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First Nations Australian traditional custodianship

The concept of First Nations Australian traditional custodianship derives from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples' strong traditional connection with the lands and seas they reside on, known collectively as "Country".[6][7][8] The term "traditional custodian" is often used interchangeably with "traditional owner" in the context of native title in Australia, including in acknowledgements of Country.[9][10] The role of a custodian, however, implies a responsibility to care for Country, reflecting a worldview that is not necessarily compatible with the Western concepts of land ownership and the right to property.[11][12]

Imaluk Beach on Darwin Harbour. While these lands and seas are widely recognised as Larrakia Country, some sources also list the Belyuen and Wadjiginy people as traditional custodians.[3][4][5]

While specific practices and interpretations of custodianship may differ among the hundreds of distinct Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander groups, they all seemingly share a close affiliation with the land and a responsibility to look after it.[13][14][15] Since the 1980s,[16] First Nations and non-First Nations Australian academics have developed an understanding of a deeply rooted custodial obligation, or custodial ethic, that underpins Aboriginal Australian culture, and could offer significant benefits for sustainable land management and reconciliation in Australia.[17][18][19]

Definitions in Australian literature edit

Aboriginal Australian academics Joann Schmider (Mamu), Samantha Cooms (Nunukul) and Melinda Mann (Darumbal) offer the following simple definition for traditional custodians: "the direct descendants of the Indigenous people of a particular location prior to colonisation". However, they add the caveat that "western worldviews are encapsulated within the English language and using western terminology to illuminate Indigenous ways of knowing, being and doing is inevitability fraught with misinterpretations and imperfect understandings".[11] As noted by Wiradjuri scholar Yalmambirra and European Australian archaeologist Dirk Spennemann: "before the onset of European administration, there was no collective concept for the original custodians of this continent, and each community, culturally divergent from its neighbours, had its own identity".[20]

The English-language term "traditional custodians" is not unique to First Nations Australians,[21] and has been used to refer to local communities' relationships with land and resources in West Africa, Southern Africa, and Canada.[22][23][24][25] It has been applied in an Australian context since 1972 at the latest, when sections 4 and 9 of the Western Australian Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972 defined them as "a representative body of persons of Aboriginal descent [that] has an interest in a place or object to which this Act applies that is of traditional and current importance to it".[26]

Following progress on First Nations land rights, European Australian understanding of traditional custodianship improved in the 1980s. In 1981, journalist Jack Waterford wrote of Aboriginal law as a system of "religious obligations, duties of kinship and relationship, caring for country and the acquisition and passing on of the community's store of knowledge".[27] Geographer Elspeth Young, in 1987, elaborated on the concept of "caring for country" as "a set of practices that articulated primary rights to land, which were based on spiritual custodianship, with secondary land use rights".[16][28] By 1992, handing down their judgment on the landmark Mabo case, High Court Justices William Deane and Mary Gaudron acknowledged that "[u]nder the laws or customs of the relevant locality, particular tribes or clans were, either on their own or with others, custodians of the areas of land from which they derived their sustenance and from which they often took their tribal names. Their laws or customs were elaborate and obligatory."[29]

In a 2021 report, the Australian federal Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water defined traditional custodians as "Indigenous people or nations who have responsibilities in caring for their Country". This contrasted with traditional owners, defined as "an Indigenous owner of their traditional Country, as determined through the purchase of freehold, as granted by government or as determined through the native title process".[9] Since 2022 the Australian Public Service has advised capitalising the first letters in each word when referring to traditional custodians.[30]

First Nations understandings of custodianship edit

Wardandi man Josh Whiteland (2015) sharing a traditional Dreamtime story, offering an explanation for how humans came to bear the custodial responsibility of caring for the natural environment around them

First Nations Australians have expressed their interpretations of traditional custodianship through academic writing, political advocacy, traditional stories, poetry and music.

Numerous Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures share an understanding that, contrary to Western views on land ownership, the land "owns us". Elders including Quandamooka woman Oodgeroo Noonuccal, Gai-mariagal and Wiradjuri man Dennis Foley, and Yankunytjatjara man Bob Randall discuss this theme at length, often in a spiritual context, referring to Country as an owner or a maternal figure, and a core component of cultural identity.[31][8][32][33] Noonuccal assigns particular importance to the following maxim: "We cannot own the land for the land owns us".[31]

Drawing on this important relationship with Country, many First Nations Australians — including Aboriginal Australians across the continent and Torres Strait Islanders alike[13][34] — identify a sense of responsibility or obligation to care for Country as a central tenet of traditional custodianship. Yolŋu woman Djuwalpi Marika outlined this sense of responsibility within her community in a 1993 report: "The Yolngu people belong to a number of separate clan groups, each consisting of individual families. Each clan is spiritually connected to their own particular ancestral homeland place (wanga), and being the traditional custodians are responsible for the care and management of their wanga. Living in their own lands make people feel happy and brings the relationship of the land, its people and their ancestors together."[35]

Turbuna man Jim Everett and Barkandji woman Zena Cumpston both identify a custodial obligation to care for Country as a shared foundation of First Nations communities across Australia, embedding a sense of deep respect and accountability for the natural world.[7][36][18] According to this view, being on Country is not considered a right, but a privilege;[37] as Warrwa-Noongar woman Louise O'Reilly explains: "it is not about our right to own land, it is about our right to protect that land. Our right to ensure that land is looked after in a way that will ensure its healthy, sustainable existence. It is a deeply imprinted sense of connection and responsibility that Aboriginal people feel to the land and not about having land as a possession."[12]

First Nations poets and musicians often express their affinity with Country and associated custodial responsibility through their works:

I am a child of the Dreamtime People
Part of the land, like the gnarled gumtree
I am the river, softly singing
Chanting our songs on my way to the sea...
I am this land
And this land is me

Hyllus Maris, Spiritual Song of the Aborigine, 1983[38]

We know that the earth is our mother who created us all.
We cannot own her, she owns us.
So we are the custodians of our Earth Mother, whom we must protect and respect at all times.

Oodgeroo Noonuccal, Legends and Landscapes, 1990[39]

This land is me
Rock, water, animal, tree
They are my song
My being’s here where I belong
This land owns me
From generations past to infinity

Kev Carmody, This Land is Mine, 2001[40]

Custodians may be referred to by different names in the hundreds of distinct Australian Aboriginal languages. These include "nguraritja" in Pitjantjatjara,[41][42] "kwertengerle" in Arrernte,[43][44] "kurdungurlu" in Warlpiri,[45][46] and "djungkay" in Kuninjku[47][48] – although these words may refer more specifically to familial roles within traditional kinship networks that bestow a particular custodial responsibility. In the Dharug language, the related phrase "yanama budyari gumada" means "walk with good spirit".[28]

Custodianship and ownership edit

The distinction between traditional custodians and traditional owners is made by some, but not all, First Nations Australians.[49][50] On one hand, Yuwibara man Philip Kemp states that he would "prefer to be identified as a Traditional Custodian and not a Traditional Owner as I do not own the land but I care for the land."[51] Wurundjeri man Ron Jones shared this sentiment, claiming that the words "traditional owners" are not typically used by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.[52] In 2017, the Referendum Council received several submissions expressing a desire to have First Nations Australians recognised as traditional custodians or guardians in the preamble of the Constitution of Australia, although the Council's final report recommended prioritising a Voice to Parliament and Makarrata Commission rather than symbolic recognition of this status.[53]

Conversely, advocates for Australian Indigenous sovereignty may prefer to emphasise their status as traditional owners rather than solely traditional custodians. Addressing the 2018 Barunga Festival, deputy chair of the Northern Land Council John Christophersen proclaimed: "We're not custodians, we're not caretakers. We weren't looking after [the land] for somebody else to come and take away. We were the owners. And occupiers. And custodians. And caretakers."[54] Wurundjeri, Yorta Yorta and Taungurung man Andrew Peters expressed the view that "using the phrase ‘traditional owners’ indicates an Indigenous definition of ownership that has never involved monetary payments, title, or exclusive rights, but rather the recognition of thousands of years of respect, rights and responsibilities shared among many."[10]

Proposals to amend the constitution to acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as First Peoples, whether framed as owners, custodians, or otherwise, have not been successful. The failed 1999 referendum would have added a preamble to the Constitution that included "honouring Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders, the nation's first people, for their deep kinship with their lands and for their ancient and continuing cultures which enrich the life of our country";[55] while the failed 2023 referendum would have established a Voice to Parliament "in recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Peoples of Australia".[56]

Custodial ethic edit

Adjunct Associate Professor Mary Graham (2021) presenting a webinar on the laws of obligation to land and her interpretation of the custodial ethic

Mary Graham, a Kombu-merra and Wakka Wakka woman, developed the philosophical concept of a unique Aboriginal "custodial ethic". Acknowledging that different people and cultures develop different theories on the "question of existence", Graham posits that Aboriginal Australians identified land or nature as "the only constant in the lives of human beings", to such an extent that the physical and spiritual worlds were regarded as inherently interconnected. This emphasises the importance of the custodial ethic, effectively an obligatory system for people to play a role in following natural wisdom, looking after the land on which they live, and renewing its flora and fauna.[57]

Elaborating further, Graham identifies two principles that together comprise the custodial ethic: "1. the ethical principle of maintaining a respectful, nurturing relationship with Land, Place and community, and 2. the organising governance principle based on autonomy and identity of Place". These two principles can complement and balance each other to permit "a non-ego-based society", and a unique mode of thinking expressed in the following four basic assumptions: that we are not alone in the world; that our needs are more than just physical; a deep reflective motive of long-term strategic thought; and a rejection of self-oriented survivalist thinking that ultimately normalises competitiveness.[17]

Other First Nations authors have adopted the concept of a custodial ethic. Wiradjuri man Glenn Loughrey suggests that it may offer a more accurate understanding of Aboriginal alternatives to the Western concepts of spirituality, justice and rights: "In Aboriginal ways of being [these are] not needed as it is taken for granted we will care for each other, in whatever shape and form the other comes in. It can be described as the custodial ethic and is the reason there are no owners of country, only custodians."[58] Noonuccal woman Samantha Cooms concurs that the custodial ethic is "a profound concept rooted in the belief that all things are considered equal, autonomous, and protected through the wisdom of the collective".[59]

The importance of commitment to a custodial ethic has also been acknowledged by some elements of non-First Nations Australian society. The Royal Societies of Australia (a national group representing the scientific academies of New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and Tasmania) in 2021 proposed that: "This custodianship approach has to be the foundation of our stewardship of country, with priority for support for country on ethical and pragmatic grounds (it is the right thing to do; we rely on it for daily living). We must be looking to the long term, thinking strategically. A society with a custodial ethic must do this."[19]

Custodianship of knowledge edit

In being responsible for Country, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people's traditional custodians typically serve as custodians of accompanying systems of traditional knowledge; they bear a "cultural imperative for protecting, maintaining and creating knowledge".[60] Much, but not all, of this knowledge relates to land and environmental management, including controlled burning, wildlife observation, pest control, water conservation, and erosion control.[61][62][63][64]

European Australian journalist Jeff McMullen cites Gurindji stockman and land rights activist Vincent Lingiari as an example of a custodian of knowledge: "As a senior lawman, Vincent Lingiari was drawing on his grandfatherʼs knowledge and connection to Gurindji country, reclaiming and asserting the core responsibility of custodianship. Like the very strongest Earth science, this foundational concept of the Aboriginal system of knowledge gives every man, woman and child some responsibility to help maintain the balance of the living system of life, the source of well-being for all creatures now and into the future."[65]

First Nataions Australians' knowledge of Country, and the practices underpinning traditional custodianship, have been incorporated into some Australian education programs.[66][67][68]

Challenges to custodianship edit

Some First Nations groups in Australia have spoken out about their struggles to receive recognition as traditional custodians within Australia's current political and legal frameworks.[69] Traditional knowledge had historically been passed down via the oral tradition through kinship networks, and despite some progress, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples allege that more work needs to be done to protect their custodial knowledge.[15][70]

According to Kamilaroi man Marcus Waters, attempts to form a broad pan-Aboriginal political community of scholars in Australian academia, even if well-intentioned, may end up sacrificing the nuance and context of the different custodial governance systems in different First Nations cultures.[14] There is also some concern that the term "traditional custodianship" lacks specificity. In 2017, the Final Report of the Referendum Council noted that custodianship is one of several concepts that are currently "legally ambiguous".[53]

See also edit

References edit

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  4. ^ Dennison, Bill; Williams, Lorraine (10 April 2020). "Engaging with the Belyuen people and Larrakia people, Traditional Owners of Darwin Harbour, Australia". University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Integration and Application Network. Belyuen people live in the Belyuen Community, the are made up of three language groups, Batjamalh, Emmiyangal, Mendheyangal. Their traditional lands are further down south of the west coast, but maintain custodial responsibilities for the area of Belyuen Community on the Cox Peninsula.
  5. ^ Day, Bill (2012). "Larrakia Family groups" (PDF). Dr Bill Day Anthropologist. Larrakia knowledge of country and rituals flourished on the Cox Peninsula, albeit through intermarriage with the Wadjiginy people as custodians.
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  11. ^ a b Schmider, Joann; Cooms, Samantha; Mann, Melinda (2022). "Our Experiences of Researching with our Mob on our Country: Traditional Custodians as Researchers". Journal of Australian Indigenous Issues. 25 (1–2): 38–58.
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  32. ^ Randall, Bob (27 February 2009). "We Are Caretakers". Global Oneness Project.
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  37. ^ Close-Brown, Eelemarni (5 May 2023). "Indigenous musicians shine light on caring for country". National Indigenous Times.
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first, nations, australian, traditional, custodianship, this, article, needs, updated, reason, given, needs, broader, contextual, definitions, custodian, country, caring, country, native, title, acknowledgement, country, please, help, update, this, article, re. This article needs to be updated The reason given is needs broader contextual definitions of custodian Country Caring for Country native title and Acknowledgement of Country 1 2 Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2024 The concept of First Nations Australian traditional custodianship derives from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples strong traditional connection with the lands and seas they reside on known collectively as Country 6 7 8 The term traditional custodian is often used interchangeably with traditional owner in the context of native title in Australia including in acknowledgements of Country 9 10 The role of a custodian however implies a responsibility to care for Country reflecting a worldview that is not necessarily compatible with the Western concepts of land ownership and the right to property 11 12 Imaluk Beach on Darwin Harbour While these lands and seas are widely recognised as Larrakia Country some sources also list the Belyuen and Wadjiginy people as traditional custodians 3 4 5 While specific practices and interpretations of custodianship may differ among the hundreds of distinct Aboriginal Australian and Torres Strait Islander groups they all seemingly share a close affiliation with the land and a responsibility to look after it 13 14 15 Since the 1980s 16 First Nations and non First Nations Australian academics have developed an understanding of a deeply rooted custodial obligation or custodial ethic that underpins Aboriginal Australian culture and could offer significant benefits for sustainable land management and reconciliation in Australia 17 18 19 Contents 1 Definitions in Australian literature 2 First Nations understandings of custodianship 2 1 Custodianship and ownership 3 Custodial ethic 4 Custodianship of knowledge 5 Challenges to custodianship 6 See also 7 ReferencesDefinitions in Australian literature editAboriginal Australian academics Joann Schmider Mamu Samantha Cooms Nunukul and Melinda Mann Darumbal offer the following simple definition for traditional custodians the direct descendants of the Indigenous people of a particular location prior to colonisation However they add the caveat that western worldviews are encapsulated within the English language and using western terminology to illuminate Indigenous ways of knowing being and doing is inevitability fraught with misinterpretations and imperfect understandings 11 As noted by Wiradjuri scholar Yalmambirra and European Australian archaeologist Dirk Spennemann before the onset of European administration there was no collective concept for the original custodians of this continent and each community culturally divergent from its neighbours had its own identity 20 The English language term traditional custodians is not unique to First Nations Australians 21 and has been used to refer to local communities relationships with land and resources in West Africa Southern Africa and Canada 22 23 24 25 It has been applied in an Australian context since 1972 at the latest when sections 4 and 9 of the Western Australian Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972 defined them as a representative body of persons of Aboriginal descent that has an interest in a place or object to which this Act applies that is of traditional and current importance to it 26 Following progress on First Nations land rights European Australian understanding of traditional custodianship improved in the 1980s In 1981 journalist Jack Waterford wrote of Aboriginal law as a system of religious obligations duties of kinship and relationship caring for country and the acquisition and passing on of the community s store of knowledge 27 Geographer Elspeth Young in 1987 elaborated on the concept of caring for country as a set of practices that articulated primary rights to land which were based on spiritual custodianship with secondary land use rights 16 28 By 1992 handing down their judgment on the landmark Mabo case High Court Justices William Deane and Mary Gaudron acknowledged that u nder the laws or customs of the relevant locality particular tribes or clans were either on their own or with others custodians of the areas of land from which they derived their sustenance and from which they often took their tribal names Their laws or customs were elaborate and obligatory 29 In a 2021 report the Australian federal Department of Climate Change Energy the Environment and Water defined traditional custodians as Indigenous people or nations who have responsibilities in caring for their Country This contrasted with traditional owners defined as an Indigenous owner of their traditional Country as determined through the purchase of freehold as granted by government or as determined through the native title process 9 Since 2022 the Australian Public Service has advised capitalising the first letters in each word when referring to traditional custodians 30 First Nations understandings of custodianship edit source source source source source source source Wardandi man Josh Whiteland 2015 sharing a traditional Dreamtime story offering an explanation for how humans came to bear the custodial responsibility of caring for the natural environment around them First Nations Australians have expressed their interpretations of traditional custodianship through academic writing political advocacy traditional stories poetry and music Numerous Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures share an understanding that contrary to Western views on land ownership the land owns us Elders including Quandamooka woman Oodgeroo Noonuccal Gai mariagal and Wiradjuri man Dennis Foley and Yankunytjatjara man Bob Randall discuss this theme at length often in a spiritual context referring to Country as an owner or a maternal figure and a core component of cultural identity 31 8 32 33 Noonuccal assigns particular importance to the following maxim We cannot own the land for the land owns us 31 Drawing on this important relationship with Country many First Nations Australians including Aboriginal Australians across the continent and Torres Strait Islanders alike 13 34 identify a sense of responsibility or obligation to care for Country as a central tenet of traditional custodianship Yolŋu woman Djuwalpi Marika outlined this sense of responsibility within her community in a 1993 report The Yolngu people belong to a number of separate clan groups each consisting of individual families Each clan is spiritually connected to their own particular ancestral homeland place wanga and being the traditional custodians are responsible for the care and management of their wanga Living in their own lands make people feel happy and brings the relationship of the land its people and their ancestors together 35 Turbuna man Jim Everett and Barkandji woman Zena Cumpston both identify a custodial obligation to care for Country as a shared foundation of First Nations communities across Australia embedding a sense of deep respect and accountability for the natural world 7 36 18 According to this view being on Country is not considered a right but a privilege 37 as Warrwa Noongar woman Louise O Reilly explains it is not about our right to own land it is about our right to protect that land Our right to ensure that land is looked after in a way that will ensure its healthy sustainable existence It is a deeply imprinted sense of connection and responsibility that Aboriginal people feel to the land and not about having land as a possession 12 First Nations poets and musicians often express their affinity with Country and associated custodial responsibility through their works I am a child of the Dreamtime PeoplePart of the land like the gnarled gumtreeI am the river softly singingChanting our songs on my way to the sea I am this landAnd this land is me Hyllus Maris Spiritual Song of the Aborigine 1983 38 We know that the earth is our mother who created us all We cannot own her she owns us So we are the custodians of our Earth Mother whom we must protect and respect at all times Oodgeroo Noonuccal Legends and Landscapes 1990 39 This land is meRock water animal treeThey are my songMy being s here where I belongThis land owns meFrom generations past to infinity Kev Carmody This Land is Mine 2001 40 Custodians may be referred to by different names in the hundreds of distinct Australian Aboriginal languages These include nguraritja in Pitjantjatjara 41 42 kwertengerle in Arrernte 43 44 kurdungurlu in Warlpiri 45 46 and djungkay in Kuninjku 47 48 although these words may refer more specifically to familial roles within traditional kinship networks that bestow a particular custodial responsibility In the Dharug language the related phrase yanama budyari gumada means walk with good spirit 28 Custodianship and ownership edit See also Native title in Australia Traditional owner The distinction between traditional custodians and traditional owners is made by some but not all First Nations Australians 49 50 On one hand Yuwibara man Philip Kemp states that he would prefer to be identified as a Traditional Custodian and not a Traditional Owner as I do not own the land but I care for the land 51 Wurundjeri man Ron Jones shared this sentiment claiming that the words traditional owners are not typically used by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples 52 In 2017 the Referendum Council received several submissions expressing a desire to have First Nations Australians recognised as traditional custodians or guardians in the preamble of the Constitution of Australia although the Council s final report recommended prioritising a Voice to Parliament and Makarrata Commission rather than symbolic recognition of this status 53 Conversely advocates for Australian Indigenous sovereignty may prefer to emphasise their status as traditional owners rather than solely traditional custodians Addressing the 2018 Barunga Festival deputy chair of the Northern Land Council John Christophersen proclaimed We re not custodians we re not caretakers We weren t looking after the land for somebody else to come and take away We were the owners And occupiers And custodians And caretakers 54 Wurundjeri Yorta Yorta and Taungurung man Andrew Peters expressed the view that using the phrase traditional owners indicates an Indigenous definition of ownership that has never involved monetary payments title or exclusive rights but rather the recognition of thousands of years of respect rights and responsibilities shared among many 10 Proposals to amend the constitution to acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as First Peoples whether framed as owners custodians or otherwise have not been successful The failed 1999 referendum would have added a preamble to the Constitution that included honouring Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders the nation s first people for their deep kinship with their lands and for their ancient and continuing cultures which enrich the life of our country 55 while the failed 2023 referendum would have established a Voice to Parliament in recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Peoples of Australia 56 Custodial ethic edit source source source source source source source source Adjunct Associate Professor Mary Graham 2021 presenting a webinar on the laws of obligation to land and her interpretation of the custodial ethic Mary Graham a Kombu merra and Wakka Wakka woman developed the philosophical concept of a unique Aboriginal custodial ethic Acknowledging that different people and cultures develop different theories on the question of existence Graham posits that Aboriginal Australians identified land or nature as the only constant in the lives of human beings to such an extent that the physical and spiritual worlds were regarded as inherently interconnected This emphasises the importance of the custodial ethic effectively an obligatory system for people to play a role in following natural wisdom looking after the land on which they live and renewing its flora and fauna 57 Elaborating further Graham identifies two principles that together comprise the custodial ethic 1 the ethical principle of maintaining a respectful nurturing relationship with Land Place and community and 2 the organising governance principle based on autonomy and identity of Place These two principles can complement and balance each other to permit a non ego based society and a unique mode of thinking expressed in the following four basic assumptions that we are not alone in the world that our needs are more than just physical a deep reflective motive of long term strategic thought and a rejection of self oriented survivalist thinking that ultimately normalises competitiveness 17 Other First Nations authors have adopted the concept of a custodial ethic Wiradjuri man Glenn Loughrey suggests that it may offer a more accurate understanding of Aboriginal alternatives to the Western concepts of spirituality justice and rights In Aboriginal ways of being these are not needed as it is taken for granted we will care for each other in whatever shape and form the other comes in It can be described as the custodial ethic and is the reason there are no owners of country only custodians 58 Noonuccal woman Samantha Cooms concurs that the custodial ethic is a profound concept rooted in the belief that all things are considered equal autonomous and protected through the wisdom of the collective 59 The importance of commitment to a custodial ethic has also been acknowledged by some elements of non First Nations Australian society The Royal Societies of Australia a national group representing the scientific academies of New South Wales Victoria Queensland Western Australia South Australia and Tasmania in 2021 proposed that This custodianship approach has to be the foundation of our stewardship of country with priority for support for country on ethical and pragmatic grounds it is the right thing to do we rely on it for daily living We must be looking to the long term thinking strategically A society with a custodial ethic must do this 19 Custodianship of knowledge editIn being responsible for Country Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people s traditional custodians typically serve as custodians of accompanying systems of traditional knowledge they bear a cultural imperative for protecting maintaining and creating knowledge 60 Much but not all of this knowledge relates to land and environmental management including controlled burning wildlife observation pest control water conservation and erosion control 61 62 63 64 European Australian journalist Jeff McMullen cites Gurindji stockman and land rights activist Vincent Lingiari as an example of a custodian of knowledge As a senior lawman Vincent Lingiari was drawing on his grandfatherʼs knowledge and connection to Gurindji country reclaiming and asserting the core responsibility of custodianship Like the very strongest Earth science this foundational concept of the Aboriginal system of knowledge gives every man woman and child some responsibility to help maintain the balance of the living system of life the source of well being for all creatures now and into the future 65 First Nataions Australians knowledge of Country and the practices underpinning traditional custodianship have been incorporated into some Australian education programs 66 67 68 Challenges to custodianship editSome First Nations groups in Australia have spoken out about their struggles to receive recognition as traditional custodians within Australia s current political and legal frameworks 69 Traditional knowledge had historically been passed down via the oral tradition through kinship networks and despite some progress Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples allege that more work needs to be done to protect their custodial knowledge 15 70 According to Kamilaroi man Marcus Waters attempts to form a broad pan Aboriginal political community of scholars in Australian academia even if well intentioned may end up sacrificing the nuance and context of the different custodial governance systems in different First Nations cultures 14 There is also some concern that the term traditional custodianship lacks specificity In 2017 the Final Report of the Referendum Council noted that custodianship is one of several concepts that are currently legally ambiguous 53 See also editAustralian Aboriginal identity Australian Aboriginal sacred site Counter mapping Perspectives on the Land United States Corporate environmental responsibility Earth jurisprudence Environmental stewardship History of Indigenous Australians Land ethic Tangata whenua Traditional ecological knowledgeReferences edit Aboriginal Custodianship Background Information NARvis Our Demands Scambary Benedict 2007 8 No vacancies at the Starlight Motel Larrakia identity and the native title claims process In Smith Benjamin R Morphy Frances eds The Social Effects of Native Title Recognition Translation Coexistence PDF ANU E Press p 154 The area is predominantly occupied by the Belyuen who have a custodial relationship with the Larrakia in relation to their residence on Larrakia country Dennison Bill Williams Lorraine 10 April 2020 Engaging with the Belyuen people and Larrakia people Traditional Owners of Darwin Harbour Australia University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Integration and Application Network Belyuen people live in the Belyuen Community the are made up of three language groups Batjamalh Emmiyangal Mendheyangal Their traditional lands are further down south of the west coast but maintain custodial responsibilities for the area of Belyuen Community on the Cox Peninsula Day Bill 2012 Larrakia Family groups PDF Dr Bill Day Anthropologist Larrakia knowledge of country and rituals flourished on the Cox Peninsula albeit through intermarriage with the Wadjiginy people as custodians Queensland Studies Authority March 2008 Relationships to country Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islander people PDF Queensland Curriculum and Assessment Authority a b Grieves Vicki 2009 Aboriginal Spirituality Aboriginal Philosophy The Basis of Aboriginal Social and Emotional Wellbeing PDF Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health Discussion Paper Series 9 a b Foley Dennis 2003 Indigenous epistemology and Indigenous standpoint theory PDF Social Alternatives 22 1 44 52 a b Department of Climate Change Energy the Environment and Water 2021 Glossary Australia State of the Environment 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Peters Andrew February 2017 MOONDANI YULENJ An examination of Aboriginal culture identity and education PDF Swinburne University of Technology a b Schmider Joann Cooms Samantha Mann Melinda 2022 Our Experiences of Researching with our Mob on our Country Traditional Custodians as Researchers Journal of Australian Indigenous Issues 25 1 2 38 58 a b O Reilly Louise 28 June 2018 THREE THINGS EDDIE MABO TAUGHT ME Amnesty International Australia a b Tonkinson Robert 1999 The pragmatics and politics of Aboriginal tradition and identity in Australia Journal de la Societe des Oceanistes 109 2 133 147 doi 10 3406 jso 1999 2110 PMID 21970010 today many indigenous people invoke values such as caring and sharing as fundamental elements of a pan Aboriginal identity a b Waters Marcus 2013 Nurturing the beginning in protecting our traditional practices from the end family kinship and Kamilaroi Aboriginal First Nation knowledge in Australia PDF The Journal of the European Association for Studies of Australia 4 1 a b Ens Emilie J Pert Petina Clarke Philip A Budden Marita Clubb Lilian Doran Bruce et al 2015 Indigenous biocultural knowledge in ecosystem science and management Review and insight from Australia PDF Biological Conservation 181 133 149 Bibcode 2015BCons 181 133E doi 10 1016 j biocon 2014 11 008 a b Pleshet Noah 2018 Caring for Country history and alchemy in the making and management of Indigenous Australian land PDF Oceania 88 2 183 201 doi 10 1002 ocea 5188 a b Graham Mary 2023 the law of obligation aboriginal ethics australia becoming australia dreaming PDF Parrhesia 37 a b Cumpston Zena 31 January 2020 To address the ecological crisis Aboriginal peoples must be restored as custodians of Country The Conversation a b Quinn Nelson 2021 New stewardship of Country The Royal Society of Victoria 133 36 38 doi 10 1071 RS21007 Yalmambirra Spennemann Dirk H R 2006 GAWAIMBANNA GU WIRADJURI NHURRANBAANG WELCOME TO WIRADJURI COUNTRY PDF Australasian Journal of Regional Studies 12 3 383 393 Sajeva G Borrini Feyerabend G Niederberger T 25 November 2019 Custodians Stewards Guardians Meanings and more Policy Brief of the ICCA Consortium no 7 ICCA Consortium Langdon Jonathan Larweh Kofi 2015 Moving with the movement Collaboratively building a participatory action research study of social movement learning in Ada Ghana PDF Action Research 13 3 281 297 doi 10 1177 1476750315572447 S2CID 147965723 a constant threat from outside forces aiming to seize the resource from the Ada or Okor people who have been its custodians Kansanga Moses Andersen Peter Kpienbaareh Daniel Mason Renton Sarah A Atuoye K Sano Y Antabe R Luginaah I 4 July 2018 Traditional agriculture in transition examining the impacts of agricultural modernization on smallholder farming in Ghana under the new Green Revolution International Journal of Sustainable Development amp World Ecology 26 1 11 24 doi 10 1080 13504509 2018 1491429 S2CID 159024556 The traditional custodian of the land who in consultation with the gods ancestors and chief administers customary land and adjudicates land disputes Morreira Shannon Iliff Fiona September 2021 Sacred Spaces Legal Claims Competing Claims for Legitimate Knowledge and Authority over the Use of Land in Nharira Hills Zimbabwe In Steinforth A S Klocke Daffa S eds Challenging Authorities Ethnographies of Legitimacy and Power in Eastern and Southern Africa Palgrave Macmillan the National Museums and Monuments of Zimbabwe also formally recognised the Moyo Ziruvi Nyamweda clan as the traditional custodians of the site Chabot April 2017 Custodians of the past archaeology and Indigenous best practices in Canada University of Manitoba Another theme that this group seemed to share with some others was a desire to move from a concept of ownership toward a concept of custodianship in an effort to build stronger positive relationships between archaeologists and Indigenous communities ABORIGINAL HERITAGE PDF Western Australian Legislation Parliamentary Counsel s Office Department of Justice Government of Western Australia 1972 Waterford Jack 18 March 1981 Aborigines move between different kinds of law The Canberra Times a b Ngurra Darug Dadd Lexodious Glass Paul Scott Rebecca Graham Marnie Judge Sara Hodge Paul Suchet Pearson Sandie 22 April 2019 Yanama budyari gumada reframing the urban to care as Darug Country in western Sydney Australian Geographer 50 3 279 Bibcode 2019AuGeo 50 279N doi 10 1080 00049182 2019 1601150 S2CID 150980191 Deane William Gaudron Mary 3 June 1992 Mabo v Queensland No 2 Mabo case 1992 HCA 23 1992 175 CLR 1 AustLII Australian Public Service Commission 27 July 2022 First Nations Vocabulary using culturally appropriate language and terminology a b Grieve Williams Victoria 2020 Oodgeroo Breaking the iron cycle of settler colonialism Overland 240 Randall Bob 27 February 2009 We Are Caretakers Global Oneness Project McGeough Jane 2 June 2014 Aboriginal Spirituality and The Land WordPress com McNamara Karen Elizabeth Westoby Ross 2016 Intergenerational Sharing of Indigenous Environmental Knowledge in the Torres Strait Geographies of Global Issues Change and Threat PDF Springer For this Torres Strait Islander Elder such environmental knowledge and traditional laws based around leaving enough for tomorrow needed to be passed on to the young people so that they too could listen to and read their country reading country is part of ways of knowing which can then be applied to care for and provide custodianship of local environments Marika Djuwalpi 1993 COMMUNITY LIVING FOR ABORIGINAL PEOPLE New South Wales Coastal Conference proceedings Cumpston Zena 2 December 2019 First Nations knowledge is in vogue but needs to be part of a deeper conversation The Adelaide Review 478 Close Brown Eelemarni 5 May 2023 Indigenous musicians shine light on caring for country National Indigenous Times Echuca Historical Society 2019 Spiritual Song of the Aborigine Hyllus Maris Gardiner Kelly 1998 3 5 1 CLAIMING THE LAND Poetry politics amp place McLean Bruce 3 September 2013 MY COUNTRY THIS LAND IS MINE THIS LAND IS ME Queensland Art Gallery Biodiversity Survey and Monitoring Section Science and Conservation Directorate Department for Environment and Heritage South Australia 2003 A BIOLOGICAL SURVEY OF THE ANANGU PITJANTJATJARA LANDS SOUTH AUSTRALIA 1991 2001 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weiner James F 2007 12 History oral history and memoriation in native title In Smith Benjamin R Morphy Frances eds The Social Effects of Native Title Recognition Translation Coexistence PDF ANU E Press pp 215 223 Walsh Fiona J Dobson Perrurle V Douglas Josie C 2013 Anpernirrentye a Framework for Enhanced Application of Indigenous Ecological Knowledge in Natural Resource Management PDF Ecology and Society 18 3 doi 10 5751 ES 05501 180318 Gibson Jason M 11 September 2018 Ethnographic sound collections and Australian Aboriginal Heritage Kaytetye song traditions remembered International Journal of Heritage Studies Barwick Linda Turpin Myfany 2016 Chapter 5 Central Australian Women s Traditional Songs Keeping Yawulyu Awelye Strong In Schippers Huib Grant Catherine eds Sustainable Futures for Music Cultures PDF Oxford University Press Nash David 1982 AN ETYMOLOGICAL NOTE ON WARLPIRI kurdungurlu In Heath Jeffrey Merlan Francesca Rumsey Alan eds Languages of Kinship in Aboriginal Australia PDF University of Sydney Museum of Contemporary Art Australia Art Gallery of South Australia 2019 Learn Djungkay cultural manager JohnMawurndjul com Bawinanga Aboriginal Corporation 2022 What we do Bawinanga Rangers Land and Sea State Government of Victoria August 2019 Traditional Owner voices improving government relationships and supporting strong foundations PDF Scott Marcelle Marea 21 August 1992 The state of the art issues concerning ownership management and conservation of Australian Aboriginal rock images with special reference to painted images in the Townsville region North Queensland PDF James Cook University Korff Jens 28 August 2023 Welcome to Country amp Acknowledgement of Country Creative Spirits Gooding J Justin 24 May 2019 Editors as Custodians of Your Journal American Chemical Society Sensors 4 5 1118 doi 10 1021 acssensors 9b00780 PMID 31122022 a b Referendum Council 30 June 2017 Final Report of the Referendum Council PDF Uluru Statement from the Heart Stafford Andrew 29 June 2018 Treaty yeah A renewed hope hovers over the Barunga festival The Sydney Morning Herald The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia 1999 Schedule Preamble to the Constitution PDF Parliament of Australia Press Conference Parliament House Prime Minister of Australia Archived from the original on 30 March 2023 Retrieved 2023 03 24 Graham Mary 2008 Some Thoughts about the Philosophical Underpinnings of Aboriginal Worldviews PDF Australian Humanities Review 45 181 194 Loughrey Glenn 2019 A Custodial Ethic an Aboriginal way of wholeness and reciprocity PDF Ethos EA Centre for Christianity amp Society Cooms Samantha 29 November 2023 Decolonising disability weaving a Quandamooka conceptualisation of disability and care Disability amp Society 1 24 doi 10 1080 09687599 2023 2287409 Mann Melinda Cooms Samantha Schmider Joann 2 July 2019 Traditional Custodians as researchers Experiences of researching with our Mob on our Country The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Skroblin Anja Carboon Tracy Bidu Gladys Taylor Muuki Bidu Ngamaru Taylor Waka et al 2022 Developing a two way learning monitoring program for Mankarr Greater Bilby in the Western Desert Western Australia Ecological Management amp Restoration 23 S1 129 138 Bibcode 2022EcoMR 23S 129S doi 10 1111 emr 12543 Hill Rosemary Pert Petina L Davies Jocelyn Robinson Catherine J Walsh Fiona Falco Mammone Fay May 2013 Indigenous Land Management in Australia Extent Scope Diversity Barriers and Success Factors PDF Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences Osinsao Jasmin 29 August 2022 CARING FOR COUNTRY INDIGENOUS CUSTODIANS IN AUSTRALIA THRIVE Project Hill Rosemary Baird Adelaide Buchanan David 1999 Aborigines and Fire in the Wet Tropics of Queensland Australia Ecosystem Management Across Cultures Society amp Natural Resources 12 3 205 223 Bibcode 1999SNatR 12 205R doi 10 1080 089419299279704 McMullen Jeff 7 August 2015 What Vincent Lingiari taught us about the value of Aboriginal custodianship Crikey Tribe David February 1990 It s a hands on turn on experience The Journal for Education 9 1 Whitehouse Hilary Lui Felecia Watkin Sellwood Juanita Barrett M J Chigeza Philemon 5 February 2014 Sea Country navigating Indigenous and colonial ontologies in Australian environmental education Environmental Education Research 20 1 56 69 doi 10 1080 13504622 2013 852655 S2CID 144487444 Poelina Anne Paradies Yin Wooltorton Sandra Guimond Laurie Jackson Barrett Libby Blaise Mindy 22 August 2023 Indigenous philosophy in environmental education PDF Australian Journal of Environmental Education 39 3 269 278 doi 10 1017 aee 2023 28 Kingsley Jonathan Townsend Mardie Henderson Wilson Claire Bolam Bruce 7 February 2013 Developing an Exploratory Framework Linking Australian Aboriginal Peoples Connection to Country and Concepts of Wellbeing International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 10 2 678 698 doi 10 3390 ijerph10020678 hdl 10536 DRO DU 30058738 PMC 3635170 PMID 23435590 Davis Michael 29 June 1998 Biological diversity and Indigenous knowledge Science Techology Environment and Resources Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First Nations Australian traditional custodianship amp oldid 1221693904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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