Abstract
This paper provides an analysis of the neglect and marginalisation of indigenous people’s sea rights. It aims to explain how a complex, ecologically appropriate and alternative law of the sea has largely escaped research interests and, until recently, has not been recognised by Western systems of law, resource and environmental management. It is argued that the dominance of Western views and concepts of nature and landscape, predicated on Western knowledges and values, marginalises indigenous concepts of nature and undermines effective indigenous control of social space. Cultural differences between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal ways of constructing meaning in the sea provides the vantage point from which to explore the relations between differences in cultural values, property rights and political and economic control over marine and coastal environments.