This post outlines an argument for the greater use of
anthropological insights in policy development, and examines two current
examples, including the current proposals to amend the Native Title Act to
support the argument.
I recently had the pleasure of attending the annual
conference of the Centre for Native Title Anthropology held in Perth and an
associated seminar convened by the Centre, the Native Title Tribunal and the
Federal Court to acknowledge 25 years of anthropology in native title.
Both events provided fascinating insights into the practice
of native title claim research, practice and litigation leading to
determination from the perspectives of both anthropology and the law.
My aim here however is not to review these proceedings but
to develop some comparative reflections on the making of public policy in
Indigenous affairs derived from the way in which the courts and legal system
has developed over the past twenty five years since the High Court’s Mabo
decision.
Each of the three arms of government, the Legislature, the
Judiciary and the Executive contributes to Indigenous policymaking, yet the
roles of the legislature and particularly the judiciary are often
underappreciated, at least by those who are not involved directly in either of
those arms of government.
What became very apparent to me over the course of the two
days of proceedings was that the overthrow of terra nullius and sudden
emergence of the native title system, and the consequential requirement on the
legal system, in particular the Federal Court, to hear and determine native
title issues created an imperative for cross cultural social analysis to
facilitate the professional and objective consideration of the requirements
contained in the Native Title Act. Of course, Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander claimants invariably give evidence directly, but the logical and
conceptual complexity arising from differing epistemologies invariably
necessitates a process of what is in effect cross cultural translation to allow
the courts to give full effect to the evidence that is made available to them
by Indigenous witnesses.
While it was very evident that the incorporation of
anthropological (and linguistic) expertise into the litigation process has not
always been easy or without structural tension, over the course of twenty five
years, a body of practice incorporating anthropological evidence has developed
in native title litigation and has in effect been institutionalised within the
legal system. The fact that many Federal Court judges are now routinely exposed
to professional social science analysis of complex native title issues and
assisted by anthropological (and other) experts will no doubt ultimately have
spillover impacts in the ways in which the higher courts deal with a wider
range of Indigenous related litigation.
In stark comparison, the Executive and in particular the
bureaucracy has not been required to utilise social science analysis in
developing policy. There has been no institutional driver or imperative on the
bureaucracy in its policymaking roles equivalent to the requirements in the
Native Title Act which required the courts to assess the merits of assertions
by claimants of continuous connection to particular tracts of land.
The consequence has been that the Indigenous affairs bureaucracy,
by and large staffed at senior levels by generalists with limited experience of
Indigenous communities, and faced with an institutional imperative to make
universal policies for a highly heterogeneous group of citizens, is structurally
unaware of its own ignorance of the ways in which Indigenous groups and
societies operate.
There are numerous potential objections to the proposition
that there should be a greater role for anthropological analysis in public
policymaking, but I will pick out just three of the most salient.
The first potential objection is that policymaking which
incorporates appropriate and adequate consultation with Indigenous interests
will offset or counteract the absence of anthropological and related social
science analysis in the policymaking process.
Of course, consultation with Indigenous interests if
undertaken well will go a long way to adding value to the policymaking process.
Setting aside the fact that consultation is expensive (both in resources and
time) and not often undertaken to an appropriate level, the increasing
complexity of the Indigenous domain involving hundreds of family, kinship and
language groupings, differing levels of accommodation to the dominant society,
new and emerging forms of engagement (‘hybrid structures’) suggests that
Indigenous perspectives on policy proposals will themselves be diverse,
directed to differing objectives, adopt differing lenses and perspectives, and
reflect deeper underlying cultural forces and imperatives which are not
necessarily apparent to non-Indigenous policymakers.
While policymaking is an
art and not a science, and inevitably involves trade-offs and value judgements
(as well as a substantial dose of politics: intra and inter-agency conflicts;
budget conflicts; and second guessing of ministers), it seems to me at least that
the bureaucracy would be better positioned to provide comprehensive and
effective advice to Ministers if it found ways to supplement consultation with
Indigenous interests to better incorporate anthropological knowledge into the
policy development process at least for substantial policy initiatives.
A second potential objection might be that anthropology is
politically compromised either because its epistemological roots are embedded
in the colonial project, and it thus is just another arm of the dominant
settler society, or at the other end of the spectrum, because its practitioners
are captured by Indigenous interests as a result of their modus operandi based on participant observation, involving
extensive time living and working amongst particular groups of Indigenous subjects.
I don’t have space to deal with each of these arguments in
full, but would merely note that while both arguments have potential validity,
the experience of the courts in the native title system has largely been that
the professional ethos of the discipline of anthropology works to counteract
these vulnerabilities. It will always be necessary to choose individual
advisers carefully based on their skills, knowledge and professionalism. The
potential for poor choices of anthropological advisers is not an argument
against accessing anthropological and related social science expertise more
generally.
A third potential objection might be that anthropologists
do not have the requisite policy skills to enable them to make an effective
contribution. While some anthropologists would undoubtedly struggle with some
of the more arcane and ruthless practices of the bureaucracy, the experience in
the native title system is that the anthropological profession has managed to
make the adjustments required to ensure that their advice and perspectives can
be presented in effective formats. There would inevitably be tensions and
challenges involved in attempting to incorporate anthropological insights into
the policy process, but persistence on both sides would find a way through.
Finally, it is worth perhaps providing some examples of current
policies which may have benefited from greater anthropological input.
The implementation of the last Labor Government’s Remote
Jobs and Communities Program (RJCP) and more sharply, the current Government’s
Community Development Program (CDP) both involved implicit program logics which
were based on an assumption that remote ‘jobseekers’ would respond to incentive
structures in particular ways. Both programs experienced challenges on this
front, with many ‘jobseekers’ responding to their own culturally determined
imperatives rather than to mandated program requirements by in effect voting
with their feet to ignore program requirements, often leading them to exit the
program. The current extraordinary breaching levels under CDP (link here
and here)
are evidence of fundamental program and policy failure but policymakers appear
unable to recognise the underlying causes of the problems.
Were there to be an
institutionalised role for anthropological advice within the policy development
process, the blind adherence of policymakers to yet tougher incentives and
penalties would potentially be questioned from within. As it is, the program is
being heavily criticised publicly from without, but political and policymaking
realities make public acknowledgement of failure a fraught business.
A second quite recent example concerns the consequences of
the recent McGlade decision in the
Federal court. The Court held, contrary to previous authority in the Federal
Court’s 2010 Bygrave decision, that
the Native Title Act required an area ILUA (that is an ILUA negotiated by a
group of claimants before a determination of native title had been made) be
signed by all members of the Registered Native Title Corporation (RNTC) rather
than just a subset of members. The Court recognised that this requirement was
virtually unworkable and would require legislative amendment (as it even included
the requirement for the signature of deceased members) but was not prepared to
read down the explicit drafting of the legislation.
As a consequence, the four ILUAs in McGlade were overturned (they related to the Noongar Native Title
Settlement in the south west of WA) and some hundreds of previously registered
ILUAs were potentially invalidated. Also placed at risk was the ILUA negotiated
(but not yet registered) in relation to the proposed Adani coal mine which is
being vociferously criticised by a subset of native title claimants.
Following the decision, the Government moved swiftly
(albeit arguably belatedly- link
here) to introduce amendments to the Native Title Act to validate existing
ILUAs and to change the requirement for unanimous agreement from members of the
RNTC to allow a subset of members to be appointed by the RNTC to sign the ILUA
and in the absence of such an arrangement by the RNTC, to provide that a simple
majority of members of the RNTC would be the default requirement to allow
registration of an ILUA.
The text of the Native Title Amendment (Indigenous Land Use
Agreements) Bill 2017 and the Explanatory Memorandum are available on the Parliament
web page for the Bill which also allows progress of the Bill to be monitored (Link
here).
The Bill has passed the House of Representatives, and is
currently the subject of consideration by a Senate Legal and Constitutional
Affairs Legislation Committee, which will be required to report on 17 March
2017, the Friday before the next Senate sitting day.
In the debate in the House of Representatives, issues
raised included the potential for an RNTC to be pressured by a proponent to
authorise a small group (potentially just one person) to approve an ILUA (see
Warren Snowden’s speech link
here). The processes which govern such an authorisation would be controlled
by the terms of the RNTC’s constitution, which can vary from corporation to
corporation, but in many cases are likely to require merely a majority vote of
Corporation members, who may or may not all be native title holders/claimants.
Certainly, the Bill’s default provision for a majority vote where an RNTC has
not made an authorisation for the process will go a long way to enshrining
western norms of decision making in the legal superstructure erected by the
Native Title Act.
That these decision processes are potentially sensitive and
contentious can be seen in the conflict which has arisen between Indigenous
groups over the Adani mine proposal. Here is a link to a media
report of native title claimants expressing concern at the way the Adani
ILUA has been negotiated.
My preliminary point is not to express an opinion on the
merits of the arguments in relation to the Adani proposal, but to point to the
fact that there is a disjunction between the ways in which decisions are made
by native title holders in relation to their lands and the provisions set out
in the current Amendment Bill. While the current provision is clearly
unworkable, it arguably is a closer reflection of Indigenous decision making
processes (which may have changed over the past two hundred years) than the
proposed mechanism with its focus on a majority vote of RNTC members.
My substantive point is that the Executive (in this
instance the Attorney General’s Department) appears to have given no consideration
to the merits of trying to reflect traditional norms of decision making into
the proposed provision, but have merely adopted, almost unthinkingly, the
western norm of majority voting. Of course, while widely accepted as a ‘fair’
method of making social choices, it is essentially arbitrary, and subject to a
range of ancillary influences which can potentially impact on the process (for
example, is voting compulsory, are the set of RNTC members representative of
the native title holders, are children allowed to vote, is there an adequate
process for explaining the implications of the issue to be determined to
voters, and so on). These are exactly the sorts of issues to which
anthropological insights might be expected to add value.
The absence of an
institutionalised role for anthropological input into policy in effect ignores
and makes irrelevant the statements in the Preamble of the Native Title Act which
provides, inter alia:
It is particularly important to ensure that
native title holders are now able to enjoy fully their rights and interests.
Their rights and interests under the common law of Australia need to be
significantly supplemented.
and the Objects Clause in section 3 which includes the statement: The main objects of this Act are: (a) to
provide for the recognition and protection of native title;…
The effect of the amendments will be to open a doorway to
outcomes which fundamentally compromise the communal nature of the title
insofar as it will be possible for a bare majority subset of native title
holders and /or RNTC members to make decisions regarding the land which in
theory is owned jointly by all native title holders.
The contrast with the Northern Territory Aboriginal Land
Rights Act (ALRA) is instructive. Section 23 (3) of that legislation, referring
to the functions of Land Councils, provides:
In carrying out its
functions with respect to any Aboriginal land in its area, a Land Council shall
have regard to the interests of, and shall consult with, the traditional
Aboriginal owners (if any) of the land and any other Aboriginals interested in
the land and, in particular, shall not take any action, including, but not
limited to, the giving of consent or the withholding of consent, in any matter
in connexion with land held by a Land Trust, unless the Land Council is
satisfied that:
(a) the
traditional Aboriginal owners (if any) of that land understand the nature and purpose
of the proposed action and, as a group,
consent to it; and
(b) any
Aboriginal community or group that may be affected by the proposed action has
been consulted and has had adequate opportunity to express its view to the Land
Council. [Emphasis added]
In effect, ALRA adopts a middle ground which more closely
reflects Aboriginal cultural practice and while it does not require group
unanimity, it does require something more than a bare majority.
In my view it is unfortunate that the Government in dealing
with the present requirement to amend the NTA did not adopt something more
along the lines of the ALRA formulation. The absence of any institutionalised
avenue for the provision and consideration of anthropological advice with
respect to issues pertaining directly to matters of land ownership policy is in
my view one of the reasons the Executive arm of government is willing to merely
adopt non-Indigenous western norms in devising the necessary amendments.
Perhaps the consideration of the Bill by the Senate
Committee will open up an opportunity to consider a revised decision process.
However, the third arm of Government, the Parliament, is largely controlled by
the Executive. Given the complexity of public policy issues which come before
Parliament, there would be value in Parliamentary Committees moving to
incorporate a greater role for independent expert staff in the consideration of
issues coming before them (along the lines of the US Congressional committees).
In Indigenous policy contexts particularly, there is again scope to consider
utilising anthropological expertise as an additional source of advice.
To sum up, the Federal Court has by necessity developed an
institutionalised process for accessing anthropological expertise in dealing
with native title issues. This raises the question whether other arms of
Government, in particular the Executive, might usefully emulate the Federal
Court and seek to make explicit provision for the incorporation of
anthropological advice into the policy development process. While there are
potential objections to this idea, the experience of the Federal Court suggests
that they do not represent insurmountable challenges. Two current examples are discussed
where policymakers might usefully have relied more heavily on anthropological
advice in devising policy.
Given the challenges governments face in addressing Indigenous
disadvantage, there is a case for greater innovation in the policy development
process. The idea explored here is just one potential option for greater
innovation.
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