In a sense both the native title and Treaty settlement process have been a success. Both processes were created through acts of recognition in order to overcome historical injustice. In this respect both processes have been successful as a number of these cases of historical injustice have been settled—if not overcome. However, the acts of recognition upon which these processes have been based have also led to new sources of injustice. In many respects these new forms of injustice flow from the inability for the issue of cultural change over time to be taken seriously by some engaged in these processes of recognition. What we need to do then is approach these processes of recognition in the spirit with which they were created. To do otherwise is to merely replace one form of injustice with another.