Areas of expertise & Fields of activity:
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Economic and Social:
Business and Industry
Citizenship and Governance
Culture
Decolonization
Development
Education
Energy
Environment
Family
Habitat
Human Rights
Indigenous Peoples
Intellectual Property
Justice
Minority Rights
Peace and Security
Population
Private Sector
Science and Technology
Social Development
Sustainable Development
Trade and Development
Values
Population:
Population growth
Population structure
Public Administration:
Ethics, Transparency and Accountability
Knowledge Systems and E-government
Social Development:
Aging
Conflict
Disabled persons
Employment
Indigenous issues
Information and Communications Technologies
Social policy
Youth
Statistics:
Crime and criminal justice statistics
Demographic and social surveys
Development indicators
Disability Statistics
Environmental Accounts
Geographical names
Household Statistics
Social Statistics and Social Monitoring
Sustainable Development:
Agriculture
Atmosphere
Biodiversity
Capacity-building
Climate change
Consumption and production patterns
Demographics
Disaster management and vulnerability
Education
Energy
Freshwater
Health
Human settlements
Industrial development
Information for decision-making and participation
Institutional arrangements
Integrated decision-making
International cooperation for an enabling environment
Land management
Marine Resources
Means of Implementation (Trade, Finance, Technology, Tranfer, etc.)
Mining
Oceans and seas
Partnerships
Protecting and managing the natural resources
Science
Sustainable Tourism
Sustainable development in a globalizing world
Sustainable development of SIDS
Technology
Toxic chemicals
Trade and environment
Transport
Waste (hazardous)
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Geographic scope: |
International
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Country of activity: |
Australia
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Millennium Development Goals: |
Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
Reduce child mortality
Improve maternal health
Ensure environmental sustainability
Develop global partnership for development
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Mission statement: |
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Year established: |
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Year of registration: |
2003 |
Organizational structure: |
Membership of the Land Trust is open to adult Aborigines who are appointed as grantees of the land pursuant to the Act. The Committee comprises up to 10 elected members, who are elected by the members at the annual general meeting, who are Trustees for the lands held in Trust by the organization. |
Number and type of members: |
The Kaurareg Aboriginal Land Trust currently has 40 members on its Register of Members. At this date, membership type is one class of members, which is Ordinary. At its next annual general meeting, the Committee will deliberate on increasing membership classes by type to include categories of members which reflect the culture and customs of Aboriginal lore and traditions. |
Affiliation with NGO networks: |
Indigenous Peoples Organizations (Australia), (MILDA) Melanesian Indigenous Land Defence Alliance |
Funding structure: |
Fees for providing consulting or research services
Product sales and business services
Grants from Governments
Funds from other Non-Governmental Organizations
Donations and grants from domestic sources
Other sources
Fundraising campaigns
Foreign and international grants
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Funding structure other: |
The Kaurareg Aboriginal Land Trust is engaging in development ventures of natural resources and through TO2TO (traditional land owners to traditional owners) trade activities across Melanesia. Income from these activities will fund sustainable development |