A just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (V2)

Australia does not have a system of implicit recognition of the prior and continuing ownership of its land and waters by its First Nations Peoples (Customary Owners) according to their traditional law and custom. Such recognition has to be sought and determined through the Federal Court of Australia...

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Main Authors: E Wensing, Garrick Small
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10018/927762
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spelling ftcquniportalfig:oai:figshare.com:article/13461095 2023-05-15T16:16:58+02:00 A just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (V2) E Wensing Garrick Small 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/10018/927762 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/conference_contribution/A_just_accommodation_of_customary_land_rights_in_conventional_and_contemporary_land_use_planning_systems_V2_/13461095 http://hdl.handle.net/10018/927762 CQUniversity General 1.0 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Law Real Estate and Valuation Services Property Law (excl. Intellectual Property Law) Customary owners Customary land rights Colonial culture of planning Text Conference contribution 2012 ftcquniportalfig 2022-08-05T12:14:36Z Australia does not have a system of implicit recognition of the prior and continuing ownership of its land and waters by its First Nations Peoples (Customary Owners) according to their traditional law and custom. Such recognition has to be sought and determined through the Federal Court of Australia. Its recognition is based on the pre-existing superior right to the whole of the land of Australia, which must be shown not to have been extinguished by legal acts by the Australian government. Customary owners understand their connection to land in somewhat more substantial terms than is currently countenanced by western civilization. The reality of customary ownership and its relationship to western law have implications for planning. Planning is effectively the right, held by the government against private freehold or leasehold owners, to control land uses. Since customary owners hold superior title to the government, it is consistent that they are not only exempt from most normal actions of planning control, but also merit some level of involvement in the planning process by virtue of the nature of their rights to the land. The logic of customary ownership implies that they should have a right of veto against development proposals comparable to that which is the operational power of urban and regional planners. Customary Owners have a highly developed sense of responsibility for maintaining their land which suggests involvement in the planning system would respect the fundamentals of customary ownership and lead to enhanced land use planning outcomes. Conference Object First Nations CQUniversity: acquire
institution Open Polar
collection CQUniversity: acquire
op_collection_id ftcquniportalfig
language unknown
topic Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Law
Real Estate and Valuation Services
Property Law (excl. Intellectual Property Law)
Customary owners
Customary land rights
Colonial culture of planning
spellingShingle Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Law
Real Estate and Valuation Services
Property Law (excl. Intellectual Property Law)
Customary owners
Customary land rights
Colonial culture of planning
E Wensing
Garrick Small
A just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (V2)
topic_facet Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Law
Real Estate and Valuation Services
Property Law (excl. Intellectual Property Law)
Customary owners
Customary land rights
Colonial culture of planning
description Australia does not have a system of implicit recognition of the prior and continuing ownership of its land and waters by its First Nations Peoples (Customary Owners) according to their traditional law and custom. Such recognition has to be sought and determined through the Federal Court of Australia. Its recognition is based on the pre-existing superior right to the whole of the land of Australia, which must be shown not to have been extinguished by legal acts by the Australian government. Customary owners understand their connection to land in somewhat more substantial terms than is currently countenanced by western civilization. The reality of customary ownership and its relationship to western law have implications for planning. Planning is effectively the right, held by the government against private freehold or leasehold owners, to control land uses. Since customary owners hold superior title to the government, it is consistent that they are not only exempt from most normal actions of planning control, but also merit some level of involvement in the planning process by virtue of the nature of their rights to the land. The logic of customary ownership implies that they should have a right of veto against development proposals comparable to that which is the operational power of urban and regional planners. Customary Owners have a highly developed sense of responsibility for maintaining their land which suggests involvement in the planning system would respect the fundamentals of customary ownership and lead to enhanced land use planning outcomes.
format Conference Object
author E Wensing
Garrick Small
author_facet E Wensing
Garrick Small
author_sort E Wensing
title A just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (V2)
title_short A just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (V2)
title_full A just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (V2)
title_fullStr A just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (V2)
title_full_unstemmed A just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (V2)
title_sort just accommodation of customary land rights in conventional and contemporary land use planning systems (v2)
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10018/927762
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/conference_contribution/A_just_accommodation_of_customary_land_rights_in_conventional_and_contemporary_land_use_planning_systems_V2_/13461095
http://hdl.handle.net/10018/927762
op_rights CQUniversity General 1.0
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