Published April 3, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Legislative Frameworks, Cross-Cultural Insights, and the Future of Indigenous Australian Heritage Protection

Description

Indigenous Australian artworks and heritage sites represent some of the oldest continuous artistic and cultural traditions in human history. Yet, these invaluable cultural assets face persistent threats due to inadequate and inconsistent legislative protections. Recent events, particularly the destruction of the Juukan Gorge rock shelters, underscore the critical need for a comprehensive review of Australia's heritage protection frameworks. This article addresses the research question: How do legislative frameworks, governmental management strategies, and cross-cultural approaches to heritage preservation impact the protection, research, and global recognition of ancient Indigenous Australian artworks? A systematic examination of historical and contemporary federal and state legislation, coupled with comparative international analysis focusing notably on Greece’s centralized heritage preservation strategies, provides the methodological foundation for this study. Key findings indicate significant disparities and enforcement gaps within Australia's legislative landscape, highlighting both the limitations of existing laws and successful practices such as Indigenous-led co-management exemplified at sites like Budj Bim and Murujuga. Furthermore, cross-cultural comparative analyses underscore essential lessons for strengthening legislative protections, community involvement, and sustainable funding models. The results signify that robust, Indigenous-informed legislative frameworks, supported by consistent implementation and global collaborative strategies, substantially enhance heritage outcomes and community empowerment.

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