Skip to main content

2005 International Conference on Engaging Communities - Mr Darryl Pearce Presentation

Discover how Indigenous Australians in Western Australia experience systemic disadvantage in justice, health, education and employment outcomes.

Disability rights Conference 14 December 2012

This page is archived

You are in an archived section of the website. This information may not be current. This page was first created in December, 2012.

Summary

Discover how Indigenous Australians in Western Australia experience systemic disadvantage in justice, health, education and employment outcomes.

Date and time
1 January 2025
12:00 am-12:00 am (AEDT)

Summary

Mr Pearce shared the experiences of Indigenous people in Western Australia to highlight the continuing disadvantage and ultimately prompt participants to think about how far we still have to go before Indigenous Australians can fully exercise their human rights. Examples of the inequality experienced include the high rates of imprisonment in the adult and juvenile justice systems, low levels of literacy, high population growth, high suicide rates, and high unemployment rates.

2005 International Conference on Engaging Communities

Mr Darryl Pearce, Chief Executive Officer, South-West Aboriginal Land and Sea Council

Topic: Negotiations between governments and indigenous peoples: how governments should engage with indigenous communities.

Presentation Summary

Mr Pearce shared the experiences of Indigenous people in Western Australia to highlight the continuing disadvantage and ultimately prompt participants to think about how far we still have to go before Indigenous Australians can fully exercise their human rights. Examples of the inequality experienced include the high rates of imprisonment in the adult and juvenile justice systems, low levels of literacy, high population growth, high suicide rates, and high unemployment rates.

Mr Pearce provided the history of government's engagement with Indigenous peoples by noting the work of those before us who initiated the rights discussion in Australia, the recognition of Indigenous Australian's citizenship rights by government and the small gains in recent times as a result.

But overall there is a disconnection between Indigenous people, especially young Indigenous people, and the mainstream community. This disconnection is driven, in part, by the responsibility placed on Indigenous people and the focus of concepts such as 'mutual obligation' on what we have to do it exchange for services.

Of particular concern with mutual obligation is the entry of mining companies into agreement-making which enables the transfer of responsibilities between government and the private sector. These agreements seem to cover citizenship entitlements in exchange for destroying cultural landscape and traditional lands. Human rights are not just housing and education; it covers all rights, including the inherent rights of Indigenous peoples. The focus only on citizenship rights is unacceptable.

To conclude, Mr Pearce asked that Indigenous people who directly engage with government and civil society to be careful not to negotiate away their inherent rights as Indigenous peoples for the sake of citizenship rights or in its simplest terms exchanging "rights" for a job.

Last updated 24 January 2006.

You might also like

Law Society Journal - Customary law and international human rights: The Queen v GJ

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, International
Article
14 December 2012

A Time to Value - Media Pack

International, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
Article
14 December 2012

Human Rights 21: From the bench: landmark human rights cases

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, Sex and gender
Article
14 December 2012

Mandatory detention laws in Australia (2001)

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, Children and youth rights
Article
14 December 2012
Subscribe to our mailing list to join a community of human rights advocates, and stay in the loop about our latest updates.