The Australian Human Rights Commission has released its ambitious
The National Anti-Racism Framework: A roadmap to eliminating
racism in Australia, with 'a call to action for
reform across Australia’s systems and structures,
including in the justice and legal system, health,
education, workplaces, media and the arts,
and data'.
Recommendations are
1. The Australian Government commit to this
National Anti-Racism Framework to eliminate
racism in Australia.
The National Anti-Racism Framework should
set out national commitments over a 10-year
period, with two 5-year implementation plans
created for each of the implementation plans
identified below.
The National Anti-Racism Framework should:
•
acknowledge the systemic and
structural nature of racism, including the
historical and ongoing impacts of settler
colonisation on First Nations peoples
•
be intersectional, community-centric, and
recognise racism as a complex and shifting
phenomenon
•
embed truth-telling and self-determination
for First Nations peoples
•
be adequately, appropriately, and
sustainably funded
•
include mechanisms for co-design and
participation of First Nations peoples and
other negatively racialised communities in
the Framework’s operation
•
set measurable targets as informed by the
needs of First Nations and other negatively
racialised communities
•
identify how the Framework interacts with
other national frameworks, agreements,
and plans, particularly those that address
intersecting forms of discrimination
•
include a monitoring, evaluation, and
learning framework with public reporting
at regular intervals.
2. The Australian Government establish
a National Anti-Racism Taskforce, to be
co-chaired by the Race Discrimination
Commissioner and a Secretary (representing
the Australian Government’s Secretaries
Board), with senior government membership
from across federal, state and territory
jurisdictions, and relevant peak organisations,
to oversee and advise on the implementation
of the National Anti-Racism Framework.
Australian governments fund and work in
partnership with the National Anti-Racism
Taskforce to develop and implement:
a. National Anti-Racism Framework First
Nations Implementation Plan and
b. National Anti-Racism Framework
Implementation Plan.
3. Australian governments, in partnership with
the Coalition of Peaks, develop a nationally
recognised definition of First Nations
cultural safety, with minimum standards, for
application across sectors, including health.
4. Australian governments fully implement
their commitments under the National
Agreement on Closing the Gap, including
to work in genuine partnership with, and
adequately fund, Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander peoples and organisations to
participate in shared decision making across
government portfolios.
5. Australian governments prioritise their
commitment to building the Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander community-controlled
sector and provide ongoing and adequate
funding for the sector and organisations to
deliver culturally safe services, particularly for
rural and remote communities.
6. Australian governments provide adequate
funding to local governments to establish
or improve local anti-racism initiatives and
programs informed by the Framework.
7. The Australian Government fund the
Australian Human Rights Commission to
co-design, with communities that experience
racism, a Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning
Framework (‘MEL Framework’) that operates
for the lifespan of the National Anti-Racism
Framework. This MEL Framework should
complement accountability mechanisms
under the National Agreement on Closing
the Gap. An independent organisation should
then be procured, with guidance from the
Race Discrimination Commissioner and the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social
Justice Commissioner, to undertake the
monitoring, evaluation, and learning with
insight from First Nations and other negatively
racialised communities.
8. The Australian Parliament enact a national
Human Rights Act incorporating findings from
the Australian Human Rights Commission’s
2023 report Free and equal: Revitalising
Australia’s commitment to human rights.
9. The Australian Government
comprehensively incorporate the United
Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples into domestic law, including:
a. taking steps to implement the UNDRIP
into law, policy, and practice
b. working in partnership with Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander peoples
to create a National Action Plan to
implement the UNDRIP
c. independently auditing existing laws,
policies, and practice for compliance
with the UNDRIP.
10. The Racial Discrimination Act 1975
be amended to include a positive duty, to
eliminate racial discrimination,
a. by an employer, business or undertaking
b. in the provision of goods and services,
with a particular focus on health,
education, retail and hospitality, sport,
housing, and financial settings
c. in the access to places and facilities
d. in the provision of land, housing and
other accommodation.
11. The Racial Discrimination Act 1975
be amended to provide powers to the
Australian Human Rights Commission to
assess compliance with the positive duty in
recommendation 10 and for enforcement.
This includes providing the Australian Human
Rights Commission with the power and
funding to:
a. undertake assessments of the extent to
which an organisation has complied with
the duty, and issue compliance notices
if it considers that an organisation has
failed to comply
b. enter into agreements/enforceable
undertakings with the organisation
c. apply to the Court for an order requiring
compliance with the duty.
12. Australian governments introduce
effective legal protections against online hate,
with particular attention given to regulation
and enforcement against, and liability of,
digital platforms. These protections should be
informed by consultation with First Nations
and other negatively racialised communities.
13. The Australian Government take
immediate steps to ensure that migration and
citizenship laws comply with international
human rights law, with particular attention
given to inequities experienced by negatively
racialised people seeking asylum, and refugees
and migrants.
14. The Australian Government consider
options for legal reform that are not already
addressed with or under recommendations
10-11 on the introduction of a positive duty to
eliminate racism, including but not limited to:
a. addressing systemic and institutional
racism experienced by First Nations and
other negatively racialised people
b. addressing religious-based
discrimination
c. addressing intersectional experiences of
racism
d. eliminating racism as is required
under Australia’s obligations under
the International Convention for the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination.
15. The Australian Government review the
effectiveness of current protections against
exploitation in employment and migration
legislation, and develop further strategies to
address unlawful arrangements experienced
by migrants in precarious work, particularly
those on temporary visas including people
seeking asylum and international students.
16. The Australian Government establish
an independent review of counter-terrorism
laws, policies, and practices to investigate
potential discriminatory application and effect
on different communities and to recommend
ways to address it.
17. The Australian Government investigate
options for legal protections against caste
discrimination, including potential reform of
existing legislation.
Workplaces and
Employment
18. All employers ensure that senior
leadership have responsibility for
organisational change on intersecting forms
of discrimination, including racism, and that
it is not solely placed on Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander and other negatively
racialised employees.
19. Medium and large employers in all
sectors develop internal workplace anti-racism
strategies. Strategies must include measures
for preventing and responding to racism in
the workplace, as an interim measure until
recommendation 10 is implemented.
20. Employers, including governments,
commit to the development and
implementation of ongoing, mandatory
workplace anti-racism training, resources,
and educational materials with anti-racism
organisations or practitioners.
21. Medium and large employers in all sectors
develop an internal cultural safety framework
for First Nations staff. This should complement
their internal anti-racism strategies for all
staff including non-Indigenous staff who
experience racism.
22. Medium and large employers in all
sectors develop, implement, monitor, and
evaluate strategies for hiring, promotion,
and retention of staff identifying as First
Nations and from other negatively racialised
backgrounds to increase representation in
the workforce, particularly in leadership and
senior roles.
23. Australian governments incorporate
cultural safety codes of practice into
workplace health and safety legislation.
24. Australian governments establish a
cross-sector First Nations Workforce
Development Strategy that incorporates
data sharing agreements and accountability
mechanisms.
25. Australian governments fund the
Australian Human Rights Commission to
convene a national council of state and
territory anti-discrimination and human
rights bodies, work, health, and safety
agencies, and relevant peak organisations
to develop nationally consistent standards
for employers and employees to report
experiences of racism and racial discrimination
in the workplace.
26. The Independent Parliamentary
Standards Commission develop behavioural
codes of conduct for all Australian
Parliamentarians and staff that take a
zero-tolerance approach to racism
with appropriate sanctions. Australian
Parliamentarians and their staff be required
to complete regular anti-racism training that
addresses workplace behaviour and prevents
racism in all public communications.
Education and
Public Awareness
27. Australian governments fund a holistic
cultural safety and anti-racism review of
existing policies and practices that affect
staff and students in primary and secondary
schools, through consultation with children
and young people. The findings must inform
the development and implementation of
cultural safety and anti-racism reforms.
28. Australian governments commission
and fund comprehensive mandatory
professional development for primary and
secondary school staff (including leadership
staff members) to build schools’ capacity
to identify, prevent, and manage incidents
of racism and develop the skills, tools, and
capability to have discussions about racism
and its effects in contemporary Australia.
29. Australian governments and education
providers (early childhood to tertiary)
co-design and incorporate into curricula
nationally consistent anti-racism resources and
educational materials for staff and students
that focus on recognising and rejecting racism:
in partnership with Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander organisations and
practitioners, including material about
the historical and ongoing impacts
of settler colonisation. This should be
supplemented by local, place-based
materials
a. b. in partnership with non-Indigenous anti-
racism experts from negatively racialised
communities, including material
about Australia’s migration histories,
contemporary forms of
racism, and ongoing impacts of
discriminatory policies.
30. Australian governments and education
providers (early childhood to tertiary)
implement curricula reform:
a. in partnership with Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander organisations and
practitioners to embed First Nations
knowledges, scholarship, and texts
across all disciplines
b. on the advice of other negatively
racialised organisations and
practitioners to better integrate
knowledges, scholarship, and texts
authored by non-Indigenous negatively
racialised people.
31. Australian governments and education
providers (early childhood to tertiary) co-
design with community experts, a nationally
consistent, effective, comprehensive, and
culturally safe mechanism for students,
staff, families, and communities to safely
and without fear of repercussions, report
experiences of racism across educational
settings and improve accountability, support,
and redress services.
32. Australian governments provide ongoing
funding to the Australian Human Rights
Commission to develop and maintain its
public awareness and education campaigns
and materials to improve racial literacy and
understandings of intersecting forms of
discrimination, in partnership with
community-led organisations.
33. Australian governments fund public
awareness and education on anti-racism for
the community sporting sector, in partnership
with the Australian Sports Commission.
34. Australian governments increase funding
for research to address gaps in existing
research and contribute to the evidence base
on the efficacy of anti-racism initiatives and
interventions in education settings, including
systemic reforms.
Justice
35. Australian governments raise the
minimum age of criminal responsibility to 14
years in all jurisdictions, without exception.
36. The Australian Government establish
an independent mechanism to monitor and
report on the status of the implementation of
the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths
in Custody. This role should be overseen by
the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social
Justice Commissioner, with adequate funding
from the Australian Government.
37. All Australian governments expedite
putting into place national preventive
mechanisms for all places of detention,
consistent with Australia’s obligations under
the Optional Protocol to the Convention
against Torture, the Convention on the Rights
of the Child, and the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights.
38. Australian governments conduct an
external audit that investigates systemic
racism, including police misconduct and
negligence, and develop holistic reforms to
institutional practices across all stages of the
justice process from initial contact with law
enforcement through to post-prison release.
39. Australian governments fund existing, or
develop new, community-specific approaches
to diversion and rehabilitation for people in
contact with the justice system, including
community-based approaches to sentencing,
alternatives to custody and court processes,
and restorative and transformative justice
solutions.
40. Australian governments explore
and fund community-informed and early
intervention solutions beyond civil and criminal
penalties to address far-right extremism and
white supremacy in communities, particularly
as they intersect with other forms of
discrimination. These solutions must include
centring community wellbeing, providing
redress for the harms experienced by targeted
individuals and communities, and a focus on
atrocity-prevention.
41. Australian governments provide ongoing
funding to legal and support services,
including community-controlled services, to
provide culturally safe and trauma-informed
access to justice for First Nations and other
negatively racialised people.
42. Australian governments increase funding
to community-controlled agencies that
support First Nations children and families in
order to reduce child protection interventions.
43. Australian governments review the
adequacy and effectiveness of any anti-
racism and cultural safety training within the
justice system, including for police, legal aid
providers, first responders, support services,
and the courts, and implement mandatory and
ongoing anti-racism and First Nations cultural
safety training for leadership and staff.
44. Australian governments, alongside police,
relevant complaints-handling mechanisms,
and non-government organisations, implement
co-ordinated strategies to address personal
and structural barriers to reporting experiences
of racism.
45. Australian governments support
comprehensive, community-led data
collection consistent with the principles of
Indigenous Data Sovereignty on interactions
with the justice system, including arrests,
outcomes of justice, and the experiences of
individuals within court processes. This is to
be completed alongside work to implement
recommendation 59 on a National
Anti-Racism Data Plan.
Media and the Arts
46. Media organisations adopt guidelines
that are grounded in an anti-racist approach
to reporting about First Nations and other
negatively racialised communities, such as
Media Diversity Australia’s Race Reporting
Handbook.
47. The Australian Government strengthen
regulation of media organisations on reporting
related to First Nations and other negatively
racialised communities, informed by the
Australian Human Rights Commission’s
forthcoming research on media regulation
and standards.
48. Australian governments and media
organisations provide ongoing funding for
community media outlets, including for First
Nations-controlled media outlets.
49. Digital platforms develop stronger,
transparent protocols to allow users to report
and remove racist content, including mis- and
disinformation. These protocols should be
informed by the Commission’s forthcoming
research on interventions to address mis- and
disinformation and online hate.
50. Australian governments, media and
arts organisations, and other private sector
organisations fund campaigns, initiatives, and
projects that are community-led and take
a strengths-based approach to storytelling
about First Nations and other negatively
racialised communities.
51. Media and arts organisations conduct
regular audits of content to assess biases
and gaps in the representation of diverse
voices, and to collect and publish metrics on
workplace representation of First Nations
and other negatively racialised communities.
This must include an assessment of whether
media and arts organisations are meeting
content targets and targets to improve the
representation of First Nations and other
negatively racialised staff.
52. The Australian Government establish
a research fund to better understand
experiences of racism and effective anti-
racism strategies to create a more accessible,
diverse, equitable, and representative media
and arts landscape in Australia.
Health
Data
53. Australian governments identify racism
as an urgent national health priority with
significant impacts on the physical and mental
wellbeing of First Nations and other negatively
racialised communities. Solutions should
prioritise partnership and shared decision
making with at-risk communities, including
people with disability and older persons.
54. Australian governments mandate
comprehensive cultural safety and anti-racism
education throughout all health curricula, and
within all workforce practice standards and
regulation requirements.
55. Australian governments fund healthcare providers to partner with First Nations peoples on the integration of traditional healing practices that acknowledge historical trauma into mainstream healthcare systems.
58. The Australian Government fund a body comprising First Nations experts on Indigenous Data Sovereignty to partner with First Nations communities to embed Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Indigenous Data Governance on a national and state and territory level.
59. The Australian Government adopt and
fund a National Anti-Racism Data Plan (‘the
Plan’). This Plan must outline a national
approach to collecting, using, and managing
data on experiences, reports, and impacts of
racism across states and territories and local
jurisdictions. To achieve this, the Australian
Government resource the Race Discrimination
Commissioner to: a. establish an advisory group
comprising anti-racism data experts
or practitioners from First Nations and
other negatively racialised communities,
and representatives from government
agencies to oversee the Plan
56. Australian governments provide
adequate funding to develop targeted
programs to address health issues
disproportionately affecting at risk-groups
within First Nations and other negatively
racialised communities, particularly in rural
and remote communities.
b. inform and develop the substance of the
Plan on the advice of the advisory group
c. lead consultations with communities,
academics, and data experts to inform
the priorities, outcomes, and other
details of the Plan
d. ensure findings and outcomes from
recommendations 58 and 60-63 are
incorporated into the Plan.
57. Australian governments provide
adequate funding for interpreter services to be
provided as standard within services, including
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander language
interpreters. This funding must also cover
training on effective interpreter use and the
recruitment of interpreters to meet evolving
language needs.
60. The Australian Government and relevant
non-government organisations commit to
collecting data about experiences of racism,
including systemic and structural racism, in
ongoing national surveys. The Australian
Government provide appropriate funding
where necessary to relevant agencies and non-
government organisations to collect this data.
61. Australian governments fund the Australian
Human Rights Commission, anti-discrimination
and human rights bodies, and work, health, and
safety agencies to collect intersectional data
under their respective mandates. The Australian
Human Rights Commission be tasked to work
in partnership with these bodies to develop an
approach with advice from the body established
under recommendation 58 on collecting
disaggregated, intersectional data on complaints
and reports, particularly as they relate to race/
ethnicity and racism in employment settings.
62. Australian governments commit
ongoing and adequate funding to existing or
prospective third-party reporting mechanisms
that take an anti-racist approach to collecting
data about racism as it affects different
communities to continue collecting this data
and to strengthen or establish initiatives,
including providing support services (e.g.
psychological and legal support) to targets or
witnesses of racism.
63. The Australian Government review the
Australian Standards for the Classification for
Cultural and Ethnic Groups and the Standards
for Statistics on Cultural and Language
Diversity and develop new standards on the
collection of administrative data about ethnic
identity by adequately funding:
a. the Australian Human Rights
Commission to lead independent
consultations on community
understandings of race and ethnicity,
with supporting research
b. the Australian Bureau of Statistics to
revise the data standards, informed
by the research in (a) and from other
relevant stakeholders.
Outcomes from these processes should
inform whether a question on ethnic identity
should be introduced into future Australian
Censuses. This may involve the establishment
and funding of a Working Group, convened by
the Australia Bureau of Statistics and as part
of work under the National Anti-Racism Data
Plan, to develop a question.