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Informing the Agenda - Call for Submissions

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice
Katie Kiss

The Australian Human Rights Commission invites opportunities from First Nations Peoples to inform the Social Justice Commissioner's agenda on key issues affecting their lives.

 

Upcoming consultations - dates and locations
 

Overview

The Commission is inviting opportunities to contribute to the “Informing the Agenda” Project. The Project seeks to collate and communicate the perspectives of First Nations Peoples across Australia on the key issues affecting their lives, and to ensure First Nations voices are elevated in national conversations relevant to the fulfillment of their human rights.

These perspectives inform the agenda of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner (Social Justice Commissioner), Katie Kiss, regarding key challenges First Nations Peoples consider worthwhile pursuing over her five-year term; the critical elements that are producing positive outcomes in the present, and how to work together to drive transformative change for First Nations communities across the policy and legislative landscape.

It will also provide an opportunity for stakeholders to provide input into key focus areas that:

  • promote better engagement with First Nations Peoples
  • create the conditions for better outcomes
  • progress a reframed relationship between First Nations and the broader Australian community.

The Project invited participation in three different formats to "Inform the Agenda". This included:

  1. Face-to-Face and online engagements (yet to be confirmed - if your organisation would like to contribute through these engagements, please contact us via informingtheagenda@humanrights.gov.au)
  2. Written submission (CLOSED)
  3. Online survey (CLOSED)

 

The Social Justice Commissioner's Six High-Level Goals

As a starting point, six high-level goals have been identified to frame the work of the Social Justice Commissioner over her five-year term. These are:

1. To promote the implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

A key focus for this goal will be to raise awareness and build capacity of First Nations people to use the Declaration to advocate for their rights and hold governments and service providers accountable to their responsibilities.

The Joint Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs made six recommendations in its report on the Inquiry into the Application of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Australia. Among them is to design and implement a national plan to progress the Declaration. As outlined above, the Social Justice Commissioner intends to engage governments with a view to progressing this as soon as possible.

2. To provide advocacy and guidance on the implementation of the three pillars of the Uluru Statement from the Heart—Voice, Treaty, Truth

The three pillars of the Uluru Statement from the Heart - Voice, Treaty, Truth - are no less relevant today than they were before the Voice to Parliament Referendum. All are necessary to advance the rights and recognition of First Nations.

In the lead up to the Voice to Parliament Referendum political and media narratives promoting mis and disinformation created division and disunity amongst Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, and further strained the relationship between First Nations Peoples and the broader population.

We need all governments to be promoting a reframed relationship that is grounded in Truth, Justice, and Healing, if we are to progress improved outcomes for First Nations Peoples. This is even more important since the Voice to Parliament Referendum outcome, which has seen marked rise in the experience of racism by First Nations people.

This will also require the political will of governments and elected representatives to engage in a national approach to truth-telling and agreement making that results in the tangible, practical outcomes that we are all aspiring to.

3. To increase Access to Justice for First Nations communities

The concept of ‘justice’ in its traditional sense is supposed to be positive. However, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s experience mostly features criminal justice or youth justice systems – which have been the opposite.

We need to move beyond building up ever greater piles of inquiries, reports, and recommendations into a space of greater accountability and evidence-based policy and action.

This includes addressing the unfinished business of implementing the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, the Bringing them Home Report, Productivity Commission Reports, and 30 years of Social Justice and Native Title Reports.

Given the national focus on Youth Justice, changing the narrative and approach in this space will be a key focus for the Social Justice Commissioners’ term, and critical to changing the unacceptable rise in numbers of children in detention nationally.

The Social Justice Commissioner hopes to work closely with her colleague, the National Children’s Commissioner, as well as the soon to be appointed National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children’s Commissioner and those in the States and Territories. The Commissioner/s aim is to move the debate from one where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples are the problem, to one that highlights their capacity to lead the response, treat Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples with dignity, and nurture and develop their children rather than punishing them for circumstances out of their control.

4. To support the realisation of First Nations health equality

The Social Justice Commissioner is particularly interested in progressing Priority Reform 3 under the National Agreement on Closing the Gap, that is focused on transforming government.

Ongoing national crises in cost of living, housing, domestic and family violence, mental health, child safety and youth justice, have amplified the need for system reform that ensures the rights of all communities.

Systemic racism and structural disadvantage exacerbate these system failures for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, so transforming government, and consequently ‘the system’ is critical to closing the gap and achieving better outcomes for First Nations Peoples.

If we are to see progress against the targets and the rights outlined in the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, governments need to create systems that promote self-determination, respond to the priorities identified by First Nations people, and work with First Nations community-controlled organisations.

5. To provide advocacy and guidance to progress Land Justice Reform

This includes providing guidance on native title system reform and the reform of connected regimes such as cultural heritage, environmental management, climate change, leveraging the social, cultural, and economic benefits and opportunities from our lands, and engaging with newly established or establishing treaty arrangements.

6. To build the capacity of the First Nations Human Rights Network

This will involve working with young people, and First Nations senior experienced people to build a connected and future-focused leadership capability. This includes learning from Elders, and increasing advocates’ knowledge of human rights so that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people can effectively use the international human rights framework to progress and realise Indigenous rights here at home.

We look forward to hearing your views on these initial priorities, and working with you and your communities to progress the work of the Social Justice Commissioner over the coming five years.

How to Make a Submission

Surveys and written submissions are now closed. If your group or organisation would like to arrange an in-person or online engagement to contribute to the coming 5-year agenda of the Social Justice Commissioner, please contact us via our email (informingtheagenda@humanrights.gov.au). 

 

Next Steps