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Title Customary land tenure and registration in Australia and Papua New Guinea : anthropological perspectives / editor: James F. Weiner ; Editor: Katie Glaskin.

Publication Info. Canberra : ANU E Press, 2007.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource.
data file
Series Asia-Pacific environment monograph ; 3
Asia-Pacific environment monograph ; 3.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Contents 1. Customary Land Tenure and Registration in Papua New Guinea and Australia: Anthropological Perspectives / James F. Weiner and Katie Glaskin -- A Legal Regime for Issuing Group Titles to Customary Land: Lessons from the East Sepik / Jim Fingleton -- Land, Customary and Non-Customary, in East New Britain / Keir Martin -- Clan-Finding, Clan-Making and the Politics of Identity in a Papua New Guinea Mining Project / Dan Jorgensen -- From Agency to Agents: Forging Landowner Identities in Porgera / Alex Golub -- Incorporating Huli: Lessons from the Hides Licence Area / Laurence Goldman -- Foi Incorporated Land Group: Group and Collective Action in the Kutubu Oil Project Area, Papua New Guinea / James F. Weiner -- Local Custom and the Art of Land Group Boundary Maintenance in Papua New Guinea / Colin Filer -- Determinacy of Groups and the 'Owned Commons' in Papua New Guinea and Torres Strait / John Burton -- Outstation Incorporation as Precursor to a Prescribed Body Corporate / Katie Glaskin -- Measure of Dreams / Derek Elias -- Laws and Strategies: The Contest to Protect Aboriginal Interests at Coronation Hill / Robert Levitus -- A Regional Approach to Managing Aboriginal Land Title on Cape York / Paul Memmott, Peter Blackwood and Scott McDougall.
Summary Anthropologists fifty years ago would probably have regarded a collaborative presentation of essays on indigenous land tenure in Australia and Papua New Guinea (PNG) as a dubious undertaking, if not a category error. Aboriginal and Melanesian systems were functionally distinct, one adapted to the needs of a hunting and gathering economy, the other to sedentary horticulture. Going back another fifty years, such a conjunction would have been intelligible only if its purpose was to exhibit lower and higher stages in cultural evolution. As the authors of the present volume are not motivated by a desire either to overturn functionalism or advance evolutionism, what brings them together in common cause?
Access Use copy Restrictions unspecified MiAaHDL
Reproduction Electronic reproduction. [Place of publication not identified] : HathiTrust Digital Library, 2010. MiAaHDL
System Details Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
Processing Action digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve MiAaHDL
Local Note JSTOR Books at JSTOR Open Access
Subject Aboriginal Australians -- Land tenure -- Social aspects -- Australia.
Aboriginal Australians -- Land tenure.
Social aspects.
Australia.
Papuans -- Land tenure -- Social aspects -- Papua New Guinea.
Papuans.
Land tenure.
Papua New Guinea.
Land titles -- Registration and transfer -- Australia.
Land titles -- Registration and transfer.
Land titles -- Registration and transfer -- Papua New Guinea.
Land use -- Australia -- History.
Land use.
History.
Land use -- Papua New Guinea -- History.
Genre/Form Electronic book.
History.
Electronic books.
Added Author Weiner, James F.
Glaskin, Katie.
Other Form: Print version: (OCoLC)176853974
ISBN 9781921313271 (electronic book)
1921313277 (electronic book)
1921313277
9781921313264 (paperback)
1921313269 (paperback)