I have been long a sleeper;
but I trust
My absence doth neglect no
great design
Which by my presence might
have been concluded.
Richard
III, Act 3, scene 4
The Parliament’s Joint Standing Committee on Northern
Australia has recently released its report: The engagement of traditional
owners in the economic development of northern Australia (link
here).
The inquiry was initiated, at the suggestion of North Qld MP Warren Entsch who
chairs the committee, in late 2018, lapsed in April 2019, and restarted in
August 2019. It has thus been in preparation for over two years (see paras.
1.43/44). The Terms of Reference were broad and relatively open ended, and
cover a lot of ground both literally and metaphorically. The report comes in at
over 100 pages, and is clearly written. The report is essential reading for
anyone interested in the interplay of native title and economic development.
On my first scan of the recommendations, I was pleasantly
surprised, as the Committee has focussed on some of the key challenges
confronting the native title/land rights policy space in northern Australia
(and beyond), and identifies the actions that Governments must take if they
wish to see Indigenous communities across northern Australia contribute to and
indeed drive the take up of economic opportunities over the coming decades.
Implicit in the committee’s thinking (but not stated) is that the failure to
grasp these opportunities will not merely be a lost opportunity, but will lead
to the development of an Indigenous underclass excluded from economic
participation, and will ultimately have an adverse impact on opportunities for
mainstream economic development of the north.
In particular, the Committee recognises the crucial
importance of effective Indigenous organisations in managing the Indigenous
land estate in northern Australia. Recommendation
one which recommends increased funding for PBCs and native title
Representative bodies, and to a lesser extent, recommendation two, which
recommends increased support for capacity building of PBCs and NTRBs, are
crucial to the future viability of the native title system nationally. The
importance of the effectiveness of the native title system is made crystal
clear if we consider that almost 80 percent of northern Australia is held under
some form of Indigenous tenure or subject to an unresolved native title claim (para
1.42). Yet the report also notes that the Government was advised in a report
conducted by Deloitte Access Economics in 2014 that the native title system
required greater financial support (para 2.14). Paras 2.13 to 2.35 in the
report lay out the case for increased funding in detail, but notwithstanding
the unequivocal recommendation, the committee fails in my view to effectively
portray the extent of systemic underfunding, and says nothing about why Government
has ignored the issue for the past seven years.
Upon closer reading, the following eight recommendations
usefully point the way forward on a series of issues that require attention,
but each of them is framed in an equivocal fashion, that simultaneously would
allow a government to accept the recommendation without necessarily committing
it to action. So, recommendation three recommends a review of systems
for appointment of PBC directors rather than recommending specific changes; recommendation
four recommends that the Commonwealth should give consideration to crating
an Indigenous strategy for northern Australia and a northern Australia
Indigenous economic development body, recommendation five recommends the
Commonwealth should support (unspecified) initiatives to make innovative use of
land tenure systems to make land management effective (whatever that actually
means)…and so on....Only recommendation ten is unequivocal. It
recommends that the NT Aboriginal Land Rights Act be amended to reinstate separate
vetos at exploration and mining stages, a policy change I support, but which I
suspect has zero chance of being implemented.
The Committee’s report follows the standard model for these
reviews: an introductory chapter describes the lay of the land (so to speak),
then a series of chapters on the key issues. Each chapter sets out a high level
narrative supported by extensive quotation from stakeholder submissions, and
concludes with a Committee comment. The three substantive chapters in the
report are titled: ‘strengthening representative bodies’; ‘role and performance
of government entities’, and ‘pathways to economic development’, with a
concluding chapter summarising the overall analysis.
The concluding chapter tells a coherent and valuable story,
but it is a story that is far from new, and which doesn’t really break new
ground. The Committee identifies the longstanding power imbalance between
traditional owners and development proponents, argues that it can only be
‘redressed with resources and institutional capacity’ (para 5.3), which leads
into the rationale for recommendations one and two. What the recommendations ignore
however is the potential for governments to take seriously their role of
representing the public and national interest (rather than particular corporate
interests) and adopt and implement policies and legislative change that
rebalances the playing field. In other words, we need to acknowledge and
address structural exclusion and systemic power imbalances.
The report argues for increasing the transparency of
decision making in representative bodies, (para 5.9) which I strongly support,
but makes no mention of the reciprocal and arguably more important need for governments
to increase their transparency.
The Committee’s analysis is somewhat confused and arguably
one-sided when it seeks to address the tensions arising from the inalienability
of both statutory and common law Indigenous tenures. At para 5.10/11, the Committee
states, somewhat tautologically, that
‘A major barrier to the productive use of
title to land under native title or land rights is land tenure….One of the key
problems is the limited fungibility of land, especially that held under native
title legislation, and the consequent problems of using land for investment…’.
The Committee discussion of these tenure issues extends from
para 2.64 to para 2.106, essentially setting out the problem, and canvassing
various solutions, but failing to alight on any specific solution. The core of
the problem is that there are multiple factors mitigating against the ability
of Indigenous land owners to raise capital using their land as collateral. The
problem is best described as multi-faceted market failure. See the AIG
submission for some case studies (link
here).
Leases (linked to ILUAs) are part of the solution, but while necessary, they
are not sufficient. The way forward is for Government to establish an
institution or mechanism to provide an underlying guarantee for loans which are
utilising Indigenous land as collateral. Yet after two years of hearings, the
Committee failed to explicitly identify the required policy action. Para 2.106
makes it clear that PMC (now NIAA) and AGD intuitively understand this, however
they won’t take the final step as they understand too that there is no
political will at the Government level to do so. As a result, the Committee is
left lamely suggesting (para 5.13) that:
The financial challenges that
prevent more effective leveraging of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander land
assets should be seriously considered, including by financial institutions and
banks.
Finally, it is worth considering what is missing from this
report.
I will nominate three high level issues.
First, while there are multiple
reference regarding the desirability of greater accountability within PBCs and
NTRBs, there is virtually no recognition that Governments too need to be
accountable for their policy actions and inaction, and that the best way for this
to occur is via greater transparency.
Second, there is a desperate need
for greater (not less) proactive policy engagement by government with a focus
on the policy opportunities that exist within the native title /land rights
space. The longstanding decision to place the administration of the bulk of the
native title Act with AGD (and not with NIAA) is a recipe for adding ever more
legal complexity at the cost of policy coherence and policy vision. In my view,
it is major oversight that the Committee says nothing about the overarching
portfolio responsibilities and what the means for the outcomes on the ground.
Third, given the focus on the
intersection between Indigenous landowners in northern Australia, and economic
development, it seems extraordinary that there is no mention in the Committee
report of the operation of the North Australia Investment Facility, the
Government’s $7 billion flagship for its northern development policy framework.
The mention of the NIAF in the Office of Northern Australia submission (link
here) is underwhelming. I don’t propose to go into detail here (I have
previously discussed this issue here), but
the fact that Indigenous interests have accessed only a miniscule proportion of
the funds committed to date is clearly worth some attention.
While this appears somewhat negative, there are some
positives. The Committee clearly put a lot of effort into building a consensus
position, something that is probably necessary to gradually shift mindsets
among the political elites who will determine the pace and nature of policy
reform into the future. And the Committee inquiry created the opportunity for
some substantive policy contributions from stakeholders and academics,
including from the Indigenous Reference Group for Northern Australia (who
promoted the idea of a northern Australia Indigenous economic development body
supported in recommendation four. The submissions (amongst others) by Altman
and Markham, by the ANU, by the Aboriginal Investment Group and of course by
the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet and the Attorney Generals
Department are all worth reading (link
here)
and add to the quantum of accessible and policy relevant information in the
public domain.
The bottom line arising from a closer reading of the Joint
Standing Committee on Northern Australia’s report, both in what it recommends,
and what if fails to deal with, is to reinforce how little the government has
done since coming to office in 2013 to encourage the inclusion of Indigenous
landowners and communities in economic activity. The Committee’s report
deserves to be widely read with a critical eye. It identifies some positive
directions, but falls short of providing a clear roadmap or policy agenda for
taking Indigenous participation in the northern Australia economy to the next
level. Unfortunately, there is also a risk that if there were to be a change of
Government in May this year, then the new Government might be tempted to use
this report as a partial policy roadmap. Such a result would be disastrous in
my view for Indigenous interests, and a lost opportunity for a new Government,
and would signal a lack of real engagement at systemic levels by the new
Government.
The Committee is correct in highlighting the economic
opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander interests in northern
Australia, but fails in my view to lay out an effective pathway to ensure those
opportunities will be grasped anytime soon. The responsibility to act however
falls upon governments. It is time they roused themselves from their
drowsiness, and woke up to the opportunities available from pursuing policy
reform designed to reverse the ongoing exclusion of Indigenous interests in
northern Australia, and beyond.
Thanks Mike as usual you do a terrific job in providing a dispassionate summary of a complex issue. Thank you also for giving a positive nod to the submission I prepared with Francis Markham at the Committee's belated invitation in late 2021: unlike your positive nod, we only got a cursory nod from the Committee.
ReplyDeleteTwo quick comments.
First, the title of this Inquiry, ‘The engagement of traditional owners in the economic development of northern Australia’, its terms of reference, and not surprisingly the report focus on what traditional owners (and their land holdings) can do FOR the economic development of the North. In my view and much of your commentary suggests that the Inquiry should have focused on what traditional owners can do to develop THEIR land holdings for THEIR benefit. Hence my second point, which was the substance of our submission and which the Committee summarised in a few brief lines: isn't it about time that we recognised that 'economic development' will mean different things to different interest groups including among traditional owners in north Australia? There is little in the report that looks at development alternatives or alternatives to mainstream forms of development except in a couple of passing comments. There is an urgent need for 'decolonisation of the mind' among key decision makers (white and black) in Australia today.
A colleague to whom I passed the report who works for an environmental not-for-profit assisting Aboriginal ranger groups in the north was excited about the positive reference to the Caring for Country movement and asked me if recommendations from policy inquiries like this were generally implemented from my experience (my having participated in about 100 Inquiries since 1985). My response was sadly negative: rarely are recommendations implemented I lamented, the best chance is before an election if an incoming government can make some policy commitments and be held to account. I note the belated release of this report and hope that its more progressive recommendations, especially in relation to the realistic support for PBCs (first recommended in 1995) and the establishment of a PBC Future Fund, gain some traction.
My prolix comment inspired by your, as always, thoughtful post. Thanks Mike, your ongoing energetic and productive engagement in this difficult policy field is admirable and appreciated. Hope to read much more in 2022!
Thanks Mike for an excellent analysis of the Joint Standing Committee's report. The question of inalienability of native title rights and interests is one that i address in detail in my PhD thesis and that I also researched in the context of the 'Living on Our Lands' study that i undertook for the WA Dept of Indigenous Affairs in 2012 (which was never publicly released). I also addressed it in my paper published by AIATSIS in July 2016.
ReplyDeleteYour comment that we need an institution backed by government guarantee is correct, but we also need to give native title holders at least, a better deal on development rights, as my colleague from SGS Economics and Planning recently stated in this article:
https://www.sgsep.com.au/publications/insights/first-nations-people-deserve-better-deal-on-development-rights