121-044 Place and Possession

Note

Available in even-numbered years alternating with 121-045 Native Title and 121-046 Garma Fieldwork.

Availability

2nd and 3rd year

Credit Points

12.5

HECS Band

1

Coordinator

Prof Marcia Langton

Prerequisites

Completion of 100 points of first and/or second year subjects including at least 50 points of approved first year subjects in your home faculty.

Semester

2 (view timetable)

Contact

Two 1-hour lectures per week and ten 1-hour tutorials

Subject Description

In this subject students survey selected case studies, and key ideas and documents in the history of the engagement between colonial and post-federation Australian legal systems and indigenous land tenure systems, culminating in a consideration of the concept of native title. An array of titles under various statutes, and the anthropological ideas which have informed them, will be examined as to their efficacy in legitimating indigenous traditions of social affiliation to place and customary ownership. Some key ideas explored in this subject include property; place; group titles; kinship; lineages and customary landholding groups; transmission and succession of customary land tenure; the sociological nature of estates of land and territory and their attributes, such as names, borders, and meanings; the attribution by anthropologists of ownership or possession to clans, 'tribes' or regional linguistic groupings; and dispute-processing in land conflicts, both in customary tradition and Australian history.

Assessment

Two 2000 word essays.

Prescribed Texts

A subject reader will be available. Web site texts and resources, both documentary and visual, will be made available to students for a prescribed period of the subject.



Status:                   Official 2002
Last Modified:            Tuesday May 07 22:11
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Email Enquiries:          Course_Information@registrar.unimelb.edu.au

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