Land Back: Aboriginal land rights in New South Wales, today and always
By (Author) Heidi Norman
NewSouth Publishing
NewSouth Publishing
1st February 2025
Australia
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Regional, state and other local government
Political control and freedoms
Paperback
368
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
Aboriginal land rights recognition in 1983 came after nearly 200 years of violent colonial dispossession and the near complete loss of land. For over 40 years, NSW Aboriginal people have worked to restore their Country and people.
Land rights in NSW included unique features that remain unrealised in other parts of the country. The laws announced the policy of self-determination, compensation for loss, a land claims process, support for enterprises and the establishment of a network of land councils. Today there are 120 land councils that operate across the state.
Yet significant features of the land rights promise remain outstanding. Less than 1 per cent of the state has been restituted to Aboriginal land councils, with tens of thousands of land claims yet to be determined.
Professor Heidi Norman, a leading expert on Aboriginal political history, has brought together voices at the forefront of the movement, including lawyers, NSW Aboriginal Land Council Youth Committee members, students, academics, activists and organisers, to share the successes, failures and possible futures of NSW land rights.
Land Back tells the story of the work that has been done, and is yet to be done, to get land back.
Heidi Norman is a professor at UNSW and a leading researcher in the field of Australian Aboriginal political history. She has published widely on histories of Aboriginal land rights, Aboriginal participation in Rugby League, studies of media representation, the history of Aboriginal working life in cities and political history of Aboriginal affairs administration. Her family are from Gomeroi lands of northwestern NSW. She is the director of the Indigenous Land and Justice Research Group and has advised government and Aboriginal peak bodies. Most recently, she contributed to development of the Australian Government's First Nations Clean Energy Strategy.