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Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that the National Archives' website and collection contain the names, images and voices of people who have died.

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  5. Daintree Protest

Daintree Protest

Protest signs erected near a walking trail at Daintree forest.

Details

Learning resource record

Creator:

Australian Information Service

Date:

1984

Citation:

NAA: B583, 1/1984

Keywords:

  • protest
  • environment
  • Queensland

This record is a photo taken of a protest site in 1984 in the Daintree rainforest. It shows a dirt road that has been blocked using logs and protest signs.

The Daintree rainforest is one of the oldest tropical rainforests in the world and home to many unique animals and plants. In 1983, a local council began building a 37-kilometre road from Cape Tribulation to Bloomfield, through the Daintree rainforest, which would cause significant destruction to it. The road was constructed mostly on the walking tracks of the Kuku-Yalanji people, the traditional owners of the area.

Environmental conservationist groups came together to oppose the project. They protested this project in several ways; from physical blockades, where they chained themselves to machinery and created road blockages using signs and logs, to letters and postcards sent to parliamentarians.

The campaign to save the Daintree resulted in nation-wide and international awareness of the issue. Although the protestors were unsuccessful in stopping the road from being built, their actions paved the way for the Daintree rainforest to be listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1988.

World Heritage sites are places that the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) have declared to be of ‘Outstanding Universal Value to humanity,’ and therefore worthy of protection.

The Australian Government is responsible for the protection and management of its 20 World Heritage sites, including the Daintree Rainforest. Commonwealth laws enable the Australian government to place restrictions on – or even refuse – construction plans that would impact a site’s heritage value.

The High Court of Australia has found that Commonwealth has power to protect World Heritage under the Australian Constitution. If a state government were to approve a project that would damage a UNESCO World Heritage site, the Australian government could use its powers to override these plans. As a result, it would be harder for a project like the road that was approved in 1983 to go ahead today.

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Protesters at Franklin Dam site, 1982.

Protest against the damming of the Franklin River

A photograph taken on 18 December 1982. It shows a protest against the decision to dam the Franklin River to generate hydro-electricity.

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Bulldozer clearing land for a new town in Western Australia.

Bulldozer clearing land for a new town in Western Australia

This black-and-white photograph shows land clearing for the new town of Rock Gully in Western Australia

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2 people standing beside the Aboriginal Tent Embassy

Aboriginal land rights protest

This record is a colour photograph of Aboriginal activists standing in front of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in 1974.

Related themes

Theme

Protest against the Vietnam War outside Old Parliament House.

Activism

Activism is an important part of the democratic process. Individuals and communities have the power to shape government policy and society by campaigning for change.

Theme

A man walking amongst magnetic white ant nests in the Northern Territory.

Environment and nature

Explore how Australians’ relationship with the natural world changed over the 20th century as we recognised the aesthetic, scientific, cultural and life-sustaining importance of the environment.

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National Archives of Australia acknowledges the Traditional Owners and Custodians of Country throughout Australia and acknowledges their continuing connection to land, sea and community. We pay our respects to the people, their cultures and Elders past, present and emerging.

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