The roundtable was convened by the Australian Human Rights Commission on Indigenous land to identify options for addressing challenges Indigenous peoples face in creating economic opportunities from their land rights. Participants expressed concern about limited outcomes from land rights processes and engagement with governments on issues affecting Indigenous communities. They discussed tensions between individual and collective land titles, cultural matters, environmental protection and development. Participants called for dialogue on enabling economic development on Indigenous lands, including reforming native title and compensation processes.
Esta presentación foi realizada para participar no V Premio TIC da Fundación Impuls cun proxecto para nenos de 3 e 4 anos sobre o ceo nocturno, a lúa e as estrelas.
Esta presentación foi realizada para participar no V Premio TIC da Fundación Impuls cun proxecto para nenos de 3 e 4 anos sobre o ceo nocturno, a lúa e as estrelas.
Your Guide to Get your Birth certificate apostilled in CaliforniaCalifornia Apostille
This SlideShare will cover a full guide of what is the process for receiving a birth certificate with an apostille in California? and How to do it yourself fast and pro.
Traditional Knowledge and Decision MakingJamie Snook
Snook, J. (2016, October). Traditional Knowledge and Decision Making. Poster presented at the Biennial Inuit Studies Conference, St. John's, NL.
The Torngat Secretariat is the implementation agent of the Torngat Joint Fisheries Board and the Torngat Wildlife and Plants Co-Management Board. The Boards provide recommendations and decisions regarding wildlife, plants and fisheries within and adjacent to the Labrador Inuit Settlement Area.
The presentation will provide background information on the role and responsibilities of the organization, and traditional knowledge research that has influenced decision-making using the case studies of Atlantic Salmon, Arctic Char, Torngat Mountains Caribou and Davis Strait Polar Bears.
The presentation also covered the transdisciplinary information that is considered in the practice of co-management. In summary:
- Knowledge can be co-produced.
- Accept all available knowledge to facilitate the best possible dialogue and decisions.
- Policy analysis should be neutral and competent and include all the key considerations.
- Traditional knowledge is influential and contributes to better decisions.
https://twitter.com/twpfs
http://www.torngatsecretariat.ca
Regional Strategy Insert - Contains all information related to the Regional Strategy Framework at Matawa First Nations Management. Designed for the bi-monthly newsletter.
Bringing Them Home 20 years onan action plan for healingChereCoble417
Bringing Them Home 20 years on:
an action plan for healing
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Healing Foundation
Bringing Them Home
20 years on:
an action plan for healing
Executive summary 4
Background 6
The Stolen Generations 7
The Bringing Them Home report 10
Responding to Bringing Them Home 14
Why action is needed now 19
An action plan for making things right 26
Action one: comprehensive response for
Stolen Generations members 27
Action two: healing intergenerational trauma 40
Action three: creating an environment for change 45
Appendix 1: key themes and recommendations
from the Bringing Them Home report 50
Bibliography 52
Notes 54
Contents
We acknowledge Stolen Generations members across Australia, including
those who have passed on, for their courage in sharing their stories and
wisdom in the Bringing Them Home report.
This report, written by Pat Anderson and Edward Tilton, was guided by
the Healing Foundation’s Stolen Generations Reference Committee. The
Committee’s efforts were central to ensuring that this report reflects
the experience of Stolen Generations and for forming the critical
recommendations to bring about change in Australia.
We acknowledge and thank all other contributors who were consulted
for this report.
1
…the past is very much with
us today, in the continuing
devastation of the lives of
Indigenous Australians.
That devastation cannot be
addressed unless the whole
community listens with an
open heart and mind to the
stories of what has happened
in the past and, having listened
and understood, commits itself
to reconciliation.
Extract from the 1997 Bringing Them Home report
2
On 26 May 1997 the landmark Bringing Them Home report was tabled in Federal
Parliament. The report was the result of a national inquiry that investigated the
forced removal of Indigenous children from their families. This marked a pivotal
moment in the healing journey of many Stolen Generations members. It was
the first time their stories—stories of being taken from their families—were
acknowledged in such a way.
It was also the first time it was formally reported that what governments did to
these children was inhumane and the impact has been lifelong.
Most Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have been affected by the
Stolen Generations. The resulting trauma has been passed down to children
and grandchildren, contributing to many of the issues faced in Indigenous
communities, including family violence, substance abuse and self harm.
Two decades on and the majority of the Bringing Them Home recommendations
have not yet been implemented. For many Stolen Generations members, this has
created additional trauma and distress.
Failure to act has caused a ripple effect to current generations. We are now seeing
an increase in Aboriginal people in jails, suicide is on the rise and more children
are being removed.
Addressing the underlying trauma of these issues thr ...
Bringing Them Home 20 years onan action plan for healing.docxjasoninnes20
Bringing Them Home 20 years on:
an action plan for healing
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Healing Foundation
Bringing Them Home
20 years on:
an action plan for healing
Executive summary 4
Background 6
The Stolen Generations 7
The Bringing Them Home report 10
Responding to Bringing Them Home 14
Why action is needed now 19
An action plan for making things right 26
Action one: comprehensive response for
Stolen Generations members 27
Action two: healing intergenerational trauma 40
Action three: creating an environment for change 45
Appendix 1: key themes and recommendations
from the Bringing Them Home report 50
Bibliography 52
Notes 54
Contents
We acknowledge Stolen Generations members across Australia, including
those who have passed on, for their courage in sharing their stories and
wisdom in the Bringing Them Home report.
This report, written by Pat Anderson and Edward Tilton, was guided by
the Healing Foundation’s Stolen Generations Reference Committee. The
Committee’s efforts were central to ensuring that this report reflects
the experience of Stolen Generations and for forming the critical
recommendations to bring about change in Australia.
We acknowledge and thank all other contributors who were consulted
for this report.
1
…the past is very much with
us today, in the continuing
devastation of the lives of
Indigenous Australians.
That devastation cannot be
addressed unless the whole
community listens with an
open heart and mind to the
stories of what has happened
in the past and, having listened
and understood, commits itself
to reconciliation.
Extract from the 1997 Bringing Them Home report
2
On 26 May 1997 the landmark Bringing Them Home report was tabled in Federal
Parliament. The report was the result of a national inquiry that investigated the
forced removal of Indigenous children from their families. This marked a pivotal
moment in the healing journey of many Stolen Generations members. It was
the first time their stories—stories of being taken from their families—were
acknowledged in such a way.
It was also the first time it was formally reported that what governments did to
these children was inhumane and the impact has been lifelong.
Most Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have been affected by the
Stolen Generations. The resulting trauma has been passed down to children
and grandchildren, contributing to many of the issues faced in Indigenous
communities, including family violence, substance abuse and self harm.
Two decades on and the majority of the Bringing Them Home recommendations
have not yet been implemented. For many Stolen Generations members, this has
created additional trauma and distress.
Failure to act has caused a ripple effect to current generations. We are now seeing
an increase in Aboriginal people in jails, suicide is on the rise and more children
are being removed.
Addressing the underlying trauma of these issues thr ...
SOURCES of STRENGTH - Meditations On Scripture For A Living Faith
“There are fifty-two meditations in this book, one for each week of the year. But don’t feel constrained to pace yourself accordingly.” --- Jimmy Carter. Plains Georgia, June 1997
CHAPTER FIFTY – TWO
Take a Chance
Whoever watches the wind will not plant;
whoever looks at the cloud will not reap. . . .
Sow your seed in the morning, and at evening let not your
hands be idle, for you do not know which will succeed,
whether this or that, or whether both will do equally well.
ECCLESIASTES 11:4, 6
“So if we wait for perfection in our lives, for exactly the right moment, then we may never act! This message applies to all of us.”
--- James Earl Carter Jr., 39th President of the United States, Nobel Peace Prize recipient 2002
Your Guide to Get your Birth certificate apostilled in CaliforniaCalifornia Apostille
This SlideShare will cover a full guide of what is the process for receiving a birth certificate with an apostille in California? and How to do it yourself fast and pro.
Traditional Knowledge and Decision MakingJamie Snook
Snook, J. (2016, October). Traditional Knowledge and Decision Making. Poster presented at the Biennial Inuit Studies Conference, St. John's, NL.
The Torngat Secretariat is the implementation agent of the Torngat Joint Fisheries Board and the Torngat Wildlife and Plants Co-Management Board. The Boards provide recommendations and decisions regarding wildlife, plants and fisheries within and adjacent to the Labrador Inuit Settlement Area.
The presentation will provide background information on the role and responsibilities of the organization, and traditional knowledge research that has influenced decision-making using the case studies of Atlantic Salmon, Arctic Char, Torngat Mountains Caribou and Davis Strait Polar Bears.
The presentation also covered the transdisciplinary information that is considered in the practice of co-management. In summary:
- Knowledge can be co-produced.
- Accept all available knowledge to facilitate the best possible dialogue and decisions.
- Policy analysis should be neutral and competent and include all the key considerations.
- Traditional knowledge is influential and contributes to better decisions.
https://twitter.com/twpfs
http://www.torngatsecretariat.ca
Regional Strategy Insert - Contains all information related to the Regional Strategy Framework at Matawa First Nations Management. Designed for the bi-monthly newsletter.
Bringing Them Home 20 years onan action plan for healingChereCoble417
Bringing Them Home 20 years on:
an action plan for healing
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Healing Foundation
Bringing Them Home
20 years on:
an action plan for healing
Executive summary 4
Background 6
The Stolen Generations 7
The Bringing Them Home report 10
Responding to Bringing Them Home 14
Why action is needed now 19
An action plan for making things right 26
Action one: comprehensive response for
Stolen Generations members 27
Action two: healing intergenerational trauma 40
Action three: creating an environment for change 45
Appendix 1: key themes and recommendations
from the Bringing Them Home report 50
Bibliography 52
Notes 54
Contents
We acknowledge Stolen Generations members across Australia, including
those who have passed on, for their courage in sharing their stories and
wisdom in the Bringing Them Home report.
This report, written by Pat Anderson and Edward Tilton, was guided by
the Healing Foundation’s Stolen Generations Reference Committee. The
Committee’s efforts were central to ensuring that this report reflects
the experience of Stolen Generations and for forming the critical
recommendations to bring about change in Australia.
We acknowledge and thank all other contributors who were consulted
for this report.
1
…the past is very much with
us today, in the continuing
devastation of the lives of
Indigenous Australians.
That devastation cannot be
addressed unless the whole
community listens with an
open heart and mind to the
stories of what has happened
in the past and, having listened
and understood, commits itself
to reconciliation.
Extract from the 1997 Bringing Them Home report
2
On 26 May 1997 the landmark Bringing Them Home report was tabled in Federal
Parliament. The report was the result of a national inquiry that investigated the
forced removal of Indigenous children from their families. This marked a pivotal
moment in the healing journey of many Stolen Generations members. It was
the first time their stories—stories of being taken from their families—were
acknowledged in such a way.
It was also the first time it was formally reported that what governments did to
these children was inhumane and the impact has been lifelong.
Most Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have been affected by the
Stolen Generations. The resulting trauma has been passed down to children
and grandchildren, contributing to many of the issues faced in Indigenous
communities, including family violence, substance abuse and self harm.
Two decades on and the majority of the Bringing Them Home recommendations
have not yet been implemented. For many Stolen Generations members, this has
created additional trauma and distress.
Failure to act has caused a ripple effect to current generations. We are now seeing
an increase in Aboriginal people in jails, suicide is on the rise and more children
are being removed.
Addressing the underlying trauma of these issues thr ...
Bringing Them Home 20 years onan action plan for healing.docxjasoninnes20
Bringing Them Home 20 years on:
an action plan for healing
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Healing Foundation
Bringing Them Home
20 years on:
an action plan for healing
Executive summary 4
Background 6
The Stolen Generations 7
The Bringing Them Home report 10
Responding to Bringing Them Home 14
Why action is needed now 19
An action plan for making things right 26
Action one: comprehensive response for
Stolen Generations members 27
Action two: healing intergenerational trauma 40
Action three: creating an environment for change 45
Appendix 1: key themes and recommendations
from the Bringing Them Home report 50
Bibliography 52
Notes 54
Contents
We acknowledge Stolen Generations members across Australia, including
those who have passed on, for their courage in sharing their stories and
wisdom in the Bringing Them Home report.
This report, written by Pat Anderson and Edward Tilton, was guided by
the Healing Foundation’s Stolen Generations Reference Committee. The
Committee’s efforts were central to ensuring that this report reflects
the experience of Stolen Generations and for forming the critical
recommendations to bring about change in Australia.
We acknowledge and thank all other contributors who were consulted
for this report.
1
…the past is very much with
us today, in the continuing
devastation of the lives of
Indigenous Australians.
That devastation cannot be
addressed unless the whole
community listens with an
open heart and mind to the
stories of what has happened
in the past and, having listened
and understood, commits itself
to reconciliation.
Extract from the 1997 Bringing Them Home report
2
On 26 May 1997 the landmark Bringing Them Home report was tabled in Federal
Parliament. The report was the result of a national inquiry that investigated the
forced removal of Indigenous children from their families. This marked a pivotal
moment in the healing journey of many Stolen Generations members. It was
the first time their stories—stories of being taken from their families—were
acknowledged in such a way.
It was also the first time it was formally reported that what governments did to
these children was inhumane and the impact has been lifelong.
Most Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have been affected by the
Stolen Generations. The resulting trauma has been passed down to children
and grandchildren, contributing to many of the issues faced in Indigenous
communities, including family violence, substance abuse and self harm.
Two decades on and the majority of the Bringing Them Home recommendations
have not yet been implemented. For many Stolen Generations members, this has
created additional trauma and distress.
Failure to act has caused a ripple effect to current generations. We are now seeing
an increase in Aboriginal people in jails, suicide is on the rise and more children
are being removed.
Addressing the underlying trauma of these issues thr ...
SOURCES of STRENGTH - Meditations On Scripture For A Living Faith
“There are fifty-two meditations in this book, one for each week of the year. But don’t feel constrained to pace yourself accordingly.” --- Jimmy Carter. Plains Georgia, June 1997
CHAPTER FIFTY – TWO
Take a Chance
Whoever watches the wind will not plant;
whoever looks at the cloud will not reap. . . .
Sow your seed in the morning, and at evening let not your
hands be idle, for you do not know which will succeed,
whether this or that, or whether both will do equally well.
ECCLESIASTES 11:4, 6
“So if we wait for perfection in our lives, for exactly the right moment, then we may never act! This message applies to all of us.”
--- James Earl Carter Jr., 39th President of the United States, Nobel Peace Prize recipient 2002
Remote Wisdom, Alice Springs. 18 November 2014Ninti_One
Ninti One hosted an informative, dynamic event to share its recent research projects and early findings.Guests joined for an invigorating and thought-provoking forum about policy issues confronting remote Australia.
This event was held at Ninti One Pty, Desert Knowledge Precinct, Tuesday 18 November 2014.
1. Communiqué
Indigenous Leader’s Roundtable on
economic development and property
rights - Broome, 19-20 May 2015
The roundtable was convened by the Australian Human Rights Commission on
the land of the Yawuru people. The roundtable was hosted at the Nulungu
Research Institute at the Notre Dame University.
The purpose of the roundtable was to identify options for addressing challenges
to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples creating economic development
opportunities, particularly due to barriers that prevent the leveraging of
property rights (be they communal, inalienable rights under native title or
through land rights schemes).
Participants at the roundtable expressed concern at the limited outcomes from
current processes for recognising and protecting Indigenous peoples’ rights to
land and resources. Concern was also expressed about the lack of genuine
engagement by governments with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
on issues that affect them. This includes current conversations about closure of
communities in WA.
While noting that there has been progress in confirming ownership of land since
the commencement of the Native Title Act, many participants expressed
disappointment in what the native title system has delivered in the past twenty
plus years and the whittling away of rights through successive amendments to
the Native Title Act.
Participants called for a new dialogue with government.
The discussions identified tensions between the place of individual and collective
title in promoting economic development, as well as tensions between cultural
matters, environmental protection and development objectives. The meeting
grappled with how to accommodate these tensions, without weighting one above
the other.
Moving forward
Participants called for dialogue about five sets of issues to better enable
economic development within the Indigenous estate:
2. 1. Fungibility and native title – enabling communities to build on their
underlying communal title to create opportunities for economic
development.
2. Business development support and succession planning – ensuring
that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have the governance
and risk management skills and capacity to successfully engage in
business and manage their estates.
3. Financing economic development within the Indigenous estate –
developing financial products, such as bonds, to underwrite economic
development through engaging the financial services sector and
organisations including the ILC and IBA.
4. Compensation – rectifying the existing unfair processes for
compensation for extinguishment of native title and considering how
addressing unfinished business could leverage economic development
opportunities.
5. Promoting Indigenous peoples right to development – promoting
opportunities for development on Indigenous land including identifying
options to provide greater access to resources on the Indigenous estate.
Participants recognised the role of existing mechanisms in advancing the issues
discussed including:
o the COAG Expert Indigenous Working Group investigation into
Indigenous land use and administration
o the constitutional recognition process.
Participants expressed determination to continue to work together to advance
these issues and called for the government to commit resources to this end.
Participants at the roundtable called for the Australian Human Rights
Commission to lead and facilitate an ongoing dialogue on these issues.
3. Roundtable Attendees
Day One – 19 May 2015
Mick Gooda Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice
Commissioner
Tim Wilson Human Rights Commissioner
Louise Bygrave Senior Policy Adviser, Human Rights Commissioner
Kirsten Gray Advisor, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social
Justice Commissioner
Padma Raman Executive Director, Australian Human Rights
Commission
Darren Dick Director of Policy, Australian Human Rights
Commission
Parry Agius Presiding Member, Alinytjara Wilurara Natural
Resources Management Board
Dianne Appleby Member, Nyamba Buru Yawuru Board
Howard Pedersen Policy Adviser, Nyamba Buru Yawuru
Wayne Bergman CEO, KRED Enterprises and Chair, Expert Indigenous
Working Group, COAG investigation into Indigenous
land use and administration
Samuel Bush-Blanasi Chair, Northern Land Council
Valerie Cooms Member, National Native Title Tribunal and Member,
Expert Indigenous Working Group, COAG
investigation into Indigenous land use and
administration
Craig Cromelin Chair, New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council and
Member, Expert Indigenous Working Group, COAG
investigation into Indigenous land use and
administration
John Daly Deputy Chair, Northern Land Council
Michael O’Donnell Principal Legal Officer, Northern Land Council
Murray McLaughlin Senior Media Officer, Northern Land Council
Patrick Dodson Chair, Nyamba Buru Yawuru
Chris Fry CEO, Indigenous Business Australia
Tyronne Garstone Deputy CEO, Kimberley Land Council
Melissa George CEO, North Australian Indigenous Land and Sea
Management Alliance Ltd
Nolan Hunter CEO, Kimberley Land Council
Tony Lee General Manager, Nyamba Buru Yawuru
Les Malezer Co-Chair, National Congress of Australia’s First
Peoples
Tony McAvoy Barrister, Frederick Jordon Chambers
Joe Morrison CEO, Northern Land Council
Maluwap Nona Chair, Malu Lamar RNTBC and Member, Expert
Indigenous Working Group, COAG investigation into
Indigenous land use and administration
4. Terry O’Shane National Coordinator for ATSI Employment,
Maritime Union of Australia
Noel Pearson Founder and Director of Strategy, Cape York
Institute
Cara Peek Director, Nyamba Buru Yawuru Board
David Ross Director, Central Land Council
Geoff Scott CEO, National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples
Kevin Smith CEO, Queensland South Native Title Services
Anthony Watson Chair, Kimberley Land Council
Raelene Webb President, National Native Title Tribunal
Daniel Owen Assistant Secretary, COAG Land Working Group,
Prime Minister and Cabinet
Jessica Foote Senior Advisor, COAG Land Working Group, Prime
Minister and Cabinet
Brian Wyatt CEO, National Native Title Council and Deputy Chair,
Expert Indigenous Working Group, COAG
investigation into Indigenous land use and
administration
Murrandoo Yanner Carpentaria Land Council Aboriginal Corporation
and Member, Expert Indigenous Working Group,
COAG investigation into Indigenous land use and
administration
Peter Yu Independent Chair, North Australian Indigenous
Land and Sea Management Alliance Ltd
Tanya Hosch Joint Campaign Director, Recognise
Bruce Gorring Research Coordinator, Nulungu Research Institute of
Notre Dame University
Anna Dwyer Notre Dame University
Dr Sandra Wooltorton Associate Professor, Nulungu Research Institute,
Notre Dame University
Leon Terrill UNSW and Central Land Council
Brian Stacey Head of Policy, Cape York Institute
Ari Gorring Land and Sea Management Unit Manager, Kimberley
Land Council
Polly Grace Carbon Outreach Office, Kimberley Land Council
5. Day Two - 20 May 2015
Mick Gooda Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice
Commissioner
Tim Wilson Human Rights Commissioner
Louise Bygrave Senior Policy Adviser, Human Rights Commissioner
Kirsten Gray Advisor, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social
Justice Commissioner
Padma Raman Executive Director, Australian Human Rights
Commission
Darren Dick Director of Policy, Australian Human Rights
Commission
Parry Agius Presiding Member, Alinytjara Wilurara Natural
Resources Management Board
Dianne Appleby Member, Nyamba Buru Yawuru Board
Howard Pedersen Policy Adviser, Nyamba Buru Yawuru
Wayne Bergman CEO, KRED Enterprises and Chair, Expert Indigenous
Working Group, COAG investigation into Indigenous
land use and administration
Samuel Bush-Blanasi Chair, Northern Land Council
Valerie Cooms Member, National Native Title Tribunal and Member,
Expert Indigenous Working Group, COAG
investigation into Indigenous land use and
administration
Craig Cromelin Chair, New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council and
Member, Expert Indigenous Working Group, COAG
investigation into Indigenous land use and
administration
John Daly Deputy Chair, Northern Land Council
Michael O’Donnell Principal Legal Officer, Northern Land Council
Murray McLaughlin Senior Media Officer, Northern Land Council
Patrick Dodson Chair, Nyamba Buru Yawuru
Chris Fry CEO, Indigenous Business Australia
Tyronne Garstone Deputy CEO, Kimberley Land Council
Melissa George CEO, North Australian Indigenous Land and Sea
Management Alliance Ltd
Nolan Hunter CEO, Kimberley Land Council
Tony Lee General Manager, Nyamba Buru Yawuru
Les Malezer Co-Chair, National Congress of Australia’s First
Peoples
Tony McAvoy Barrister, Frederick Jordon Chambers
Joe Morrison CEO, Northern Land Council
Maluwap Nona Chair, Malu Lamar RNTBC and Member, Expert
Indigenous Working Group, COAG investigation into
Indigenous land use and administration
Terry O’Shane National Coordinator for ATSI Employment,
Maritime Union of Australia
Noel Pearson Founder and Director of Strategy, Cape York
Institute
6. Cara Peek Director, Nyamba Buru Yawuru Board
David Ross Director, Central Land Council
Geoff Scott CEO, National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples
Kevin Smith CEO, Queensland South Native Title Services
Anthony Watson Chair, Kimberley Land Council
Raelene Webb President, National Native Title Tribunal
Daniel Owen Assistant Secretary, COAG Land Working Group,
Prime Minister and Cabinet
Jessica Foote Senior Advisor, COAG Land Working Group, Prime
Minister and Cabinet
Brian Wyatt CEO, National Native Title Council and Deputy Chair,
Expert Indigenous Working Group, COAG
investigation into Indigenous land use and
administration
Murrandoo Yanner Carpentaria Land Council Aboriginal Corporation
and Member, Expert Indigenous Working Group,
COAG investigation into Indigenous land use and
administration
Peter Yu Independent Chair, North Australian Indigenous
Land and Sea Management Alliance Ltd
Senator the Hon.
George Brandis QC Attorney-General, Commonwealth of Australia
James Lambie Attorney-General’s Office
Liam Brennan Attorney-General’s Office
Tanya Hosch Joint Campaign Director, Recognise
Tim Gartrell Joint Campaign Director, Recognise
Charlee-Sue Frail Coordinator of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Engagement, Recognise
Bruce Gorring Research Coordinator, Nulungu Research Institute of
Notre Dame University
Anna Dwyer Notre Dame University
Dr Sandra Wooltorton Associate Professor, Nulungu Research Institute,
Notre Dame University
Leon Terrill UNSW and Central Land Council
Brian Stacey Head of Policy, Cape York Institute
Melissa Price MP, Federal Member for Durack
Will Story A/g Assistant Secretary, Indigenous Recognition
Taskforce, Attorney-General’s Department
Ari Gorring Land and Sea Management Unit Manager, Kimberley
Land Council
Polly Grace Carbon Outreach Office, Kimberley Land Council