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About the Australian Human Rights Commission navigation

Australian Aboriginal woman at festival. Photo by Matthew Syres

About the Commission

The Australian Human Rights Commission is the new name of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. The Commission was established in 1986 by an act of the federal Parliament. We are an independent statutory organisation and report to the federal Parliament through the Attorney-General.

Our Vision:

Human rights: everyone, everywhere, everyday

Our Mission:

Leading the promotion and protection of human rights in Australia by:

We do this by:

Our statutory responsibilities include:

We do this through:

The Commission works closely with other national human rights institutions, particularly through the Asia Pacific Forum of National Human Rights Institutions, to address major human rights issues in the region.

We also undertake bilateral international activities as part of the Australian Government's development program run by the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAid). The most substantial of these is the Human Rights Technical Assistance Program, which is part of the annual Dialogue on Human Rights with China.

Our structure

The Commission is a collegiate body made up of a President and six Commissioners. The seven positions are currently held by six people. The President is the chief executive officer.

The Hon. Catherine Branson QC
President and Human Rights Commissioner

Mick Gooda
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner

The Hon Susan Ryan AO
Age Discrimination Commissioner

Graeme Innes AM
Disability Discrimination Commissioner

Dr Helen Szoke
Race Discrimination Commissioner

Elizabeth Broderick
Sex Discrimination Commissioner

Find out more

In this section you can also find:

Reconciliation Action Plan