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) |
|