Dr Hanna Jaireth has a longstanding interest in dispute resolution, ecologically sustainable development and human rights. Her current interests include practising as a mediator, governance (including internal audit, risk management & compliance) and environmental democracy. She currently serves in a pro bono capacity on two national boards - of the Resolution Institute (the peak body for mediators in Australia) and the Australian Environment Review. Hanna has worked as an academic, lawyer, public servant, parliamentary inquiry secretary and journalist in a range of private and public sector positions, many with a sustainability focus. Hanna has undergraduate arts/law and postgraduate qualifications in international relations and mediation. Phone: 0262517438 Address: Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
tag=1 data=Reconciliation restored: Towards self-determination. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=... more tag=1 data=Reconciliation restored: Towards self-determination. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Johanna tag=3 data=Aboriginal Law Bulletin, tag=4 data=3 tag=5 data=64 tag=6 data=October 1993 tag=7 data=19-21. tag=8 data=ABORIGINAL LAND RIGHTS%MABO tag=9 data=PRINCIPLE 22 OF THE RIO DECLARATION ON ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT tag=10 data=The risk of a fracturing of the reconciliation process is unlikely to reappear during the life of this government. But does the Bill match international and domestic aspirations for self-determination for indigenous people. tag=11 data=1994/6/1 tag=12 data=94/0048 tag=13 data=CAB
Review: Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance By Clark Miller an... more Review: Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance By Clark Miller and Paul N. Edwards (Eds.) Reviewed by Hanna Jaireth Aranda, ACT, Australia Clark Miller, & Paul N. Edwards (Eds.). Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001. 375 pp. ISBN 0-262-13387-3 (cloth). US$70.00 This edited collection of essays analyses the international politics of climate science and the institutional governance of global climate change. The editors claim that climate change is a "key site in the global transformation of world order," resulting in power and authority being redistributed amongst diverse actors by new regimes or ensembles of political and scientific institutions and networks (p. 3). Climate science is not an "independent input" to global governance but "a human institution deeply engaged in the practice of ordering social and political worlds" (p. 5). The book seems to have been compiled for graduate students in environmental politics, but it may also appeal to climate "technicians." Chapter 3, for example, is a defence of climate modeling that is probably impenetrable to all but tertiarytrained modellers or meteorologists. The essays are grouped thematically. Chapters 2-4 analyze how controversial and culturally influenced scientific research understands and represents climate change, particularly through the use of computer modelling and satellite data to produce global projections. Chapters 5 and 6 examine the processes through which various stakeholders have understood, represented, and governed climate(s) over time. They include case studies of the rise and fall of weather modification (geoengineering), international meteorological cooperation and technical assistance, and the evolution of global networks of atmospheric observation stations. Chapters 7-10 include an examination of multilateral institutional responses to scientific claims and politicised critiques, the politics inherent in international expert advisory processes, and the normative issues that remain unresolved regarding the allocation of responsibilities for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Chapter 10 explores the "construction" of our "global neighbourhood" through diverse images, especially from space and in the mass media, and through influential environmental texts of the 1960s and 1970s, then broadens into a brief examination of global representations of politics, trade, ethics, and social movements. Chapters 7-9 are probably the best chapters to read after the introduction because they provide an accessible overview of key issues and contemporary debates about climate change, providing a good lead into the rest of the book. The book is primarily concerned with analysing the "construction" of the contemporary science and public perceptions of a changing global atmosphere (drawing on constructivist/interpretive/reflectivist theory) rather than with critiquing how atmospheric change has come about or can be mitigated. Unlike other variations of constructivist theory, this book does not explore the power/knowledge dynamics or political economy of the humaninduced global transformations that are having a discernible impact on climate change. …
Australasian plant conservation : journal of the Australian network for plant conservation, Dec 1, 2005
Grassy Ecosystems Management Kit: A Guide to Developing Conservation Management Plans, by Sharp S... more Grassy Ecosystems Management Kit: A Guide to Developing Conservation Management Plans, by Sharp S., Dorrough J., Rehwinkel R., Eddy D. and Breckwoldt, A. 2005, Environment ACT, Canberra. ISBN: 0 642 60340 5, Price $30 (incl. GST) and $10 postage.
Review(s) of: Towards a marine strategy for torres strait (masts), by M. Mulrennan, with assistan... more Review(s) of: Towards a marine strategy for torres strait (masts), by M. Mulrennan, with assistance from P. full, M. Sullivan and N. Hanssen, in consultation with the Torres Strait Island Coordinating Council, V. McGrath and other Torres Strait Islanders Australian National University North Australia Research Unit, and the Torres Strait Island Coordinating Council, Darwin, 1993, pp xii + 52; Marine strategy for Torres Strait: Policy directions, by M. Mulrennan and N. Hanssen, with the Torres, Strait Island Coordinating Council, Australian National University North Australia Research Unit, and the Torres Strait Island Coordinating Council, Darwin, 1994, pp 99.
Ethos: Official Publication of the Law Society of the Australian Capital Territory, Jun 1, 2010
Review(s) of: Students' Guide to Legal Writing, Law Exams and Self Assessment, 3rd Ed, by Cam... more Review(s) of: Students' Guide to Legal Writing, Law Exams and Self Assessment, 3rd Ed, by Campbell, Fox, and de Zwart, Th e Federation Press.
This article examines the intensification of inter-'national' and international cultural ... more This article examines the intensification of inter-'national' and international cultural contestations over intellectual property rights (IPRs). Examples are given of disputes over biological materials and their commercial use in biotechnology and natural products, and concepts of culture, properly and fair return. These disputes are also about culture and political liberalism. Corporate stakeholders, governments, indigenous peoples' organisations (IPOs) and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are involved in democratic, and with some exceptions, lawful political activity to secure law reform.
Many of the post-1960s images representing the state of the Earth’s environment cast a global pal... more Many of the post-1960s images representing the state of the Earth’s environment cast a global pall. They politicize and popularize repeated scientific warnings that the life-sustaining processes of the planet are imperilled. As a consequence, images of environmental insecurity are often projected in the International Relations (IR) discipline. But more reassuring images of ‘sustainable development’ achieved through global governance, have become increasingly prevalent. Institutions, non-state actors, and social movements are recognized and analysed as key actors for sustainable development. These images contrast again with the ecocentric but marginal images projected by ecofeminists and ‘deep’ ecologists.
tag=1 data=Queensland Land Rights: a derogation from poor standards elsewhere? by Johanna Sutherl... more tag=1 data=Queensland Land Rights: a derogation from poor standards elsewhere? by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Johanna tag=3 data=Aboriginal Law Bulletin, tag=4 data=2 tag=5 data=52 tag=6 data=October 1991 tag=7 data=16-18. tag=8 data=ABORIGINAL LAND RIGHTS%QLD tag=11 data=1991/3/15 tag=12 data=91/1153 tag=13 data=CAB
tag=1 data=Fisheries, Aquaculture and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples: Studies, Pol... more tag=1 data=Fisheries, Aquaculture and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples: Studies, Policies and Legislation. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Johanna tag=3 data=Australian Indigenous Law Reports, tag=4 data=2 tag=5 data=1 tag=6 data=April 1997 tag=7 data=124-153 tag=8 data=FISH%ABORIGINAL CULTURE tag=9 data=COASTAL ZONE INQUIRY tag=10 data=The Commonwealth Government is currently addressing Indigenous Australians' interests in fisheries through the development of an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Fisheries Strategy. tag=11 data=1997/3/6 tag=12 data=97/0154 tag=13 data=CAB
tag=1 data=Native title in the Qld wet tropics. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Joha... more tag=1 data=Native title in the Qld wet tropics. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Johanna tag=3 data=Aboriginal Law Bulletin, tag=4 data=3 tag=5 data=62 tag=6 data=June 1993 tag=7 data=17-20. tag=8 data=ABORIGINAL LAND RIGHTS%MABO tag=10 data=The Mabo decision has provided a new negotiating baseline for Aboriginal people with cultural and property interests in the Wet Tropics World Heritage Management Area of North Qld, and it has generated demands for the development of an effective reconciliation strategy for the area. tag=11 data=1993/5/8 tag=12 data=93/0431 tag=13 data=CAB
Review: Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance By Clark Miller an... more Review: Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance By Clark Miller and Paul N. Edwards (Eds.) Reviewed by Hanna Jaireth Aranda, ACT, Australia Clark Miller, & Paul N. Edwards (Eds.). Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001. 375 pp. ISBN 0-262-13387-3 (cloth). US$70.00 This edited collection of essays analyses the international politics of climate science and the institutional governance of global climate change. The editors claim that climate change is a key site in the global transformation of world order, resulting in power and authority being redistributed amongst diverse actors by new regimes or ensembles of political and scientific institutions and networks (p. 3). Climate science is not an independent input to global governance but a human institution deeply engaged in the practice of ordering social and political worlds (p. 5). The book seems to have been compiled for graduate students in environmental politics, but it may also appeal to climate technicians. Chapter 3, for example, is a defence of climate modeling that is probably impenetrable to all but tertiary- trained modellers or meteorologists. The essays are grouped thematically. Chapters 2-4 analyze how controversial and culturally influenced scientific research understands and represents climate change, particularly through the use of computer modelling and satellite data to produce global projections. Chapters 5 and 6 examine the processes through which various stakeholders have understood, represented, and governed climate(s) over time. They include case studies of the rise and fall of weather modification (geoengineering), international meteorological cooperation and technical assistance, and the evolution of global networks of atmospheric observation stations. Chapters 7-10 include an examination of multilateral institutional responses to scientific claims and politicised critiques, the politics inherent in international expert advisory processes, and the normative issues that remain unresolved regarding the allocation of responsibilities for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Chapter 10 explores the construction of our global neighbourhood through diverse images, especially from space and in the mass media, and through influential environmental texts of the 1960s and 1970s, then broadens into a brief examination of global representations of politics, trade, ethics, and social movements. Chapters 7-9 are probably the best chapters to read after the introduction because they provide an accessible overview of key issues and contemporary debates about climate change, providing a good lead into
Australia and the United Nations are engaged in debates about how best to recognise and engage Fi... more Australia and the United Nations are engaged in debates about how best to recognise and engage First Peoples in law, policy and programme development, consistent with human rights norms. In Australia, proposed constitutional reforms are contested, partly because of concerns about how disputes will be resolved. This article notes design recommendations for the proposed federal Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice legislation concerning dispute resolution (DR), and several state-level experiences. It concludes that DR processes recommended for the federal Voice should allay critics' concerns and provide opportunities for DR professionals, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, to continue to facilitate reconciliation.
tag=1 data=Reconciliation restored: Towards self-determination. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=... more tag=1 data=Reconciliation restored: Towards self-determination. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Johanna tag=3 data=Aboriginal Law Bulletin, tag=4 data=3 tag=5 data=64 tag=6 data=October 1993 tag=7 data=19-21. tag=8 data=ABORIGINAL LAND RIGHTS%MABO tag=9 data=PRINCIPLE 22 OF THE RIO DECLARATION ON ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT tag=10 data=The risk of a fracturing of the reconciliation process is unlikely to reappear during the life of this government. But does the Bill match international and domestic aspirations for self-determination for indigenous people. tag=11 data=1994/6/1 tag=12 data=94/0048 tag=13 data=CAB
Review: Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance By Clark Miller an... more Review: Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance By Clark Miller and Paul N. Edwards (Eds.) Reviewed by Hanna Jaireth Aranda, ACT, Australia Clark Miller, & Paul N. Edwards (Eds.). Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001. 375 pp. ISBN 0-262-13387-3 (cloth). US$70.00 This edited collection of essays analyses the international politics of climate science and the institutional governance of global climate change. The editors claim that climate change is a "key site in the global transformation of world order," resulting in power and authority being redistributed amongst diverse actors by new regimes or ensembles of political and scientific institutions and networks (p. 3). Climate science is not an "independent input" to global governance but "a human institution deeply engaged in the practice of ordering social and political worlds" (p. 5). The book seems to have been compiled for graduate students in environmental politics, but it may also appeal to climate "technicians." Chapter 3, for example, is a defence of climate modeling that is probably impenetrable to all but tertiarytrained modellers or meteorologists. The essays are grouped thematically. Chapters 2-4 analyze how controversial and culturally influenced scientific research understands and represents climate change, particularly through the use of computer modelling and satellite data to produce global projections. Chapters 5 and 6 examine the processes through which various stakeholders have understood, represented, and governed climate(s) over time. They include case studies of the rise and fall of weather modification (geoengineering), international meteorological cooperation and technical assistance, and the evolution of global networks of atmospheric observation stations. Chapters 7-10 include an examination of multilateral institutional responses to scientific claims and politicised critiques, the politics inherent in international expert advisory processes, and the normative issues that remain unresolved regarding the allocation of responsibilities for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Chapter 10 explores the "construction" of our "global neighbourhood" through diverse images, especially from space and in the mass media, and through influential environmental texts of the 1960s and 1970s, then broadens into a brief examination of global representations of politics, trade, ethics, and social movements. Chapters 7-9 are probably the best chapters to read after the introduction because they provide an accessible overview of key issues and contemporary debates about climate change, providing a good lead into the rest of the book. The book is primarily concerned with analysing the "construction" of the contemporary science and public perceptions of a changing global atmosphere (drawing on constructivist/interpretive/reflectivist theory) rather than with critiquing how atmospheric change has come about or can be mitigated. Unlike other variations of constructivist theory, this book does not explore the power/knowledge dynamics or political economy of the humaninduced global transformations that are having a discernible impact on climate change. …
Australasian plant conservation : journal of the Australian network for plant conservation, Dec 1, 2005
Grassy Ecosystems Management Kit: A Guide to Developing Conservation Management Plans, by Sharp S... more Grassy Ecosystems Management Kit: A Guide to Developing Conservation Management Plans, by Sharp S., Dorrough J., Rehwinkel R., Eddy D. and Breckwoldt, A. 2005, Environment ACT, Canberra. ISBN: 0 642 60340 5, Price $30 (incl. GST) and $10 postage.
Review(s) of: Towards a marine strategy for torres strait (masts), by M. Mulrennan, with assistan... more Review(s) of: Towards a marine strategy for torres strait (masts), by M. Mulrennan, with assistance from P. full, M. Sullivan and N. Hanssen, in consultation with the Torres Strait Island Coordinating Council, V. McGrath and other Torres Strait Islanders Australian National University North Australia Research Unit, and the Torres Strait Island Coordinating Council, Darwin, 1993, pp xii + 52; Marine strategy for Torres Strait: Policy directions, by M. Mulrennan and N. Hanssen, with the Torres, Strait Island Coordinating Council, Australian National University North Australia Research Unit, and the Torres Strait Island Coordinating Council, Darwin, 1994, pp 99.
Ethos: Official Publication of the Law Society of the Australian Capital Territory, Jun 1, 2010
Review(s) of: Students' Guide to Legal Writing, Law Exams and Self Assessment, 3rd Ed, by Cam... more Review(s) of: Students' Guide to Legal Writing, Law Exams and Self Assessment, 3rd Ed, by Campbell, Fox, and de Zwart, Th e Federation Press.
This article examines the intensification of inter-'national' and international cultural ... more This article examines the intensification of inter-'national' and international cultural contestations over intellectual property rights (IPRs). Examples are given of disputes over biological materials and their commercial use in biotechnology and natural products, and concepts of culture, properly and fair return. These disputes are also about culture and political liberalism. Corporate stakeholders, governments, indigenous peoples' organisations (IPOs) and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are involved in democratic, and with some exceptions, lawful political activity to secure law reform.
Many of the post-1960s images representing the state of the Earth’s environment cast a global pal... more Many of the post-1960s images representing the state of the Earth’s environment cast a global pall. They politicize and popularize repeated scientific warnings that the life-sustaining processes of the planet are imperilled. As a consequence, images of environmental insecurity are often projected in the International Relations (IR) discipline. But more reassuring images of ‘sustainable development’ achieved through global governance, have become increasingly prevalent. Institutions, non-state actors, and social movements are recognized and analysed as key actors for sustainable development. These images contrast again with the ecocentric but marginal images projected by ecofeminists and ‘deep’ ecologists.
tag=1 data=Queensland Land Rights: a derogation from poor standards elsewhere? by Johanna Sutherl... more tag=1 data=Queensland Land Rights: a derogation from poor standards elsewhere? by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Johanna tag=3 data=Aboriginal Law Bulletin, tag=4 data=2 tag=5 data=52 tag=6 data=October 1991 tag=7 data=16-18. tag=8 data=ABORIGINAL LAND RIGHTS%QLD tag=11 data=1991/3/15 tag=12 data=91/1153 tag=13 data=CAB
tag=1 data=Fisheries, Aquaculture and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples: Studies, Pol... more tag=1 data=Fisheries, Aquaculture and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples: Studies, Policies and Legislation. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Johanna tag=3 data=Australian Indigenous Law Reports, tag=4 data=2 tag=5 data=1 tag=6 data=April 1997 tag=7 data=124-153 tag=8 data=FISH%ABORIGINAL CULTURE tag=9 data=COASTAL ZONE INQUIRY tag=10 data=The Commonwealth Government is currently addressing Indigenous Australians' interests in fisheries through the development of an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Fisheries Strategy. tag=11 data=1997/3/6 tag=12 data=97/0154 tag=13 data=CAB
tag=1 data=Native title in the Qld wet tropics. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Joha... more tag=1 data=Native title in the Qld wet tropics. by Johanna Sutherland tag=2 data=Sutherland, Johanna tag=3 data=Aboriginal Law Bulletin, tag=4 data=3 tag=5 data=62 tag=6 data=June 1993 tag=7 data=17-20. tag=8 data=ABORIGINAL LAND RIGHTS%MABO tag=10 data=The Mabo decision has provided a new negotiating baseline for Aboriginal people with cultural and property interests in the Wet Tropics World Heritage Management Area of North Qld, and it has generated demands for the development of an effective reconciliation strategy for the area. tag=11 data=1993/5/8 tag=12 data=93/0431 tag=13 data=CAB
Review: Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance By Clark Miller an... more Review: Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance By Clark Miller and Paul N. Edwards (Eds.) Reviewed by Hanna Jaireth Aranda, ACT, Australia Clark Miller, & Paul N. Edwards (Eds.). Changing the Atmosphere: Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001. 375 pp. ISBN 0-262-13387-3 (cloth). US$70.00 This edited collection of essays analyses the international politics of climate science and the institutional governance of global climate change. The editors claim that climate change is a key site in the global transformation of world order, resulting in power and authority being redistributed amongst diverse actors by new regimes or ensembles of political and scientific institutions and networks (p. 3). Climate science is not an independent input to global governance but a human institution deeply engaged in the practice of ordering social and political worlds (p. 5). The book seems to have been compiled for graduate students in environmental politics, but it may also appeal to climate technicians. Chapter 3, for example, is a defence of climate modeling that is probably impenetrable to all but tertiary- trained modellers or meteorologists. The essays are grouped thematically. Chapters 2-4 analyze how controversial and culturally influenced scientific research understands and represents climate change, particularly through the use of computer modelling and satellite data to produce global projections. Chapters 5 and 6 examine the processes through which various stakeholders have understood, represented, and governed climate(s) over time. They include case studies of the rise and fall of weather modification (geoengineering), international meteorological cooperation and technical assistance, and the evolution of global networks of atmospheric observation stations. Chapters 7-10 include an examination of multilateral institutional responses to scientific claims and politicised critiques, the politics inherent in international expert advisory processes, and the normative issues that remain unresolved regarding the allocation of responsibilities for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Chapter 10 explores the construction of our global neighbourhood through diverse images, especially from space and in the mass media, and through influential environmental texts of the 1960s and 1970s, then broadens into a brief examination of global representations of politics, trade, ethics, and social movements. Chapters 7-9 are probably the best chapters to read after the introduction because they provide an accessible overview of key issues and contemporary debates about climate change, providing a good lead into
Australia and the United Nations are engaged in debates about how best to recognise and engage Fi... more Australia and the United Nations are engaged in debates about how best to recognise and engage First Peoples in law, policy and programme development, consistent with human rights norms. In Australia, proposed constitutional reforms are contested, partly because of concerns about how disputes will be resolved. This article notes design recommendations for the proposed federal Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice legislation concerning dispute resolution (DR), and several state-level experiences. It concludes that DR processes recommended for the federal Voice should allay critics' concerns and provide opportunities for DR professionals, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, to continue to facilitate reconciliation.
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