E Press home > Titles > CAEPR > The Social Effects of Native Title > PDF Instructions
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Portable Document Format (PDF) Instructions
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The Social Effects of Native Title - Whole Book (4.2 MB) ![]()
- The social effects of native title: recognition, translation, coexistence
- Performing law: The Yolngu of Blue Mud Bay meet the native title process
- Claim, culture and effect: property relations and the native title process
- Some initial effects of pursuing and achieving native title recognition in the northern Kimberley
- ‘We’re tired from talking’: The native title process from the perspective of Kaanju People living on homelands, Wenlock and Pascoe Rivers, Cape York Peninsula
- Towards an uncertain community? The social effects of native title in central Cape York Peninsula
- Native title and the Torres Strait: encompassment and recognition in the Central Islands
- ‘No vacancies at the Starlight Motel’: Larrakia identity and the native title claims process
- What has native title done to the urban Koori in New South Wales who is also a traditional custodian?
- Beyond native title: the Murray Lower Darling Rivers Indigenous Nations
- The limits of recognition
- History, oral history, and memoriation in native title



