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Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972 (WA) | ||
Category: | Legislation | |
Binomial Name: | State of Western Australia | |
Sub Category: | Legislation | |
Place: | ||
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State/Country: | Western Australia, Australia | |
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Subject Matter: | Cultural Heritage | Environmental Heritage | |
URL: | http://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/viewdb/au/legis/wa/consol_act/aha1972164/ | |
Summary Information: | ||
The Aboriginal Heritage Act (AHA Act) applies in relation to the protection of places and objects which may be of importance and significance to people of Aboriginal descent in Western Australia. In particular, it applies to places and objects (and storage areas for objects) that may have sacred, ceremonial and ritual significance.
Section 18 While section 17 of the AH Act makes it an offence to damage or alter any site of importance or significance to persons of Aboriginal descent (as defined by section 5) without authorisation, section 18 outlines an approval process by which the Minister for Aboriginal Affairs could may give consent to a land owner to use land for a purpose which would otherwise likely breach section 17. In deciding whether to grant consent, the Minister must consider a recommendation by the Aboriginal Cultural Material Committee (the ACMC) and also the 'general interest of the community.' However, the Minister may act outside the recommendation made by the ACMC, and Traditional Owners have no procedural rights in relation to any aspect of decision making. As a result, a section 18 permit can become permanent permission for a destructive activity even when new information about a site's significant heritage value comes to light. (Joint Standing Committee on Northern Australia, pp 71, 73, 75) | ||
Detailed Information: | ||
Background and Context The AH Act came into operation in 1972, at a time where growing official and public awareness about Aboriginal cultural sites coincided with the Western Australian mining boom of the 1960s and 1970s, which led to large-scale developments in inland areas of WA which had previously been largely untouched by non-Indigenous people. These developments had unprecedented impact on local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. With increasing disputes about development of land on which important Aboriginal sites were located, it became clear that formal mechanisms were needed to protect Aboriginal heritage. (Joint Standing Committee on Northern Australia, [4.6]) Criticisms of the AH Act While the Act was reviewed and amended several times over the fifty year period for which it was in force, it has been broadly accepted as outdated. Criticism of the Act generally concerns its ineffectiveness in the face of pressures on Aboriginal heritage from the scale of Western Australian economic development, and that of successive governments having either 'watered down' the Act or applied it in such a way that it has not protected Aboriginal heritage [4.29 - 4.37]. In particular, section 18 was found to have significant shortcomings. Once a permit had been granted, it 'entrenched a right to destroy' cultural heritage, where Traditional owners could not appeal the Minister's decision, even in the face of new evidence, despite the fact that land owners and miners retained that right [4.44]. The destruction of the Juukan Gorge, and other examples outlined in Ch. 3 of the 'A Way Forward' report, demonstrate how the AH Act, (and s 18 in particular) have, in many cases directly contributed to damage and destruction of Aboriginal cultural heritage (Foreword). Legislative Reform In response to the growing desires for major reforms of legislative protections for Aboriginal heritage in Western Australia, the WA government commenced a review of the AH Act in 2018. To do so, it engaged in a three-stage consultation process that sought to identify issues and gaps in the AH Act. In March 2019 it released a discussion paper which set out proposals for new legislation, and in October 2020, a draft exposure bill was released for further submissions. (See Chapter 4 of the "A Way Forward Report" linked below.) The new, Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act 2021 (WA) was passed in October 2021 with the intention of, among other things, better recognising, protecting, conserving and Aboriginal cultural heritage, (s 8). |
Related Entries |
Organisation |
Legislation |
Policy/Strategy |
References |
Report |
Joint Standing Committee on Northern Austarlia (October 2021) A Way Forward |
Resource |
State of Western Australia (1972) Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972 |
Australian Legal Information Institute (1972) Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972 (WA) |
Glossary |
Legislation |
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