous Law Bulletin 8, no. 22 (2016): 28–34.37 See, for e.g. Ingram ‘Indigenous Governance’, 33–6.38 Ibid., 36; Kingsley Palmer, Australian Native Title Anthropology: Strategic Practice, the Law and the State (Canberra: ANU Press, 2018); and Simon Young, The Trouble with Tradition. Native Title and Cultural Change (Sydney, Federation Press: 2008).39 Strelein and Tran, ‘Building Indigenous Governance’, 46.40 See Melissa Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey of Prescribed Bodies Corporate (PBCs) (Canberra: National Native Title Council, AIATSIS, 2020), 28–32; McGrath, ‘The Work of Rights’, 251–63; Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 38–39; Tran and Stacey, ‘Wearing Two Hats’; and also Elizabeth Strakosch, ‘The Technical is Political: Settler Colonialism and the Australian Indigenous Policy System’, Australian Journal of Political Science 54, no. 1 (2019): 114–30.41 See Howlett and Lawrence, ‘Accumulating Minerals and Dispossessing Indigenous Australians’, 1739–69; and Ed Wensing, ‘Dealings in Native Title and Statutory Aboriginal Land Rights in Australia: What Land Tenure Reform is Needed?’, in Engaging Indigenous Economy: Debating Diverse Approaches, CAEPR Monograph No. 35, ed. Will Sanders (Canberra: ANU Press, 2016). The destruction of Juukan Gorge in 2020 at the hands or Rio Tinto has brought these issues again to the fore. See Joint Standing Committee on Northern Australia, A Way Forward: Final Report into the Destruction of Indigenous Heritage Sites at Juukan Gorge (Canberra: Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, 2021), and Jon Altman, ‘The Native Title Act Supports Mineral Extraction and Heritage Destruction, Arena, June 16, 2020, https://arena.org.au/the-native-title-act-supports-mineral-extraction-and-heritage-destruction/.42 Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 149.43 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 43.44 See both Mick Gooda, ‘Chapter 2: Lateral violence in native title: our relationships over our lands, territories and resources’, Native Title Report 2011 (Sydney: Australian Human Rights Commission), 74–115, and Larissa Behrendt and Loretta Kelly, Resolving Indigenous Disputes: Land Conflict and Beyond (Sydney: The Federation Press, 2008), 27–56.45 See Stephen Cornell, ‘That’s the Story of Our Life’, in We are a People: Narrative and Multiplicity in Constructing Ethnic Identity, ed. Paul Spickard and W.J. Burroughs (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2000), 41–51.46 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 6.47 Donna Murray and Deb Evans, ‘Culturally Centred, Community Led: Wiradjuri Nation Rebuilding through Honouring the Wiradjuri Way’, in Developing Governance and Governing Development, 165–86.48 Murray and Evans, ‘Culturally Centered, Community Led’, 176.49 For discussion of constructions of Aboriginality as ‘homo religiosus’, see Jeremy Beckett, ‘The Past in the Present; the Present in the Past: Constructing a National Aboriginality’, in Past and Present: The Construction of Aboriginality (Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, 1988), 207; and, as ‘homo superorganicus’, see Patrick Wolfe, ‘Nation and MiscegeNation: Discursive Continuity in the Post-Mabo Era’, Social Analysis 36 (1994): 134.50 Mabo & Ors v The State of Queensland [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1 per Brennan J 64; also per Deane & Gaudron JJ at 89, per Dawson J at 133; The Wik Peoples v State of Queensland (1996) 187 CLR 1 per Kirby J at 215.51 Yorta Yorta (2002) 214 CLR 422 [52], [50].52 Mabo [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1, 54–57 (Brennan J); Western Australia v The Commonwealth (1995) 183 CLR 373 per Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Toohey, Gaudron & McHugh at 433.53 Members of the Yorta Yorta Aboriginal Community v Victoria [2002] HCA 58; 214 CLR 422 at [31].54 Alyawarr (FCA) [78]. There is no ‘technical, jurisprudential or social scientific criteria for the classification of groups as ‘societies’.55 For discussions on sovereignty and the legal gymnastics undertaken by the High Court to ensure it did not countenance findings that would challenge its own legitimacy or that of the Australian state, see, for e.g.: Silverstein, ‘Submerged Sovereignty’; Motha, ‘The Failure of “Postcolonial” Sovereignty in Australia’, 107; Ben Golder, ‘Law, History, Colonialism: An Orientalist Reading Of Australian Native Title Law’, Deakin Law Review 9, no. 1 (2004): 41–60; Peter Fitzpatrick, ‘“No Higher Duty”: Mabo and the Failure of Legal Foundation’, Law and Critique 13 (2002): 233–52. Importantly, some First Nations envisage native title as an expression of their sovereignty, regardless of assertions to the contrary (see Benjamin R. Smith and Frances Morphy, ‘The Social Effects of Native Title: Recognition, Translation, Coexistence’, in The Social Effects of Native Title: Recognition, Translation, Coexistence, ed. Benjamin R. Smith and Frances Morphy (Canberra: ANU E Press, 2007)).56 See, for e.g. Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 54. Weir describes how the Karajarri became ‘mobilised around native title’ after the building of a fence that ‘threatened access to culturally significant’ sites.57 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 43.58 Ibid., 36.59 Eggington, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, March 10, 2022. Eggington prefers ‘Nyungar’ to refer to his nation. Noongar is used elsewhere in this paper is the spelling used in the nation’s native title claim. Originally 78 claims were developed across Noongar Nation (Noongar Boodja/Country extends across much of the south-west of Western Australia). By 1998, these were amalgamated into 6, and by 2003, a singular claim was brought forward by the South West Aboriginal Land and Sea Council (SWALSC).60 This was not without significant challenges. See Manuhuia Barcham, ‘Noongar Nation’, in Contested Governance: Culture, Power and Institutions in Indigenous Australia, ed. Janet Hunt et al. (Canberra: ANU Press, 2008), 265–82.61 Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to Native Nation Development’, 28–29.62 Ibid.63 Native Title Act, s 61 Native Title Act, s 251B.64 Native Title Act, s 251B(a).65 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 37.66 Native Title Act, s 55. Following a positive determination, the PBC becomes a Registered Native Title Body Corporate (RNTBC). The terms are sometimes used interchangeably.67 See, for e.g. McCaul, ‘Caring for Country as Deliberate Policymaking’, 51–72; and Toni Bauman, ‘Nations and Tribes “Within”: Emerging Aboriginal “Nationalisms” in Katherine’, The Australian Journal of Anthropology 17, no. 3 (2006): 322–35.68 Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey, 37.69 Ibid., 7, 38.70 Gugu Badhun Country includes the upper Burdekin region in north Queensland. The Gugu Badhun Nation are also known as the ‘People of the Valley of Lagoons’.71 Petray and Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation’.72 Ibid.; and GBAC, Gugu Badhun Aboriginal Corporation Strategic Plan 2020–2025 (Townsville: GBAC, 2020), 5–6, http://www.gugubadhun.com/about-gbac. For analysis of the importance of cultural match, see Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to the Development of Native Nations’, 24–25.73 The Gunditjmara People is the self-identified name of the Gunditjmara nation. Their Country extends over the southwest of Victoria.74 For analysis of the Gunditjmara Full Group, see Daryle Rigney et al., ‘Gunditjmara and Ngarrindjeri: Case Studies of Indigenous Self-Government’, in Cambridge Legal History of Australia, ed. Peter Cane, Lisa Ford and Mark McMillan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022), 186–224.75 Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 135–7.76 In fact, one of KLC’s 4 strategic priorities for 2020–24 is ‘empowerment in Nation Building’ for the Traditional Owner groups in the regions. See KLC, KLC Strategic Plan 2020–2024 (Broome: KLC, 2020), 2, https://www.klc.org.au/klc-strategic-plan.77 As expressed by COO Felicity Thiessen in 2021. See CAEPR, ‘“People, Place and Partnership”: A Model for Leveraging and Governing Native Title’, https://caepr.cass.anu.edu.au/events/people-place-and-partnership-model-leveraging-and-governing-native-title (viewed March 30, 2023).78 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 12.79 Cornell and Kalt, ‘Two Approaches to Native Nation Development’, 9–11.80 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements, between Indigenous Peoples and States, Including Peace Accords and Reconciliation Initiatives, and Their Constitutional Recognition’, UN Seminar of the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 29 November – 1 December 2021, https://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/IPeoples/EMRIP/Pages/EMRIP-Seminar-Treaties.aspx (viewed January 28, 2022).81 The Torres Strait, for example, now includes 19 PBCs alongside the pre-existing Torres Strait Regional Authority and the Torres Strait Islands Regional Council. These bodies have differing forms of representation and (settler-sanctioned) jurisdiction, ensuring a ‘struggle for autonomy’ has ensued (Strelein, ‘Native Title Bodies Corporate’, 66). Likewise, in the Kimberley, PBCs were added into a region where community councils already effectively functioned as ‘local governments’ (Weir, ‘Karajarri’, 148). In the first instance, this suggests that whether or not First Nations already have self-governance systems in place may affect the usefulness of PBC to collective decision-making.82 Cornell, ‘Processes of Native Nationhood’, 16–18.83 Rigney et al., Indigenous Nation Building, 2.84 See Merlan, ‘Australia’s First Nations’, American Anthropologist 124, no. 1 (2022): 175–86.85 Jessica Weir, The Gunditjmara Land Justice Story (Canberra: AIATSIS, 2009), 7.86 Weir, The Gunditjmara Land Justice Story, 27.87 There is a long history of First Nations using community organisations for collective action and political advocacy. The rise of the ‘Indigenous sector’ since the 1980s – a product of the so-called ‘self-determination’ era – has enabled significant political advocacy, leading to some shifts in health, housing and education policy and discourse. See Patrick Sullivan, ‘The Aboriginal Community Sector and the Effective Delivery of Services: Acknowledging the Role of Indigenous Sector Organisations’, Desert Knowledge CRC Working Paper Series 73 (2010), https://www.nintione.com.au/resource/DKCRC-Working-paper-73_Indigenous-sector-oganisations.pdf (viewed March 31, 2023).88 Rigney, quoted in Daryle Rigney, Damein Bell and Alison Vivian, ‘A Conversation on How Indigenous Nations Can Become Treaty Ready’, in Treaty Making: 250 Years Later, ed. Harry Hobbs, Alison Whittaker and Lindon Coombes (Sydney: Federation Press, 2021), 27.89 See, for e.g. Australian Institute of Indigenous Governance, ‘9.1 What is Nation Rebuilding?’ Indigenous Governance Toolkit, https://toolkit.aigi.com.au/toolkit/9-1-what-is-a-network (viewed March 14, 2022); and Agreements, Treaties and Negotiated Settlements, ATNS, Nation Building in Australia, https://www.atns.net.au/nation-building-landing.90 Ingram, ‘Indigenous Governance’, 29.91 Altman, ‘Indigenous Rights, Mining Corporations and the Australian State’, in The Politics of Resource Extraction, ed. Suzana Sawyer and Edmund Terence Gomez (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), 46.92 As put by Ciaran O’Faircheallaigh, ‘There is now a broad policy consensus in Australia that mineral development should proceed with the agreement of, rather than over the opposition of, Aboriginal traditional owners’. See O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State in Contemporary Australia: A New Political Economy or ‘Business as Usual’, Australian Journal of Political Science 41, no. 1 (2006): 1–22. Significantly, and as laid out in Part 2, Division 3 of the NTA, ILUAs can be negotiated with native title claimant groups. A positive determination is not required.93 O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State’, 6.94 As O’Faircheallaigh explains, settler governments tend due to view Aboriginal land through a neoliberal lens, with a view to enabling particular types of development. See O’Faircheallaigh, ‘Aborigines, Mining Companies and the State’, 2.95 Petray and Gertz, ‘Building an Economy and Building a Nation’.96 Burbidge et al., Report on the 2019 Survey, 21.97 Ngarrindjeri Country includes the Coorong lagoon area on the coast of South Australia inland to the Murray River and Murray lakes. For descriptions of Kuti Co, see Jawun, ‘Kuti Co – Strengthening the Ngarrindjeri Nation Through their Pipi Harvest Enterprise’, Jawun, July 28, 2020, https://jawun.org.au/2020/07/kuti-co-strengthening-the-ngarrindjeri-nation-through-their-pipi-harvest-enterprise/; Indigenous Land & Sea Corporation, ‘Kuti Co Pipi Project’, https://www.ilsc.gov.au/home/project-profiles/kuti-co-pipi-project/; and Goolwa Pipi Co, ‘Back on Country. Ngarrindjeri: 19,000 Years on Country’, https://goolwapipico.com/ngarrindjeri/.98 See Murray and Evans, ‘Culturally Centered, Community Led’, 165–86.99 Jorgensen et al., ‘Yes, The Time is Now’, 138–9, and Donna Murray, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, 26 June 2023. Some Wiradyuri people are engaged in preliminary work around possible claim/s.100 See, for e.g. the National Native Title Council’s PBC Policy Reform project at https://nntc.com.au/our-agenda/pbc-policy-reform-nation-building/ (viewed March 14, 2022); or the comments of the QSNTS at the 2022 AIATSIS summit, at https://aiatsis.gov.au/whats-new/news/2022-aiatsis-summit-navigating-spaces-between (viewed December 1, 2022).101 See Gooda, Native Title Report 2011, 107–10, and Behrendt and Kelly, Resolving Indigenous Disputes.102 Janine Gertz’ recently completed doctoral thesis will be a highly significant resource in this regard. See Gertz, Gugu Badhun Sovereignty, Self-Determination, and Nationhood (PhD thesis, James Cook University, 2022), https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/77294/.103 In addition to PBCs, settler governments are also willing to engage with Aboriginal community-controlled service delivery organisations, including peak bodies, which are not necessarily linked to a particular First Nation. The National Agreement on Closing the Gap is one such example of such engagement.104 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements’.105 The Ngarrindjeri Nation entered into 2016–17 treaty negotiations with the South Australian Government through the Ngarrindjeri Regional Authority (NRA), the peak decision-making body for the nation. The NRA cultivated long-standing effective relationships with state government public servants. See Rigney et al., ‘Treating Treaty as a Technology for Indigenous Nation Building’, 119–40.106 The Barunga Agreement is a Memorandum of Understanding to negotiate framework for treaty development. While the Land Councils are established under the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976, the NLC and CLC are also NTRBs. See NT Treaty Commission, ‘History’, https://treatynt.com.au/history (viewed March 30, 2023).107 Victorian Government, ‘Applications and Registrations’, https://www.aboriginalheritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/applications-and-registration.108 Gertz, ‘Treaties, Agreements and Other Constructive Arrangements’. As Gertz has described, if PBCs are used in place of other representative bodies in negotiations for treaties, this risk ensuring that negotiations are ‘corporate-to-sovereign’ rather than ‘sovereign-to-sovereign’, with the potential to reinscribe settle-colonial hierarchies.109 Griffiths v Northern Territory of Australia (No 3) [2016] FCA 900 has seen the Ngaliwurru and Nungali peoples awarded $2,530,350 in compensation for damage and extinguishment of their native title in and around the town of Timber Creek in the Northern Territory, plus interest. In turn, this has established a calculation for compensation claims and also set a precedent for historical ‘loss’ (since 1975) alongside future extinguishment. See Young, ‘Native Title as Displaced Mediator’; and Young, ‘Computing Compensation for Extinguishing Native Title in Australia’, The New Zealand Law Journal 4 (2020): 153–57.110 See Shelley Marshall, Carla Chan Unger, and Suzi Hutchings, ‘When Native Title Fails: First Nations People are Turning to Human Rights Law to Keep Access to Cultural Sites’, The Conversation, October 22, 2021, https://theconversation.com/when-native-title-fails-first-nations-people-are-turning-to-human-rights-law-to-keep-access-to-cultural-sites-169634; Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation, ‘Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation’, https://yynac.com.au/.111 In 2022, the SWALSC reached an agreement with the WA Government resolving all native title claims in exchange for a package including 6 ILUAs (see SWALSC, Settlement Agreement, https://www.noongar.org.au/about-settlement-agreement). For analysis of some of the differences in Noongar views on the Settlement, including legal challenges against the ILUAs, see Hannah McGlade, ‘The McGlade Case: A Noongar History of Land, Social Justice and Activism’, Australian Feminist Law Journal 43, no. 2 (2017): 185–210.112 Collard, interview with Anthea Compton and Alison Vivian, March 10, 2022.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Australian Research Council under a Discovery Grant (ARC DP190102060 Prerequisite Conditions for Indigenous Self-Government).
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来源期刊
Settler Colonial Studies
Settler Colonial Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
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1.80
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18
期刊介绍: The journal aims to establish settler colonial studies as a distinct field of scholarly research. Scholars and students will find and contribute to historically-oriented research and analyses covering contemporary issues. We also aim to present multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary research, involving areas like history, law, genocide studies, indigenous, colonial and postcolonial studies, anthropology, historical geography, economics, politics, sociology, international relations, political science, literary criticism, cultural and gender studies and philosophy.
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