Skip to main content

Self-determination

Understand Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples' right to self-determination and control over decisions affecting their future and communities.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples Article 12 May 2014

Summary

Relevant Articles:

Articles 3, 4 and 5

Self-determination is the central right of the Declaration. All other rights support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ exercise of self-determination. All Indigenous peoples have this right.

Relevant Articles:

Articles 3, 4 and 5

Self-determination is the central right of the Declaration. All other rights support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples' exercise of self-determination. All Indigenous peoples have this right.

Self-determination can mean different things to different groups of people. At its core, self-determination ‘is concerned with the fundamental right of people to shape their own lives'. In a practical sense, self-determination means that we have the freedom to live well, to determine what it means to live well according to our own values and beliefs.

In recognising that Indigenous peoples have this right, governments are required to recognise our collective/group identities such as our nations, language groups, clans, family alliances or communities.

Self-determination means that:

  1. We have choice in determining how our lives are governed and our development paths.
  2. We participate in decisions that affect our lives. This includes a right to formal recognition of our group identities.
  3. We have control over our lives and future including our economic, social and cultural development.

Our citizenship rights and our Indigenous rights cannot be separated. We cannot have one without the other.

Professor Lowitja O'Donoghue

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner conducted a survey of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people's perspectives on the Declaration in 2012. Participants in the survey identified the following examples of how self-determination can be exercised:

  • through our own representative bodies
  • through our own schools, justice systems, health systems
  • by having control over our lives
  • by being able to participate in decisions that affect us
  • through being subject to our own laws
  • by establishing our own government
  • by establishing our own sovereign state.

Learn about the 4 UNDRIP principles

You might also like

Self-determination and Indigenous peoples

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Article
4 August 2023

Respect for and protection of culture

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Article
12 May 2014

Close the Gap (2021)

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Article
7 June 2024

Indigenous Rights & the Voice

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Explainer
4 August 2023

Symbolic change or substantive reform

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Article
4 August 2023

The Voice and human rights

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Submission by the public
4 August 2023

Have a question about discrimination or sexual harassment? Want to know more about human rights? Contact us if you need help.

Contact us
Subscribe to our mailing list to join a community of human rights advocates, and stay in the loop about our latest updates.