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The Mabo Case Manuscripts

 
Edward Koiki Mabo. Register no. 002
Year of registration 2001
Abstract The personal papers of Edward Koiki Mabo are held alongside legal and historical materials relating to the Mabo Case. Eddie Mabo was an indigenous activist whose efforts resulted - shortly after his death - in the Australian High Court, in June 1992, overturning the doctrine of ?terra nullius?. The judgment unleashed profound change in Australia?s legal and legislative landscape, influencing the status and land rights of its indigenous peoples and race relations generally. The significance of the Mabo Case lies in it being an extremely rare instance in world history of pre-existing tribal law being formally recognised as superior to fundamental law of the ?invading? culture, regardless of the economic and political implications.

1.0 Identity and location 1.1 Name of documentary heritage The Mabo Case Manuscripts
1.2 Country Australia.
1.3 State, Province or Region Australian Capital Territory (ACT).
1.4 Name of organisation or institution (if appropriate) National Library of Australia.
1.5 Address Parkes Place, Parkes, ACT 2600. Telephone +61 2 6262 1111, Facsimile +61 2 6257 1703, Email www.nla.gov.au, http://www.nla.gov.au.

2.0 Legal information 2.1 Owner (name and full contact details) National Library of Australia, Parkes Place, Parkes, ACT 2600. Telephone +61 2 6262 1111, Facsimile +61 2 6257 1703, Email www.nla.gov.au, http://www.nla.gov.au.
2.2 Custodian (name and full contact details) National Library of Australia, Parkes Place, Parkes, ACT 2600. Telephone +61 2 6262 1111, Facsimile +61 2 6257 1703, Email www.nla.gov.au, http://www.nla.gov.au.
2.3 Legal status (if different from 2.1)
(a) category of ownership Public.
(b) details of legal and administrative powers for the preservation of the documentary heritage National Library Act 1960 (Commonwealth).
(c) accessibility Restricted or Closed Access.
(d) copyright status Multiple copyright owners.
2.4 Responsible administration National Library of Australia.

3.0 Identification 3.1 Description and inventory Personal papers of Edward Koiki Mabo (1936-1992) and records relating to the case Mabo v. State of Queensland (No.2) in the High Court of Australia (1992).
3.2 Bibliographic/Registration details The personal papers comprise diaries, correspondence, business papers, personal documents, financial papers, legal papers, newspaper cuttings and printed ephemera, 1959-92 (19 boxes). The legal papers comprise exhibits, transcripts of evidence, submissions, and correspondence between the plaintiff?s solicitors and their clients and witnesses, 1982-92 (73 volumes).
3.3 Visual documentation, if appropriate (for example photographs or a video of the documentary heritage Not available.
3.4 History The personal papers of Edward Koiki Mabo were purchased by the National Library from his widow, Bonita Mabo, in 1995. The legal papers were received from Bryan Keon-Cohen QC, a barrister in the Mabo Case, in 2000.
3.5 Bibliography
Guide to the Papers of Edward Koiki Mabo in the National Library of Australia. Canberra: National Library of Australia, 1995.

Cunningham, Adrian. "The Chamberlain and Mabo Papers: Case Studies of Personal Papers of National Significance." Paper presented at the Australian Society of Archivists National Conference 1997. pp. 98-103.

Loos, Noel, and Koiki Mabo. Edward Koiki: His Life and Struggle for Land Rights. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press, 1996.

Brennan, Frank. One Land, One Nation: Mabo - Towards 2001. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press, 1995.

Rowse, Tim. After Mabo: Interpreting Indigeneous Traditions. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1993.

Sharp, Nonie. No Ordinary Judgement: Mabo, the Murray Islanders' Land Case. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, 1996.

Sephenson, M. A. Mabo: The Native Title Legislation. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press, 1995.

3.6 Names, qualifications and contact details of up to three independent people or organisations with expert knowledge about the values and provenance of the documentary heritage


4.0 Assessment of the documentary heritage against each criterion Criterion 1 - Influence The papers were acquired by the Library in 1995-2000 and, in addition, access to them is restricted. Inevitably, their use in so short a time has been limited. They have, however, been used by the biographer of Mabo, Noel Loos, and they were drawn on extensively for an award-winning film about Mabo and the Mabo Case. They have therefore indirectly had a great influence on popular perceptions of Edward Mabo and of public appreciation of the significance of the Mabo Case.
Criterion 2 - Time The papers date from 1959-92. This is a crucial period in the history of race relations in Australia, with a series of battles and legal cases over the ownership and use of land, growing awareness of racial discrimination, and the social and health problems of indigenous peoples. It also saw the emergence of a small group of Aboriginal leaders who became household names by the 1990s. The Mabo Case papers include copies of documents relating to the ownership of land on the Murray Islands extending back to the first arrival of Europeans in the nineteenth century.
Criterion 3 - Place The Mabo Papers, particularly the legal papers, are an extraordinary source on the history and society of the Murray Islands in Torres Strait. They also contain a good deal on social and employment conditions in North Queensland. The value of the papers is by no means confined to this remote geographical area. The issues discussed in the papers have a bearing on the rights of both indigenous peoples and the descendants of European settlers throughout Australia. Moreover, these Australian discussions have aroused considerable interest in New Zealand, North America and in other countries where the rights of First Nations, and especially their land rights, have been hotly debated in recent decades.
Criterion 4 - People In the first place, the papers document much of the life, experiences and thoughts of Edward Mabo, a man who was not widely known at the time of his death in 1991 but who is now a household name in Australia. More generally, they document the struggles of indigenous peoples, particularly the Torres Strait Islanders, to improve their economic position and affirm their legal rights. Mabo became a famous name, but his business ventures in Townsville and his efforts to improve housing and education were similar to those of other indigenous leaders in this period in other parts of Australia.
Criterion 5 ? Subject/Theme The subject matter of the papers relate firstly to the history of land ownership and use, and social customs and beliefs, in the Torres Strait Islands over more than a century. In particular, they shed light on the concept of terra nullius, which was rejected by the High Court in 1992. In addition, the papers deal with some major issues in modern times: the political advancement of indigenous peoples, race relations in provincial cities, barriers to employment and higher education of indigenous peoples, and the survival and promotion of Aboriginal culture.
Criterion 6 ? Form and style The collection contains material in a variety of formats created by many people. It is not possible to generalize about its form and style.
Criterion 7 ? Social value For the reasons stated above, the papers are of the utmost value to the indigenous peoples of Australia, especially the Torres Strait Islanders. The Mabo Case was one of the most famous of High Court cases and the judgment had an immediate and long-term impact on land claims throughout Australia. The papers are therefore of importance to both indigenous and non-indigenous Australians.
Secondary criterion 1 - Integrity The integrity of the collection derives from its provenance: the personal papers were written or accumulated by Edward Mabo over many years, while the legal papers were assembled by the counsel representing Mabo and the other plaintiffs. They have been preserved intact by the Library.
Secondary criterion 2 - Rarity The personal papers are unpublished and unique. Many of the legal papers are copies, but they are interfiled with unique papers and it would be virtually impossible to reconstruct this archives. The personal papers were received directly from the Mabo Family and the legal papers were received directly from lawyers in the Mabo Case. The rarity of the papers is self-evident.
4.2 Contextual assessment including an assessment of the importance of a series of documents, the importance of a series of documents in a particular setting, and the assessment against other documentary heritage
4.3 An evaluation of the authenticity Much of the value of the papers derive from the integrity and completeness of the collection. Individual documents may, in themselves, be of little interest, but as part of a series, or as part of the whole collection, they document the life of Edward Mabo and the long chain of events that led to the 1992 Mabo Judgment. No comparable collection is known to exist in Australia.
4.4 An assessment of any threat(s) to the preservation of the documentary heritage

5.0 Management plan To be supplied.

6.0 Consultation 6.1 Details of consultation about the nomination with the:
(a)Owner National Library of Australia.
(b) Custodian National Library of Australia.
(c) Relevant Regional or National Memory of the World Committee (if appropriate UNESCO Australian Memory of the World Committee, ANU Centre for UNESCO, 5 Liversidge St., Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200. Telephone +61 2 6125 9943, Facsimile +61 2 6125 4959, Email carole.caldwell@anu.edu.au, http://www.amw.org.au.
(d) Independent institution(s) and/or experts
Dr Tim Rowse, PO Box 128, O?Connor, ACT 2602.


7.0 Nominator 7.1 Name National Library of Australia.
7.2 Relationship to the documentary heritage Owner and Custodian
7.3 Contact person (if appropriate) Ms Jan Fullerton, Director General, National Library of Australia.
7.4 Contact details Parkes Place, Parkes, ACT 2600. Telephone +61 2 6262 1111, Facsimile +61 2 6257 1703, Email www.nla.gov.au, http://www.nla.gov.au.
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