9 episodes

The Customary Land Podcast is about all things relating to the equitable management of customary land. We will be discussing tools and ideas needed to manage, use and equitably maximise interests in land at the interface of custom, tradition and development in its many forms

The Customary Land Podcast Spike Boydell

    • Society & Culture

The Customary Land Podcast is about all things relating to the equitable management of customary land. We will be discussing tools and ideas needed to manage, use and equitably maximise interests in land at the interface of custom, tradition and development in its many forms

    Let's go surfing...

    Let's go surfing...

    In this episode I discuss several of the customary land related reviews initiated in 2023 by the Rabuka led Coalition Government in Fiji.  These include:
    The Review of the Great Council of Chiefs (GCC).
    And, as foreshadowed by Prof Steve Ratuva in his public lecture celebrating Ratu Sakuna Day celebrations, and requested at the meeting of the GCC on Bau Island in late May,..
    the proposed Review of the iQoliqoli (Fishing Ground) Compensation Policy; and
    the proposed Review of the iTaukei Land Trust Board (iTLTB).
    This provides a segue into a broader discussion on the April 2023 Cabinet Decision to  Review of the Regulation of Surfing Areas Act (2010).
    ©️ Spike Boydell 2023

    Host: Spike Boydell

    Website: TheCustomaryLandPodcast.com

    Email: contact@thecustomarylandpodcast.com

    Royalty free music used in this episode is from my Artlist.io subscription.

    DISCLAIMER: The views, insights and opinions shared on the Customary Land Podcast are those of the Host, any Guests, and others they may cite. They do not constitute legal or financial advice and should not be construed as such by any individual, group or organisation. Before undertaking any dealing or action relating to customary land, individuals, groups or organisations should obtain professional advice from a qualified lawyer, experienced valuer and/or certified accountant with specialist expertise in your particular country. Alternatively, you can contact Customary Land Solutions for advocacy, advisory and capacity building solutions for customary and indigenous landowning groups and trusts on land management, leasehold, valuation and resource compensation issues (E: contact@customarylandsolutions.com).

    • 27 min
    The Republic = The Aboriginal Voice

    The Republic = The Aboriginal Voice

    In this episode I explore how becoming a Republic and crafting a new Constitution fit for purpose in the 2020s offers Australia the perfect opportunity to truly recognise the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander 'Voice'.

    An Australian Republic means we need to replace the Crown and the Crown's superior interest in the land with something.  If that 'something' is an acknowledgement of the guardianship of the land through Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islander stewardship, would this, could this, or should this affect the underlying way that we as 21st century citizens in Australia relate to real property?

    The current discussions about holding a referendum in Australia to make changes to the archaic 1901 Constitution (an Anglo-centric model crafted during the Empire of Queen Victoria) to create an Aboriginal Voice fails to deal with the significant issue that we are perpetuating King Charles III as 'King of Australia'.  Imagine instead , if you will, what might change in terms of our identity as citizens if Australia were to become a Republic – something that many see as inevitable, albeit a situation which is yet to become a reality.

    In this episode I draw heavily on my paper A 21st Century Citizen in a Brave New Republic.

    I also reference Stan Grant's 'Australia Day' and 'The Queen is Dead'.




    ©️ Spike Boydell 2023

    Host: Spike Boydell

    Website: TheCustomaryLandPodcast.com

    Email: contact@thecustomarylandpodcast.com

    Royalty free music used in this episode is from my Artlist.io subscription.

    DISCLAIMER: The views, insights and opinions shared on the Customary Land Podcast are those of the Host, any Guests, and others they may cite. They do not constitute legal or financial advice and should not be construed as such by any individual, group or organisation. Before undertaking any dealing or action relating to customary land, individuals, groups or organisations should obtain professional advice from a qualified lawyer, experienced valuer and/or certified accountant with specialist expertise in your particular country. Alternatively, you can contact Customary Land Solutions for advocacy, advisory and capacity building solutions for customary and indigenous landowning groups and trusts on land management, leasehold, valuation and resource compensation issues (E: contact@customarylandsolutions.com).

    • 31 min
    The Plurality of Registers - Coronation, Aristocracy and Autonomy on Customary Land

    The Plurality of Registers - Coronation, Aristocracy and Autonomy on Customary Land

    Differing worldviews constitute the 'Plurality of Registers' and the tension of navigating between customary and traditional relations to land as 'ours' versus the western materialism of possessive individualism that sees land as 'mine'.

    In part, this episode is triggered by the anachronism of a coronation in 2023, particularly when former empire and commonwealth is viewed from the  plundered and brutalised indigenous perspective. The associated myth, embeddedness and tradition leads me to reflect on our recent proposal for a CLS team to review the role in Fiji of a contemporary Great Council of Chiefs to lead iTaukei society.  These two events provide a segue to look at the customary counterpoint of the Melanesian Indigenous Land Defence Alliance (MILDA) from the perspective of Joel Simo (Symoh Joel) in a talk he gave at a meeting of AID/Watch in Sydney (14 November 2014 - the transcript is on pp.11-14 of this paper).  As outlined in their Declarations, MILDA are against and form of land registration or leasing of customary land.  This is a view that is reinforced by Act Now in PNG (see their 90 second very powerful video on 'The Real Value of Customary Land'). I also refer to the Declaration and Resolutions of the 2002 South Pacific Land Tenure Conflict Symposium.

    A vodcast (video version) of the podcast is also available here.
    ©️ Spike Boydell 2023

    Host: Spike Boydell

    Website: TheCustomaryLandPodcast.com

    Email: contact@thecustomarylandpodcast.com

    Royalty free music used in this episode is from my Artlist.io subscription.

    DISCLAIMER: The views, insights and opinions shared on the Customary Land Podcast are those of the Host, any Guests, and others they may cite. They do not constitute legal or financial advice and should not be construed as such by any individual, group or organisation. Before undertaking any dealing or action relating to customary land, individuals, groups or organisations should obtain professional advice from a qualified lawyer, experienced valuer and/or certified accountant with specialist expertise in your particular country. Alternatively, you can contact Customary Land Solutions for advocacy, advisory and capacity building solutions for customary and indigenous landowning groups and trusts on land management, leasehold, valuation and resource compensation issues (E: contact@customarylandsolutions.com).

    • 56 min
    The Valuation of Unregistered Land

    The Valuation of Unregistered Land

    In this episode I sit down for a far-reaching conversation about the valuation of unregistered land with Mike McDermott PhD MA FAPI FRSA.  Mike is an International Land Policy and Valuation Implementation Consultant who is also the author of Wicked Valuations and Landed Property.  He has advised a diversity of governments, development agencies, donors and professional organisations.

    Traditional valuation approaches are increasingly recognised as being insufficient to address the wicked valuation problems of the diverse peoples and groups that inhabit the globe from north, south, east to west. We discuss land policy, land reform, customary land, peri-urban developments, fitness landscapes, compulsory acquisition,  due diligence, market value, solatium and the principle of equivalence.  We explore the importance of the the personal, cultural values and norms which underpin our assessment of "value", and how to incorporate these in the valuation of unregistered land. Mike's innovative  approach to Wicked Valuations develops a means of engaging with highly complex valuation problems. 



    ©️ Spike Boydell 2023

    Host: Spike Boydell

    Website: TheCustomaryLandPodcast.com

    Email: contact@thecustomarylandpodcast.com

    Royalty free music used in this episode is from my Artlist.io subscription.

    DISCLAIMER: The views, insights and opinions shared on the Customary Land Podcast are those of the Host, any Guests, and others they may cite. They do not constitute legal or financial advice and should not be construed as such by any individual, group or organisation. Before undertaking any dealing or action relating to customary land, individuals, groups or organisations should obtain professional advice from a qualified lawyer, experienced valuer and/or certified accountant with specialist expertise in your particular country. Alternatively, you can contact Customary Land Solutions for advocacy, advisory and capacity building solutions for customary and indigenous landowning groups and trusts on land management, leasehold, valuation and resource compensation issues (E: contact@customarylandsolutions.com).

    • 1 hr 22 min
    Leasing Customary Land: Problem or Solution?

    Leasing Customary Land: Problem or Solution?

    Leases are a common tool to enable surplus (or non-reserve) native land, tribal land or customary land to be used productively, be it for primary production, commercial or residential purposes. When properly crafted and managed, leasehold tenure should enable inalienable customary land to be used productively for the benefit of landowners, tenants and governmental development.
    Unfortunately through a series of historical events, certain aspects of leases seem to have been ‘lost in translation’ from their original design in Victorian England to their subsequent application in parts of Australia and then the Pacific.  Notably this variance relates to the ‘ownership’ of any improvements on the land, and there seems to have been an inadvertent alienation through leasehold that has occurred.
    In this episode, I draw heavily on my lived experience to piece together why this ‘problem’ may have occurred and explain why leases should still be part of the ‘solution’ for customary land.
    ©️ Spike Boydell 2023

    Host: Spike Boydell

    Website: TheCustomaryLandPodcast.com

    Email: contact@thecustomarylandpodcast.com

    Royalty free music used in this episode is from my Artlist.io subscription.

    DISCLAIMER: The views, insights and opinions shared on the Customary Land Podcast are those of the Host, any Guests, and others they may cite. They do not constitute legal or financial advice and should not be construed as such by any individual, group or organisation. Before undertaking any dealing or action relating to customary land, individuals, groups or organisations should obtain professional advice from a qualified lawyer, experienced valuer and/or certified accountant with specialist expertise in your particular country. Alternatively, you can contact Customary Land Solutions for advocacy, advisory and capacity building solutions for customary and indigenous landowning groups and trusts on land management, leasehold, valuation and resource compensation issues (E: contact@customarylandsolutions.com).

    • 52 min
    Lessons from Timber Creek.

    Lessons from Timber Creek.

    In this episode I sit down with Prof. John Sheehan AM to reflect on and explore lessons from the Timber Creek case.

    Our far-reaching discussion includes recognition (and extinguishment) of inalienable customary land rights, which are precarious, Native Title, s.51 xxxi of the Constitution of Australia ('just terms' compensation), and the relationship to the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People's.  The Timber Creek case provides helpful guidance about compensation (for extinguishment) that recognises the 'cultural loss' relating to the indigenous connection to the land (rather than 'solatium').

    Full High Court of Australia background to the Timber Creek case can be accessed here.

    The Judgement of the High Court in the Timber Creek case is here.

    John also refers to his co-authored paper with Jasper Brown and Kenneth Rayner 'On solatium: towards a rethinking of compensation'.

    For those who prefer to watch a video version, it is provided here.
    ©️ Spike Boydell 2023

    Host: Spike Boydell

    Website: TheCustomaryLandPodcast.com

    Email: contact@thecustomarylandpodcast.com

    Royalty free music used in this episode is from my Artlist.io subscription.

    DISCLAIMER: The views, insights and opinions shared on the Customary Land Podcast are those of the Host, any Guests, and others they may cite. They do not constitute legal or financial advice and should not be construed as such by any individual, group or organisation. Before undertaking any dealing or action relating to customary land, individuals, groups or organisations should obtain professional advice from a qualified lawyer, experienced valuer and/or certified accountant with specialist expertise in your particular country. Alternatively, you can contact Customary Land Solutions for advocacy, advisory and capacity building solutions for customary and indigenous landowning groups and trusts on land management, leasehold, valuation and resource compensation issues (E: contact@customarylandsolutions.com).

    • 1 hr

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