Translating Native Title to Individual ‘Title’ in Australia : Are Real Property Forms and Indigenous Interests Reconcilable?

Keyword(s):  
1969 ◽  
pp. 189
Author(s):  
Geoffrey Lester ◽  
Graham Parker

Concern for aboriginal rights has been mounting in many former British colonies in the last decade. Nowhere is this more true than in Australia where there are no treaties and few statutes which make any attempt to protect the rights of the original inhabitants of the continent. But the decision in Milirrpum Ors. v. Nabalco Pty. Ltd. The Commonwealth of Australia appears to have "blocked further action through the courts and . . forced the debate into the political arena" by refusing to recognize any legal obliga tion on the Crown to take cognizance of aboriginal rights based on customary native tenure as "their relationship with the land could not be characterized as proprietary interest." But the authors submit that the Milirrpum court "failed to discover the existence of communal native title" because they operated in conceptual framework, the law of real property, which was not equal to the task. Instead the authors suggest that such rights stem from the aborigines'status as British subjects (and "central to this issue is the distinc tion between colonies acquired by conquest and those acquired by peaceful settlement"). In colonies acquired by peaceful settlement or annexation the aborigines were British subjects under the protection of the common law. And on the basis of case law, aborigines do have some rights at common law: their title has been characterized as right of "qualified" or "modified" dominion over the land, to the extent, at least, of occupation or enjoyment of the land, which is consistent with the Crown's right of pre-emption (exclusive right to extinguish native title). The authors cite the example of New Zealand and the British experience with the Maoris (where the theory was cessation with consent), offering detailed and careful examination of historical materials to support their view that there does exist doctrine of communal native title. They suggest that where aborigines enjoy the status of British subjects, the Crown's pre-emptive right


2013 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-84
Author(s):  
Anna Trembecka

Abstract Amendment to the Act on special rules of preparation and implementation of investment in public roads resulted in an accelerated mode of acquisition of land for the development of roads. The decision to authorize the execution of road investment issued on its basis has several effects, i.e. determines the location of a road, approves surveying division, approves construction design and also results in acquisition of a real property by virtue of law by the State Treasury or local government unit, among others. The conducted study revealed that over 3 years, in this mode, the city of Krakow has acquired 31 hectares of land intended for the implementation of road investments. Compensation is determined in separate proceedings based on an appraisal study estimating property value, often at a distant time after the loss of land by the owner. One reason for the lengthy compensation proceedings is challenging the proposed amount of compensation, unregulated legal status of the property as well as imprecise legislation. It is important to properly develop geodetic and legal documentation which accompanies the application for issuance of the decision and is also used in compensation proceedings.


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