Castan Centre for Human Rights Law
A FAIR PLACE IN OUR OWN COUNTRY:
INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIANS, LAND RIGHTS AND THE AUSTRALIAN
ECONOMY
CASTAN PUBLIC LECTURE Noel Pearson Director
Cape York Institute for Policy and Leadership
It was late in the long campaign against the 10 Point Plan and many indigenous
leaders who had been involved in the politics of the Native Title Act
in 1993 were absent from Canberra in the crucial weeks and days before
the passage of the Howard Government's legislation in response to the
Wik decision. I arrived in Canberra with ominous indications that Brian
Harradine would make a deal with the government to pass the legislation.
Earlier we thought we had won the day when the delegation of Wik People
led by Richard Ahmat, the Chair of the Cape York Land Council, together
with other indigenous leaders working the corridors of Federal Parliament,
had persuaded the Senator to oppose the government's Bill. When I heard
the news back in Cape York Peninsula and saw the images of the Senator
dancing with the Wik People on the lawns of Parliament House, I was ecstatic.
I had no problem with the failure of the Bill leading to the much-feared
double dissolution `race election'. But then Harradine recommenced negotiations
with the government.
The afternoon I arrived in Parliament House I was walking down the corridors
with Ahmat and Terry O'Shane from the North Queensland Land Council, when
we bumped into the Senator. He was to inform us, no doubt thinking that
it was the very news we wanted to hear, that he had made a deal or was
very close to concluding a deal with the government for the passage of
the Bill. We were non-plussed. The game was over and the 10 Point Plan
was heading for the statute books with some ameliorations extracted by
Harradine. The concessions secured by Harradine did not make an unjust
Bill just, and the Senator was responsible for allowing a fundamental
tilt of the pendulum away from the native title rights of indigenous people,
which continues to this day.
Faced with the inevitability of the passage of the Bill that evening
in the Senate, I decided on a last desperate strategy. Invited to appear
on the 7.30 Report I decided to endorse the passage of the Bill and to
give the impression that Harradine had won huge gains for indigenous people.
My hope was to incite the lunatics from the far right of the Coalition
- Senators O'Chee, Lightfoot et al - so that they would reject the Bill,
in much the same way as they had done to our advantage, in 1993. The metaphor
that was in my mind was like trying to push some livestock into a pen.
I thought a sudden scare just as the stock were at the mouth of the pen
would have two possible consequences: there was a chance they would take
fright and run off down the paddock, or they would run straight through
the gate and into the pen. I was prepared to take the risk in the hope
that we could snatch victory from the jaws of the defeat which Harradine
had sprung for our own good: to supposedly save us from a race election.
Barry Cassidy knew what I was trying to do, Kerry O'Brien did not, and
when I did the interview with Kerry he was bewildered by my support for
the passage of the Bill later that night.
Alas my gamble did not work. The coalition senators knew they had secured
victory for the Australians they felt they represented - and they dutifully
voted in unison. All I had achieved was that I had defused the whole debate
following the passage of the 10 Point Plan. Federal politics moved on
to the next issue on the very next day.
Let me now turn to another story going back to the 1997-1998 when the
10 Point Plan and commitments by government leaders to secure `bucketloads
of extinguishment' consumed the nation.
Ron Castan QC had long spoken to me about the need to move the momentum
from Mabo from the plane of litigation and the courts, to the plane
of a larger political and economic settlement. Ron had warned that reliance
upon the law alone was not sufficient. The furore that arose in the wake
of the High Court's Wik decision in December 1996 underlined Ron's view
and the bitter debates that raged during 1997 underlined the need for
an alternative solution.
At the same time the former, notorious leader of the CLP in the Northern
Territory, Ian Tuxworth, and his colleague who had become a good friend
to us in far northern Queensland, Jim Petrich, commenced a discussion
on the far right of rural Australian politics questioning whether the
10 Point Plan would deliver the kind of resolutions that were needed,
particularly in the relationship between traditional owners, pastoralists
and resource developers. It was the workability of any imposed legislative
regime which they doubted.
Ron, Ian and Jim decided to bring together the parties that were furthest
apart from each other in the raging national debates about Wik and the
10 Point Plan. Ron brought together key indigenous leaders from the Land
Councils, and Tuxworth and Petrich brought together key leaders from the
National Party and farmers' representatives. They secured Michael Costello,
former diplomat and then CEO of the ASX, as the facilitator who would
help the two sides see if they could find common ground.
We did. And this common ground was set out in a number of principles
which were set out in a draft Heads of Agreement. The preamble to these
Heads of Agreement began as follows:
For tens of thousands of years the Aboriginal people settled and owned
this land. They were part of it in a unique and primary way. For the Aboriginal
people, the land was the essence of their culture, and their culture was
the essence of their being. To deny their ownership of the land is
therefore, to deny their very existence. It is for this reason that
of all the wrongs done to the Aboriginal people over the centuries since
European settlement, none has been more profound than the assertion of
the doctrine that this land had been owned by no-one before 1788.
The confirmation by the High Court that the concept "terra nullius" was
a myth and that the Aboriginal ownership of land was reality, was a defining
moment in the nation's history...
The document went on to say:
In order to give effect to these principles of recognition; security
and certainty; a stake in the country; and empowerment; we have agreed
to seek a resolution of native title and related issues by negotiation
in accordance with the following framework:
1. Recognition of prior settlement and ownership by Aboriginal people.
2. Recognition of valid Crown titles, such as freehold and leasehold,
and agreement on the necessity for a fair procedure to ensure any necessary
validation of post-1993 grants of title.
3. Existing Aboriginal land including Aboriginal Reserves be recognised
and placed under appropriate title as soon as practicable.
4. Acknowledgement of Aboriginal interests in national parks, and
development of principles for appropriate Aboriginal involvement in their
management and development.
5. Recognition that native title can only have continuing effect
where that native title is consistent in whole or in part with a validly
granted Crown title. Native title therefore has no effect for example
where a valid freehold or exclusive leasehold title exists, but native
title has full effect over unalienated Crown land.
6. Common law has recognised that native title can co-exist with a
pastoral lease, but only to the extent that it does not interfere with
the rights of the leaseholder under that lease.
7. We agree to separate economic rights on pastoral leases from non-economic
(or cultural) rights held or claimed by Aboriginal people.
We therefore agree on the following principles for co-existence:
8. We agree to separate the provision of compensation for the relinquishment
of economic rights from the provision of resources to address the "citizenship"
entitlements of Aboriginal people in health, education, housing and welfare.
The first is based on justice for economic rights foregone. The second
is based on the strict needs of Aboriginal people as Australian citizens.
We therefore agree:
(a) That in compensation for the relinquishment of economic rights
an annual payment will be made to Aboriginal people for the following
[x] years. The amount of this annual payment will be [either ($x) or (calculated
according to an agreed formula, for example annual mineral production
or GDP]
The payment will be made in such a way that it provides a long term capital
base for all Aboriginal Australians through which they can participate
more fully in the economic development and prosperity of the broader economy,
and can sustain their culture
(b) That "citizenship" entitlements will be properly funded and administered
through arrangements to be agreed.
It is agreed that fairer, and more efficient procedures for native title
claims need to be devised as soon as practicable to ensure that legitimate
claimants are treated fairly and that the uncertainties of multiple or
frivolous claims are avoided.
We agree that a document of reconciliation in the form of a domestic
treaty between the First Australians and the Commonwealth and State/Territory
Parliaments on behalf of the Australian people, is the desired goal of
the reconciliation process.
We recognise that the settlement will be one between citizens of the
one,, united Australia and that our futures are inescapably intertwined
and we are, at a fundamental level, one people.
The outcome of negotiations under this framework should be incorporated
in a Treaty and put to a referendum in the centenary year of Federation.
We believe this is necessary to confirm there is overwhelming support
of the Australian people for the outcome, and to provide certainty against
any potential legal challenge or change of legislation.
We also believe it will provide a great opportunity for the Australian
people to show that we are able to move forward as a nation united, where
all Australians can live their culture, achieve respect and realise their
aspirations.
These principles, referring to the establishment of a "long term capital
base" for indigenous Australians culminating in a "document of reconciliation
in the form a domestic Treaty" to be put to a referendum - were the product
of an informally convened and conducted dialogue between key indigenous
leaders and key leaders from the regional and rural Right of Australian
politics. These were the people whom I described as coming from "just
this side of One Nation".
Having identified the basis for common ground between rural and indigenous
interests, the next challenge was to see if the same principles could
gain the support of the miners. Ron and I met with the then Chair of the
Minerals Council in Brisbane, but the miners were banking on the 10 Point
Plan to deliver certainty and workability for them. Similarly, representatives
from the teams that had developed these Heads of Agreement briefed members
of the government and the opposition in Canberra, but without the miners
there was little prospect of the Federal Government changing course. So
what was at the time called the Bennelong process - not be confused with
what was later to become the rightwing thinktank on indigenous policy,
The Bennelong Society - was put aside, and the parliamentary process of
the 10 Point Plan continued.
Ron Castan taught me a critical lesson in 1998. He illuminated for me
what I have since called the "80-90% strategy" of indigenous
advocacy, as opposed to the "51% strategy" with which I was familiar.
I used to say to him: "You look after the law Ron, I'll look after the
politics" - but it was Ron who would get me to see that there is more
common ground between indigenous people and people from the right of Australian
politics and society than conventional politics would have it. People
from the rural and regional right of Australia firstly have many interests
in common with indigenous people. Secondly, they have an understanding
of the issues and problems. Thirdly, they have many genuine friendships
and relationships with indigenous people - and they may be unsentimental
or inelegant in their demeanour, but many of the ones to whom I am referring
are fundamentally decent and have goodwill. What I understood is that
much of the Right's objections to Aboriginal aspirations were rooted in
their objection to these aspirations being identified as Leftist moralizing.
I came to see how much the form in which indigenous issues were presented
disproportionately determined the responses of the two sides of Australian
politics and society - rather than necessarily the substance.
Who would have thought that you could get leading figures from the far
Right of Australian politics endorsing a set of principles which included
the establishment of a long-term capital base for indigenous people and
their support for a domestic treaty to be put to a referendum? The Bennelong
process allowed both sides, for a brief time, to explore common ground
with clear eyes.
For many of you here tonight you will take from the legacy of Ron Castan
QC AM true succour for the cause of human rights, because there was no
more deft an advocate nor one who had achieved so much for the cause of
human dignity and equality than he. But let me speak testament to another
side of this man: he was an unreserved believer in the need for and entitlement
of indigenous Australians to share in the wealth of their own country.
There was not a skerrick of equivocation about this in him whatsoever.
Coming as he did from a privileged background - Ron used to joke to me
"you have to pick your grandparents Noel and I was lucky" - he harboured
no double standards in relation to black people and wealth.
Ron Castan was unusual; he was a great champion and fighter for Aboriginal
people's rights, but he was, completely free of romantic foolishness about
Aboriginal people. Unfortunately, the vast majority of those who have
seen themselves as allies in the political struggle have had utopian tendencies
in their thinking about indigenous people.
One such romantic idea is the idea about the Aboriginal struggle being
just one aspect of an environmentalist agenda. It is of course excellent
if Aboriginal advancement can go hand in hand with good environmental
and conservation policies, but the problem is the idea that Aboriginal
people desire to take themselves and their lands anywhere else than to
the forefront of economic development in the global economic marketplace.
A second romantic idea is one that has most clearly been expressed by
Frank Brennen: the notion that about Aboriginal people must find a way
other than the "secularism, materialism and individualism".
Ron Castan was all about opportunity and entitlement. He understood the
material needs of people stuck in poverty and disadvantage.
It is this contrast that most strikes me upon reading Frank Brennan's
disappointing recent 2004 Ozanam Lecture, "The Church's Voice and State
Powers for Justice and Peace: Seeking Decency, Harmony and Equality for
All" (20 May 2004). If I were asked to aphorise my fundamental opposition
to Brennan's approach it would be this: yes, Man cannot live by bread
alone, but he does need bread.
Frank Brennan's speech is disappointing because after a long absence
from commentary on indigenous affairs, he reappears not having changed
or challenged his basic outlook - which is founded on the traditional
"social justice" perspective on which he was nurtured, which I for one
will not allow to be regurgitated without objection.
For one thing Brennan dismisses the partnerships we are developing with
the private sector in Cape York. But he knows nothing of the fact that
these partnerships are helping to solve some of the most mundane but critical
issues facing families in our communities: putting in place banking facilities
so that families can manage their meagre income and mothers can feed their
children. Yes, they may not be able to live by bread alone, but they do
need bread.
Only a person living large, careless to the realities confronting ordinary
members of our community, would so casually dismiss the importance of
the building blocks we are putting into place to confront the real material
needs of people - without first bothering to find out the facts.
And anyway our partnerships include partnerships with governments: the
cornerstone of our enterprise in Cape York Peninsula is based on a conviction
shared in common with the Queensland Premier, Peter Beattie, that we must
confront substance abuse if any of our efforts to improve the position
of our people are to have any chance of success.
My sense is that Brennan has a strong, underlying allergic reaction to
our criticism of the progressivist Left. Brennan is part of an old Catholic,
Labor "social justice on a just-hearted Catholic plate" tradition. They
won't face up to their legacy even in the light of our critique.
Brennan was junior counsel in the Alwyn Peter Case at Weipa South (now
Napranum) in the early 1980s, a book about which was written by criminologist
Paul Wilson. The Alwyn Peter became a cause celebre, and Brennan made
his mark with it. The whole approach was to paint Alwyn Peter (who had
murdered his girlfriend whilst drunk) as a victim of history, trauma,
Mapoon removal etc etc. The symptom theory underpinned the whole view
- and has underpinned the whole "social justice" approach to indigenous
problems with the criminal justice system from the Peter Case to the Royal
Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody and to this day. Where has
this whole approach take us in the last 25 years in terms of the breakdown
of social order and the spiralling problems? For a start we in Cape York
have launched a considerable critique of the "symptom theory" approach
to substance abuse and sought to get policy-makers to understand that
whatever the reasons for people being highly susceptible to developing
substance abuse problems - it is the substance abuse that becomes a problem
in its own right, and must therefore be confronted as a problem in its
own right.
All that was achieved by presenting a deeper historical understanding
of the background to indigenous crimes and dysfunction was that the criminal
justice system became sensitive to this background - and sentences became
increasingly lenient. After a couple of decades we then reached a point
where judges and observers - not the least Aboriginal people - started
to wonder whether the loss of Aboriginal life was less serious than that
of non-Aborigines. The criminal justice system may have tried to accommodate
an understanding of the factors which Brennan and those who followed him
had illuminated in the Alwyn Peter case, but it did nothing to abate offending
and the resultant "over representation" of indigenous people in the criminal
justice system. In fact I would say that it made this problem worse.
At one point in his lecture Brennan talks about "the minimisation of
substance abuse" as if this is separate to indigenous people being "entitled
to the building blocks for the rejuvenation of their spirituality, the
protection of their culture and the preservation of their indigenous identity".
He has completely ignored our argument that one of the main "building
blocks" to the preservation of culture is the eradication of substance
abuse. The use of "minimisation" is instructive as well: even a cursory
read of our policies would reveal that we in Cape York are not in the
business of minimising harm when it comes to substance abuse - we want
to prevent it.
Elsewhere Brennan writes "Noel Pearson welcomes the decision by a community
such as Aurukun to limit access to grog, observing that `the reduction
in the violence alone is in itself precious.' It is, but then again I
remember when Aurukun was dry back in the 1980s". What does he mean by
this? If Brennan means that when Aurukun was dry it was little better
than 2 years ago - he is clearly wrong. Things were much better,before
1985 before the canteen was introduced against the community's will. As
the anthropologist Peter Sutton pointed out in his Berndt Lecture,
the suicide and homicide statistics in Aurukun started after 1985, when
the canteen was introduced.
The most troubling statement from Brennan's lecture is the following:
" I had always thought that the work for land rights and self-determination
was worthwhile because such laws and policies could provide the time and
space for Aboriginal Australians to find and make their place in modern
Australia, and on terms that were not dictated solely by the descendants
of their colonisers. I have always regarded the next part of the task
as the far more difficult. It is not political or national in character;
it is spiritual and individual. The secularism, materialism and individualism
of Australian society are now more the cause of the problems of identity
and well being rather than the wellsprings of any solution." This last
sentence basically says that unless Aboriginal people can find a way other
than "secularism, materialism and individualism" then we are buggered.
No matter that Frank Brennan's siblings and nephews and nieces are successful
and high-earning lawyers and professionals - this is impliedly not the
way for our people because it involves materialism etc. This is the social
justice lobby's equivalent prescription to that of the unthinking sections
of the green movement: indigenous people should not engage in capitalist
society unless they have found solutions to all of the dilemmas and problems
of materialism, individualism and secularism. But white fellas, including
presumably those near and dear to Brennan, should continue to enjoy the
privileges in the meantime.
In our work in Cape York Peninsula we have many strategies that superficially
resemble the romantic environmental and spiritual notions about the development
of Aboriginal society. We are working for environmental goals and we seek
a spiritual and cultural revival of our communities. But our fundamental
goal is complete and equal social and economic inclusion in the Australian
mainstream and in the global economy. We do not see it as our main mission
to be an environmental conscience or a custodian of spiritual values in
a materialistic world.
What plan does Frank Brennan have for the secularists, materialists and
individualists who occupy the long and depressing rows of Aboriginal people
who have their own land, languages and their cultures considerably intact,
playing poker machines in the Alice Springs casino, and in RSL clubs from
Cooktown to Broome?
I have no problem with meddling priests - indeed we need more of them
- what I have issues with is the quality of the meddling, and what is
achieved by it. There are things that I would agree with in Brennan's
critique of what the present Federal Government is doing with indigenous
affairs - but regurgitating social justice platitudes is not good enough.
Let me now conclude with an overview of the policy shifts of the past
three to four decades, which I believe people who value human rights and
social justice need to take more seriously. Australians of the social
justice era have grown up with declarations of goodwill towards indigenous
people and official attempts to extend the benefits of the modern world
to us without forcing assimilation upon us. The ideological shift has
been so dramatic that people need to be reminded how different things
were forty years ago.
Discriminatory laws and practices continued to affect indigenous people.
The idea that Aboriginal people were inferior was still influential. It
today seems incomprehensible that even in the 60s and 70s, Australia allowed
some of our nation's languages to disappear forever insufficiently recorded.
Such facts cannot be explained away; white Australian ideology and attitudes
had the function of justifying the dispossession of the original owners
of this land. Prime Minister Howard was wrong to argue that white Australians
should reject the notion that "we're all part of a sort of racist, bigoted
history".
Things seemed straightforward for progressive people: discrimination
should be removed and Aboriginal people would become equal. Decision makers
did in fact know that in remote areas, equal pay would cause a comprehensive
transfer to a welfare economy, but they made a conscious choice; equality
was the first priority.
Dismantling of formal discrimination culminated with the referendum of
1967. After 1967 there have been two stories of indigenous affairs.
The first is the official liberal/progressive story of positive advancement
by means of a rights agenda and government service delivery. This programme
had two components.
The first component was based on the thesis that indigenous people still
suffered unofficial discrimination and disadvantage. To remedy this, there
was legal aid to deal with bias in the criminal justice system, health
services, community development, and other indigenous-specific programmes.
These efforts were not explicitly anti-assimilationist. The second component
of the official programme however went further than removing formal discrimination
and addressing unofficial discrimination and disadvantage: Aboriginal
culture and Aboriginal society were advanced as being as valuable as Australia's
British institutions and perhaps morally superior.
The most important components of this programme were land rights and
attempts at the incorporation of indigenous languages and culture in education
and many other aspects of government policy.
In recent years, the entire complex of progressive indigenous policies
that I have outlined above has sunk into disrepute. It must nevertheless
be said that many of these policies and ideologies were both necessary
and successful, or could be successful if subjected to reform. Even ATSIC
had successes, for example with indigenous home ownership.
Abstudy was better before the Government allowed Pauline Hanson's One
Nation to influence policy. Land rights could be a foundation for economic
development.
However, the true story of what has happened in indigenous affairs bears
little relationship to the narrative constructed by the liberal/progressive
reconciliation movement.
During the last forty years, the following factors became completely
dominant in the real life of the communities: passive welfare; withdrawal
from (unequal, exploited) participation in the market economy; collapse
of the local subsistence economies; idleness; supply of legal and illicit
addictive and psychoactive substances; gambling; libertarian social values,
and bewildered and at best hesitant government policies in the areas of
social order and substance abuse.
The presence of these factors led to substance abuse epidemics, and an
outlook shaped by passive welfare. Results are a gap in life expectancy
of twenty years between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians that
is not narrowing; illiteracy; sexual violence, and epidemic foetal alcohol
syndrome.
These facts have been discussed within the liberal/progressive reconciliation
framework - albeit belatedly. However, the reconciliation movement has
failed to reach two necessary conclusions.
First, the chaos and misery has incorrectly been attributed almost entirely
to the legacy of dispossession and racism. It has not been acknowledged
that many elements of the abolishment of formal discrimination and the
liberal/progressive advancement programme have inadvertently been major
causes of Aboriginal disadvantage.
The liberal consensus during the social justice era was that Aboriginal
disadvantage was caused by the denial of self-determination and denial
of rights and services, and by discrimination. Many reforms that have
had deleterious consequences (such as the right to drink and equal pay
in the cattle industry which led to unemployment) were unavoidable consequences
of equality, but there was no discourse about Aboriginal responsibility
in this new situation. Nor was there any awareness that many elements
in the positive advancement programme were flawed. Policies for recognition
of culture and language - correct in principle - marginalised indigenous
people instead of making them fully integrated citizens with a strong
cultural identity. Legal aid policies and criminological theory did nothing
to reduce crime or help the victims of crime.
One item on the anti-discrimination agenda is still unfinished business:
government misuse of confiscated Aboriginal wages was a crime even during
the era of "protection" and discrimination, but has not yet been adequately
rectified. However, the situation has deteriorated to a point where even
the just act of handing back illegally withheld wages presents a dilemma.
One of the reasons why we initiated Cape York Partnerships with governments
and the private sector was that we saw how any kind of money supply -
including restitution of stolen wages - was likely to facilitate substance
abuse and gambling.
The second necessary conclusion is that the numerous official documents
articulating the official reconciliation programme are diversions. The
Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody and other like reports,
and the vast academic literature - all these piles of paper give no guidance
to our work in Cape York Peninsula.
Today, the real story of indigenous affairs is no longer containable.
The liberal/progressive interpretation of indigenous affairs is not standing
up to scrutiny: it is half right, but also half wrong.
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