TY - CHAP TI - Indigenous land and sea management: Recognition, redistribution, representation AU - Altman, Jon AU - Jackson, Sue T2 - Ten Commitments Revisited : Securing Australia's Future Environment A2 - Morton, Steve A2 - Lindenmayer, David A2 - Dovers, Stephen CY - Victoria, AUSTRALIA DA - 2015/// PY - 2015 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au/searchS/i?1486301673 PB - CSIRO Publishing SN - 978-1-4863-0168-3 UR - https://ebooks-publish-csiro-au.eu1.proxy.openathens.net/content/ten-commitments-revisited KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Benchmarking Indigenous water holdings in the Murray-Darling Basin: a crucial step towards developing water rights targets for Australia AU - Hartwig, Lana D AU - Markham, Francis AU - Jackson, Sue T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - Australia’s ability to address Indigenous claims for water rights and to advance both national Indigenous and water policy is hampered by a lack of information on Indigenous water entitlements and the communities that hold them. This paper contributes to the policy agenda of increasing Indigenous water rights by developing a method that quantifies and enables spatially explicit comparison of Indigenous-held water within and across Murray-Darling Basin jurisdictions. We construct baselines for (i) Indigenous population (ii) Indigenous holdings of surface water entitlements, and (iii) Indigenous holdings of groundwater entitlements across water management units in the Basin. We estimate that Indigenous surface water holdings constitute no more than 0.17% of the equivalent permitted take across the entire Basin. Groundwater entitlements held by Indigenous entities constitute 0.02% of all available groundwater. The approximate market value of these water entitlements is A\19.2 million in 2015–16 terms, which equates to 0.12% of the total \16.5 billion market value. In contrast, 5.3% of the Murray-Darling Basin population is Indigenous, a proportion that is rapidly increasing. The production of estimates of this type, and Indigenous control of the data needed to generate them, are first steps in a reparations process that can contribute towards Indigenous water justice. DA - 2021/07/03/ PY - 2021 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2021.1970094 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 25 IS - 2 SP - 98 EP - 110 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Benchmarking Indigenous water holdings in the Murray-Darling Basin UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2021.1970094 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:27:18 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Water colonialism and Indigenous water justice in south-eastern Australia AU - Hartwig, Lana D. AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Markham, Francis AU - Osborne, Natalie T2 - International Journal of Water Resources Development DA - 2021/// PY - 2021 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/07900627.2020.1868980 VL - 38 IS - 1 SP - 30 EP - 63 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07900627.2020.1868980 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - BOOK TI - Planning in Indigenous Australia AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Porter, Libby AU - Johnson, Louise C. DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6449721~S30 PB - Routledge UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6449721~S30 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Towards a new planning history and practice AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Johnson, Louise C AU - Porter, Libby T2 - Planning in Indigenous Australia DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DP - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b7211294~S30 SP - 236 EP - 244 PB - Routledge SN - 1-315-69366-6 UR - https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b7211294~S30 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - The politics of evaporation and the making of atmospheric territory in Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Head, Lesley T2 - Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space AB - Scholarship on the hydrosocial cycle has tended to overlook the atmospheric phase of the cycle. This paper identifies and conceptualises a politics of evaporation in Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin. Evaporation is not a neutral hydrological concept to be understood, measured or acted on without an appreciation of the networks in which it originates, the geo-political circumstances that continue to shape its circulation, and its socio-spatial effects. The politics of evaporation is conceptualised here as a process of hydrosocial territorialisation in which atmospheric water came to be known as a force acting within a balanced hydrologic cycle, and ‘atmospheric territory’ was created. The scientific origins of evaporation show (i) how modernist hydrologic technologies and conventions that relied on containment and territorialisation to account for and control water led to the negative depiction of evaporation as a loss, and (ii) the historical depth of processes of abstraction and commensuration that are so influential in today’s regimes of water accounting and marketisation. The politics of evaporation is identified empirically in the controversy surrounding the management of the Menindee Lakes and the lower Darling River in New South Wales, where efforts to ‘save’ water according to the logic of efficiency have enrolled atmospheric water into a Basin-wide program to redistribute surface water. The lens of evaporation theorises a neglected aspect of the materiality of water that is particularly important to the dry, hot parts of the world. It challenges us to rethink the ‘cycle’ as well as the ‘hydro’, while providing further evidence of the value of thinking about territory in a material register as volumetric and not areal. DA - 2022/09// PY - 2022 DO - 10.1177/25148486211038392 DP - journals.sagepub.com (Atypon) VL - 5 IS - 3 SP - 1273 EP - 1295 SN - 2514-8486 UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/25148486211038392 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:04:48 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Town Scheming: The Kenbi Aboriginal Land Claim and the Role of Planning in Securing Possession AU - Jackson, Sue T2 - Journal of Planning History AB - This article provides a detailed history of Australia’s longest running Indigenous land claim (1978–2016), made by the Larrakia traditional owners to the coastal hinterland of Darwin, under Australia’s first land rights legislation. It reveals the efforts of the state and its planners to exercise territorial control and establish a racialised socio-political order through planning legislation and land use plans. Institutions designed to return land to Indigenous peoples represent a critical site of inquiry for understanding not only how injustice is reproduced and resisted in settler colonial contexts but how settler colonial urbanism is made and remade as imperial power. DA - 2022/10/15/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1177/15385132221128510 DP - journals.sagepub.com (Atypon) SP - 15385132221128510 SN - 1538-5132 ST - Town Scheming UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/15385132221128510 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:08:29 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Reframing and revising Australia’s planning history and practice AU - Johnson, Louise AU - Porter, Libby AU - Jackson, Sue T2 - Australian Planner DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/07293682.2018.1477813 VL - 54 IS - 4 SP - 225 EP - 233 J2 - Australian Planner SN - 0729-3682 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07293682.2018.1477813 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Ngemba water values and interests: Ngemba Old Mission Billabong and Brewarrina Aboriginal fish traps (Baiame’s Nguunhu) AU - Maclean, Kirsten AU - Bark, Rosalind H. AU - Moggridge, Bradley AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Pollino, Carmel T2 - Canberra: CSIRO DA - 2012/// PY - 2012 ST - Ngemba water values and interests UR - https://doi.org/10.4225/08/584d948534b2d KW - Landscape architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Racialized water governance: the ‘hydrological frontier’ in the Northern Territory, Australia AU - O’Donnell, Erin AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Langton, Marcia AU - Godden, Lee T2 - Australasian Journal of Water Resources AB - Increased scrutiny and contestation over recent water allocation practices and licencing decisions in the Northern Territory (NT) have exposed numerous inadequacies in its regulatory framework. Benchmarking against the National Water Initiative shows that NT lags behind national standards for water management. We describe key weaknesses in NT’s water law and policy, particularly for Indigenous rights and interests. NT is experiencing an acceleration of development, and is conceptualised as a ‘hydrological frontier’, where water governance has institutionalised regulatory spaces of inclusion and exclusion that entrench and (re)produce inequities and insecurities in water access. Regulations demarcate spaces in which laws and licencing practices provide certainty and security of rights for some water users, with opportunities to benefit from water development and services, while leaving much of NT (areas predominantly owned and occupied by Indigenous peoples) outside these legal protections. Water allocation and planning, as well as water service provision, continue to reinforce and reproduce racialised access to (and denial of) water rights. Combining an analysis of the law and policies that apply to water for economic development with those designed to regulate domestic water supply, we present a comprehensive and current picture of water insecurity for Indigenous peoples across the NT. DA - 2022/01/02/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/13241583.2022.2049053 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 26 IS - 1 SP - 59 EP - 71 SN - 1324-1583 ST - Racialized water governance UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13241583.2022.2049053 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:27:25 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - CHAP TI - Indigenous Planning: Emerging Possibilities AU - Porter, Libby AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Johnson, Louise C. T2 - Planning in Indigenous Australia DA - 2017/// PY - 2017 DP - Google Scholar SP - 214 EP - 235 PB - Routledge ST - Indigenous Planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Remaking imperial power in the city: The case of the William Barak building, Melbourne AU - Porter, Libby AU - Jackson, Sue AU - Johnson, Louise T2 - Environment and Planning D: Society and Space DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 DO - https://doi.org/10.1177/0263775819852362 VL - 37 IS - 6 SP - 1119 EP - 1137 J2 - Environment and Planning D: Society and Space SN - 0263-7758 UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0263775819852362 KW - Urban planning ER -