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journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-04, 16:15authored byNick Wray-Jones, Justine Bell-James
In 2019, Queensland became the third Australian state to legislate human rights protections, but the first to enshrine a right of ‘Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islander peoples [to] not be denied the right, with other members of their community … to conserve and protect the environment and productive capacity of their land, territories, waters, coastal seas and other resources’. This article analyses how this right may be interpreted and applied in practice, and argues in favour of an expansive interpretation, encompassing a right to consultation. Coupled with Queensland’s complaints and conciliation process, it is argued that this right may provide significant protection for indigenous cultural rights in Queensland.
History
Publication Date
2023
Volume
49
Issue
1
Type
Journal Article
Pages
118–150
AGLC Citation
Nick Wray-Jones and Justine Bell-James, 'The Promise and Potential of Queensland’s Human Rights Act for Indigenous Peoples: Interpreting the "Environmental Right"' (2023) 49(1) Monash University Law Review 118.