ABSTRACT

'This book debunks in spectacular fashion some of the most treasured, over-inflated claims of the benefits of native title.'

Professor Mick Dodson, ANU Centre for Indigenous Studies

'David Ritter's fascinating account of the evolution of the native title system is elegant and incisive, scholarly and sceptical; above all, unfailingly intelligent.'

Professor Robert Manne, La Trobe University

'An unsentimental, richly informed account of a fascinating period in the history of Australia's relationships with its indigenous people.'

From the Foreword by Chief Justice Robert French

After the historic Mabo judgement in 1992, Aboriginal communities had high hopes of obtaining land rights around Australia. What followed is a dramatic story of hard-fought contests over land, resources, money and power, yielding many frustrations and mixed outcomes.

Based on extensive research, enriched by intimate experience as a lawyer and negotiator, David Ritter offers both an insider's perspective and a cool-headed and broad-ranging account of the native title system. In lucid prose Ritter examines the contributions of the players that contested and adjudicated native title: Aboriginal leaders and their communities, multinational resource companies, pastoralists, courts and tribunals, politicians and bureaucrats. His account lays bare the conflicts, compromises and conceits beneath the surface of the native title process.

chapter 1|26 pages

Reading the Porridge

Introducing the native title system

chapter 2|20 pages

The Dilemmas of the Black Leadership

ATSIC, the native title working groups and their successors

chapter 3|25 pages

Like Unacknowledged Bastards

The native title representative bodies

chapter 4|27 pages

State Expectations

Executive government of the states and territories

chapter 5|23 pages

Mining Rules and the Sheep's Back

Non-government third party respondents

chapter 6|25 pages

Poets and Slaves

The National Native Title Tribunal

chapter 7|25 pages

You Can Take the Judge Out of the Court . . .

The Federal Court of Australia

chapter 8|5 pages

The End of Uncertainty

The native title system in retrospect