'Developing a land and resource management framework for Kaanju homelands, Central Cape York Peninsula'

Date

2003

Authors

Smith, Benjamin R
Claudie, D

Journal Title

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Volume Title

Publisher

Canberra, ACT : Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research (CAEPR), The Australian National University

Abstract

This paper outlines efforts by Kaanju families to develop a comprehensive framework for the management of traditional lands and their associated resources on Kaanju homelands. Based at the Chuula homeland camp on the upper Wenlock River, Kaanju people are attempting to move beyond involvement as mere partners or stakeholders in land and resource management projects, which involves a substantial re-orientation in the ways in which land and resource management are undertaken. Through engagement with the ‘Indigenous Protected Areas’ framework, and other categories devised by ‘mainstream’ agencies, Kaanju people are seeking a practical but substantial form of selfdetermination in partnership with local non-Indigenous people and regional and national agencies. This approach to local land and resource management is based on what Kaanju people understand to be their inalienable and substantial ties to their traditional homelands. The paper provides perspectives from the Chairman of the Chuulangun Aboriginal Corporation (David Claudie) and from an anthropologist (Benjamin Smith) who has researched Kaanju homelands aspirations for the past seven years. The paper outlines the opportunities and challenges entailed by this innovative approach, and the cultural and political contexts underlying Kaanju relationships with current land management structures.

Description

Keywords

traditional lands, Kaanju homelands, resource management, Chuula, framework, IPA, Indigenous Protected Areas, ngaach

Citation

Source

Type

Working/Technical Paper

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

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DOI

Restricted until

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