Sentences with phrase «traditional owner control»

Not exact matches

Still getting 40/30 mpg hiway / city... Bought the car in nearly showroom condition interior, cruise control and intact paint except for the traditional rust on the rear wheel wells — Ford Escort owners know what I'm talking about.
If you are a long time horse owner, you may be familiar with traditional parasite control strategies.
Traditional dog training emphasizes that human dog owners need to «take control» by becoming that «alpha» dog or pack leader and by suppressing any attempts by their dog to become the alpha in the family.
For dogs who are not good candidates for surgery or whose owners opt against it, traditional therapy involves a combination of weight control, moderate exercise, and anti-inflammatory medications.
As the number of Native Title determinations increase in the NQLC region and with larger amounts of land under Aboriginal control, traditional owner PBCs are in need of sustainable, environmentally friendly business opportunities.
Cultural tourism may be combined with eco-tourism where traditional owners have rights to the land, and allows some control over how they will «host» tourism.101
They suggest a number of ways in which a separate structure for economic development may be established but still linked to the PBC so that the traditional owners retain control of subsidiary entities.
the use of traditional biological knowledge in the scientific, commercial and public domains proceeds only with the cooperation and control of the traditional owners of that knowledge
Reserves were established as areas of land to hold, control and protect Indigenous people as pastoralism and mining extended across Australia and the traditional owners were moved to make way for mining and grazing cattle and sheep.
These principles are reflected in provisions of the resulting Act which established four regional land councils with an independent source of funding through the Aboriginal Benefits Account, controls access of non-traditional owners to the land, gives traditional owners the power to veto minerals exploration on their land, and ensures development proposals do not occur without the informed consent of the traditional owners.
Traditional owners need to have a greater degree of control over decisions affecting their land.
Relocating control of the development process to the traditional owner group requires capacity within the group to set, implement and achieve development goals.
The court ruled Traditional Owners have a right to control access by recreational and commercial fishers in the inter-tidal zone over Aboriginal land in the Northern Territory.
In my Native Title Report 2006, I referred to the proposal of the former Thamurrur Council for a 40 - year lease over the community of Wadeye to a body controlled by traditional owners, which would then be able to issue subleases to occupants as required.
[133] This means that traditional owners can not know, or control, whether they will receive ongoing rent under a township lease.
Relocating control of the development process to the traditional owner group requires capacity in the group to set, implement and achieve development goals.
On 13 June 2007, Jenny Macklin MP (then Shadow Minister for Indigenous Affairs) told the House of Representatives that the township leasing model «removed direct control by traditional owners over development on township land».
The decision reaffirmed the legal strength of Aboriginal property rights under the ALRA and the independent degree of control over land enjoyed by traditional owners.
(c) Deny to any person or corporation the right to obtain patent, copyright or other legal protection for any element of an indigenous peoples» heritage without adequate docu - mentation of the free and informed consent of the traditional owners to an arrangement for the sharing of ownership, control, use and benefits;
I do not believe that it is beyond the wit of traditional owners and the government to devise land tenure arrangements which streamline transaction costs without fundamentally undermining Indigenous ownership and control of their land.
Decision - making processes for Aboriginal land holders that must be followed when an Aboriginal Land Trust is considering the grant of a lease are designed to ensure that traditional owners retain control over decisions about what happens on their land.
While I welcome the Australian Government's intention to explore ways of facilitating the economic development potential of Indigenous land where this is desired by traditional owners, this opportunity must not be used to erode Indigenous control and ownership of land.
These processes enable land councils to articulate decisions about land use made under traditional law and custom by the land owners to the outside world in conformity with standard Australian land tenure and land use procedures, while maintaining Aboriginal control.
The existing provisions of land rights legislation retain substantial control for traditional owners over land use decisions.
However, more recent commentaries on the ALRA (NT) have called for this consent requirement to be reduced in order to allow traditional owners themselves to control development on their land and to take responsibility for their actions.105
These provisions maintain the control of entry onto Aboriginal land by traditional owners and their representative bodies.
Such a lease will override traditional owner rights; it is the intention behind the Act to do so.94 The maintenance of Aboriginal control over such activities reflects the inherent inalienability and proprietary rights of Aboriginal freehold in the Northern Territory.
Strategies: Negotiate for the purchase of pastoral leases in the western and central areas of Cape York; support development of land management skills and capacity; security and control of fisheries and marine resources by traditional owners; incorporation of traditional land and sea management practices into mainstream land management regimes.
Relocating control of the development process to the traditional owner group assumes that there is already available within the group the capacity to set, implement and achieve development goals.
The decision also ensures that Traditional Owners have the ultimate control over their country.
However, as discussed in the 2003 Native Title Report, unless partnerships between government, industry and traditional owners are based on the recognition of traditional owners» inherent rights, distinct identity and governance structures, they will not be partnerships between equals.118 Failure to provide meaningful recognition to traditional owners and to recognise and respect traditional owners» control of their own development will only foster the dependency that the government is trying to reduce and threaten traditional owners» development goals.
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