Full description
This thesis explores legal and institutional mechanisms that may better support Torres Strait Islanders to protect their cultural secrets. When Indigenous people lose control of cultural secrets they are also likely to lose cultural identity, autonomy and power to control their own lives. Australian law has largely proven ill-equipped to protect Indigenous cultural secrets. The author argues that Native Title law is poised to emerge as the leading contender, best-equipped to provide necessary legal protection, applying a regime which is neither an institution of the common law nor a form of common law tenure but nevertheless recognised by common law.Issued: 2019
Subjects
Expanding Knowledge |
Expanding Knowledge |
Expanding Knowledge |
Expanding Knowledge in Law and Legal Studies |
Expanding Knowledge |
Expanding Knowledge in Law and Legal Studies |
Intellectual Property Law |
Intellectual Property Law |
Law |
Law and Legal Studies |
Law and Legal Studies |
Private Law and Civil Obligations |
User Contributed Tags
Login to tag this record with meaningful keywords to make it easier to discover
Other Information
handle :
https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/26901
Identifiers
- Handle : 1959.11/60863
- Local : une:1959.11/60863