National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974

Legislation passed by the New South Wales Parliament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 is the legislation passed by the New South Wales Parliament with the explicit intent of conserving the natural and cultural heritage of the state of New South Wales; fostering public appreciation, understanding and enjoyment of its natural and cultural heritage; and managing any lands reserved for the purposes of conserving and fostering public appreciation and enjoyment of its natural and cultural heritage.[1]

CitationNo. 80 of 1974
Territorial extentNew South Wales
Passed27 November 1974
Quick facts Parliament of New South Wales, Citation ...
National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974
Parliament of New South Wales
CitationNo. 80 of 1974
Territorial extentNew South Wales
Passed27 November 1974
Assented to byGovernor of New South Wales
Assented to27 November 1974
Commenced1 January 1975
Administered byDepartment of Planning and Environment / NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service
Status: Current legislation
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Cultural heritage

Overview

The cultural heritage the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 seeks to conserve (and foster public appreciation, understanding and enjoyment of) includes "..places, objects and features of significance to Aboriginal people.."; "places of social value to the people of New South Wales.."; and "places of historic, architectural or scientific significance".[1]

Aboriginal heritage

The National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 is the primary legislation in New South Wales relied upon within the state to effectively manage and protect the state's Aboriginal cultural heritage[2]

Section 84 provides for a place to be designated an "Aboriginal place", that "is or was of special significance with respect to Aboriginal culture", which enables special protections to be put in place.[3]

See also

References

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