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Indigenous owned land yields economic benefits will depend on geographic factorssuch as climate, soil type and location, the strength of landowners’ property rights,the skills and governance arrangements of landholding bodies, and the aspirationsof the Indigenous landowners. Section 11.3 examines data on Indigenous ownedand controlled land.Although there was strong feedback during the consultations that governance wasan important element of the framework, there are difficulties in finding appropriateindicators of governance. It has not been possible to develop meaningfulquantitative indicators that could be reported consistently with comparable dataacross jurisdictions. It may be possible to improve quantitative reporting in futureyears.In the 2003 and 2005 Reports, a proxy indicator ‘Accredited training in leadership,finance or management’ was included in the framework to report on capacitybuilding in governance. Following feedback and comments from consultation on the2005 Report, this indicator has been renamed ‘Governance capacity and skills’(section 11.4). It complements the case studies in governance arrangements insection 11.5.Attachment tablesAttachment tables for this chapter are identified in references throughout thischapter by an ‘A’ suffix (for example, table 11A.1.3). A list of attachment tables isin section 11.7. These tables can be found on the Review web page(www.pc.gov.au/gsp). Users can also contact the Secretariat to obtain theattachment tables.11.2 OVERCOMINGINDIGENOUSDISADVANTAGE 2007

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