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Australian Heritage Council

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17-665: The Australian Heritage Council is the principal adviser to the Australian Government on heritage matters. It was established on 19 February 2004 by the Australian Heritage Council Act 2003 . The Council replaced the Australian Heritage Commission as the Australian Government's independent expert advisory body on heritage matters when the new Commonwealth heritage system was introduced in 2004 under amendments to

34-603: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Australian Heritage Commission The Australian Heritage Commission ( AHC ), was the Australian federal government authority established in 1975 by the Australian Heritage Commission Act 1975 as the first body to manage natural and cultural heritage in Australia until its demise in 2004. It was responsible for the creation of

51-887: The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 . The Council assesses nominations for the Australian National Heritage List and the Commonwealth Heritage List . The Minister may ask the Council for advice on action that he may take in relation to the List of Overseas Places of Historic Significance to Australia . The Council plays a key role in assessment, advice and policy formulation and support of major heritage programs. Its main responsibilities are to: This Australian government-related article

68-968: The Gordon-below-Franklin dam proposal which had been placed on the World Heritage List in 1983. The AHC was ultimately abolished under the Howard Liberal-National coalition government and the Australian Heritage Council formed in its place on 19 February 2004. The National Indigenous Heritage Art Awards , initially known as the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Art Awards , were held in Canberra from 1993 until 2000. The accompanying exhibitions were known as The Art of Place . In November 1993,

85-618: The International Year for the World's Indigenous People , it was announced in parliament that the AHC would be sponsoring a new art prize for Indigenous Australians , initially known as National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Art Award. Worth a total prize pool of A$ 30,000 , the prizes would be awarded for "an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander work of art which uses a National Estate place as its subject". The subject of

102-653: The Register of the National Estate . The Australian Heritage Commission was one of a number of ventures by the Whitlam Labor government to establish cultural heritage as a more substantial government activity. In his policy speech in November 1972, the federal Labor leader said that "...one overriding objective of a Labor government would be to preserve and enhance the quality of the National Estate". When

119-699: The 1990s, with the second award staged in 1994; the third in 1996; and the fourth, now called the National Indigenous Heritage Award, was held in April 1998. The 1998 Art of Place exhibition toured to several regional towns in New South Wales as well as Adelaide and Brisbane , attracting some 44,000 visitors. Some exhibition catalogues were published. The exhibitions became known as The Art of Place . In 2000, then prime minister John Howard gave an opening address at

136-634: The Commonwealth Minister for the Environment, Sport and Territories. Commissioners meet four to six times a year, and with the part-time chairman and six part-time commissioners being chosen for their skills and interest in the natural and cultural environment. In the 1980s and 90s the AHC developed a number of policy documents which became standard heritage practice. Heritage practitioners including Jane Lennon and Michael Pearson were important figures in this process. The first meeting of

153-517: The Labor government came to office in December 1972, a Committee of Inquiry into the National Estate was set up, with terms of reference "...to report on: the nature and state of the National Estate; the measures presently being adopted; the measures which should be adopted; the role which the Australian Government should play in the preservation and enhancement of the National Estate; the manner in which

170-530: The National Estate was formed in August 1974 to continue the work of the inquiry and begin to develop a national policy for the national estate, based on UNESCO 's Committee for the Protection of World Cultural and National Heritage , which spoke of an "International Estate". The Australian Heritage Commission Act 1975 was assented to on 19 June 1975. The commission was a statutory authority , responsible to

187-477: The National Trusts of Australia and other appropriate conservation groups could be supported by public funds and the amount required in order that these bodies can immediately increase their effectiveness, in arguing and working for the preservation and enhancement of the National Estate". The AHC had wide terms of reference, covering natural, Indigenous and historical heritage. It was first proposed in

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204-533: The artwork had to be either "in the Register of the National Estate, its Interim List or places the artist believes should be listed". There would be three sections: Open, with a first prize of A$ 17,000 , a photographic section ( A$ 2,500 ), and a youth section, for artists 25 years and under ( A$ 2,500 ). Entries were exhibited at Old Parliament House from 15 December 1993 to 12 January 1994, in an exhibition known as The Art of Place . The awards continued through

221-689: The assessment of places on the Register of the National Estate, which have been subsequently adapted and adopted by most state and community heritage organisation. Formed just as the Fraser Liberal-Country coalition government came into power, the AHC came under criticism from mining and development lobbies, and the Commonwealth Government itself over issues such as the Ranger Uranium Mine in Kakadu , and

238-494: The fifth edition of the awards ceremony. The sponsors that year included the Koori Mail , N. M. Rothschild and Sons and Multiplex . A selection of artworks from the 2000 exhibition toured the country in 2001, funded by the federal government, including Sydney , Wagga Wagga , Alice Springs , Adelaide and Perth in its tour. Sponsorship paid for 36% of the prize money, and a record 436 entries were submitted. Although

255-454: The government-appointed Committee of Inquiry into the National Estate, chaired by Mr Justice R. M. Hope, in April 1973. The committee reported to federal parliament in August 1974 that "...uncontrolled development, economic growth and 'progress' to that time had had a very detrimental effect on Australia's national estate..." and called for "...prompt action and public education to prevent further neglect and destruction". An Interim Committee on

272-563: The present community . The AHC was an important catalyst to other state and local heritage protection and took on the early role of establishing guidelines, standards and criteria for assessment and managing places of heritage significance. An example was the development of the Australian Historic Themes for use by heritage professionals at the national level, as a means for co-ordinating research and significance assessments. The commission also established criteria for

289-538: The seven part-time members of AHC chaired by David Yencken was held on 27 July 1976. A small staff supported the work of the chairman and commissioners. A critical component of the commission was the creation of the Register of the National Estate , which was intended as an inventory of ...those places, being components of the natural environment of Australia or the cultural environment of Australia, that have aesthetic, historic, scientific or social significance or other special value for future generations as well as for

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