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Native Title
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1992 - The Mabo Case
1993
- The Native Title Act
1996
- The Wik Case
1998
- Amendment Bill View
Legislation
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A proofing for the St Vidgeon native title claim
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1992 - The Mabo Case
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On 3 June, 1992, the High Court of Australia delivered
its landmark Mabo decision which rewrote the Australian common law
and gave a massive boost to the struggle for the recognition of
Aboriginal land rights.
Put simply, the decision said that under Australian
law, Indigenous people have rights to land - rights that existed
before colonisation and which still exist. This right is called
native
title.
By a majority of six to one, the High Court
ruled that native title to land is recognised by the common law
of Australia, throwing out forever the legal fiction that when Australia
was "discovered" by Captain Cook in 1788 it was terra nullius,
an empty or uncivilised land.
The case centred on the Murray Islands in the eastern
part of the Torres Strait Islands between Australia and Papua New
Guinea. The Meriam people, led by Eddie Koiki Mabo, took the action
to the High Court to overturn the doctrine of terra nullius.

The judges in the case declared that:
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...
the Meriam people are entitled as against the whole world to possession,
occupation, use and enjoyment of the lands of the Murray Islands.
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It was the first time that the High Court had considered
the position of Indigenous people in Australian property law and
their judgement was not restricted to the Murray Islands. Justice
Brennan said:
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there may be other areas of Australia where an Aboriginal people,
maintaining their identity and their customs, are entitled to enjoy
their native title.
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Justice Brennan
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Reviewing the history of non-Aboriginal Australia,
Justice Brennan wrote:
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Aborigines
were dispossessed of their land parcel by parcel, to make way for
expanding colonial settlement. Their dispossession underwrote the
development of the nation.
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Justice Brennan
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Settlements, land grants and pastoral leases:
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spread across the continent to dispossess, degrade and devastate
the Aboriginal peoples and leave a national legacy of unutterable
shame.
The acts and events ... (of Aboriginal) dispossession ... constitute
the darkest aspect of the history of this nation... The nation as
a whole must remain diminished unless and until there is an acknowledgment
of, and retreat from, those past injustices. 
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Justices Deane and Gaudron
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While recognising the existence of native
title, the High Court also confirmed the sovereignty of governments
and said that they had the power to acquire native
title providing they kept within the law, particularly the Racial
Discrimination Act 1975.
Sections of the mining and pastoral industries, and
conservative politicians, reacted angrily to the High Court's decision
and urged the Commonwealth Government to overturn it by legislation.
They conducted a massive fear campaign against the newly-established
land rights of Indigenous Australians.

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