Guarding against law and order excess
Last year, Kumanjayi Langdon, a proud and respected 59-year-old Warlpiri man from a large family, died in police custody in Darwin.
His crime? Police suspected he was drinking in a local park. He wasn’t causing any disruption and was polite and cooperative at all times.
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Ms Dhu's death in custody: The shocking footage that Australia needs to see
Dragged from her cell. Handcuffed and paralysed. Hauled, dying, into the back of a police truck. This week Australia may be confronted, yet again, with images and footage of the justice system failing Aboriginal people, with devastating results.
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A modest pledge won't erase the stain of Manus and Nauru
Our Prime Minister, Immigration Minister and Foreign Minister have spent this week in New York attending high-profile global summits on refugees. They arrived insisting that the Australian government's policies were the "best in the world", but they'll leave having offered little more than self-congratulations.
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Surgical sterilisation shouldn't be the cost of correcting a transgender person's birth certificate
While the nation's eyes have been on federal parliament bickering over the marriage equality plebiscite this week, another critical LGBTI debate began in the Victorian Legislative Assembly.
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Enough is enough: bring Manus Island detainees to Australia
The PNG government has conceded that the Manus facility must close. But while tearing down the fences would be a significant step, the real issue is not the future of the facility itself but of the 854 men trapped inside it.
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Offshore detention was destined to fail and the collapse might be closer than you think
Australia’s offshore camps are a house of cards. They’re unsustainable and liable to collapse amid increasing corporate aversion to complicity in abuse, legal uncertainty and human despair.
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Northern Territory detention royal commission shows Malcolm Turnbull can lead on human rights
Prime Minister Malcom Turnbull's announcement of a royal commission into the abuse of children in Northern Territory jails gives an insight into his instincts on human rights.
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The youth justice system is a slippery slope of failure
Monday night's Four Corners episode also revealed that cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment is endemic in its principal youth detention facility.
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For everyone's sake, Ferrovial must withdraw from Manus Island and Nauru detention contract
Every day that the Manus Island and Nauru camps stay open, people suffer. Every day that Ferrovial operates those centres, it is exposed to risk, writes the HRLC's Rachel Ball.
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The Universal Periodic Review and human rights progress: A case study from Australia
The Universal Periodic Review (UPR) has received mixed reviews about its effectiveness as a mechanism to achieve positive human rights change. However, the case study of Australia demonstrates the capacity of the UPR to open space for dialogue and facilitate positive, albeit modest, human rights progress and monitoring.
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We’ve been silent on injustice for too long
Governments around Australia are again playing politics with the lives and liberty of Indigenous people writes the HRLC’s Ruth Barson and Julian Cleary from Amnesty International Australia.
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Same-sex apology draws a line in the sand
We shouldn't underestimate the human toll of the 'homosexual conduct' laws. William Leonard from Gay and Lesbian Health Victoria and HRLC's Anna Brown explain how the Victorian Government's State Apology is also about publicly acknowledging and valuing the diversity of sexual expression.
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Find your way: Law Week
Law Week is a time to pause and reflect on how well the law is serving the community, writes Managing Director of Victoria Legal Aid, Bevan Warner.
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Manus: What Australia Needs to Do Now
The PNG Supreme Court's unanimous ruling highlights the harmfulness of Australia's treatment of asylum seekers in the Manus Island detention centre.
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Western Australians should not tolerate injustice
It’s been twenty-five years since the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, yet WA’s justice system remains utterly out of balance – it is destroying families and communities, writes the HRLC’s Ruth Barson.
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Whither universal suffrage? The case for lowering the voting age in Australia
The article below was written for the special 2016 Children Rights Edition of the HRLC Monthly Bulletin, Rights Agenda, developed in collaboration with the National Children’s and Youth Law Centre, King & Wood Mallesons and the Human Rights Law Centre.
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Age of consent and the criminal law
This article was written for the special 2016 Children Rights Edition of the HRLC Monthly Bulletin, Rights Agenda, developed in collaboration with the National Children’s and Youth Law Centre, King & Wood Mallesons and the Human Rights Law Centre.
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NSW anti-protest laws are part of a corrosive national trend
NSW's new anti-protest laws are the latest example of governments in Australia steadily chipping away at our democracy's foundations, writes the HRLC's Hugh de Kretser.
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It’s time to safeguard our democracy
The Human Rights Law Centre report, Safeguarding Democracy, documents the unmistakable trend of governments at national and state level steadily chipping away at free speech, a free press, peaceful assembly, open government and the rule of law - some of the foundations of our democracy.
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Attacks on environmental advocacy are part of a disturbing undemocratic trend
Attacks on environmental groups are part of an unmistakable broader trend of governments eroding many of the vital foundations our democracy, writes the HRLC's Hugh de Kretser.
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The legality of solitary confinement and the direction Australian policy should take
Kelsey Montgomery a law student at the University of Western Australia. She did a placement with the Human Rights Law Centre at the end of 2015 and has since written this piece looking at the legality of solitary confinement.
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Holocaust remembrance teaches lessons for humanity
If Australia is serious about protecting human rights, it should codify and enforce them, writes the HRLC's Ruth Barson on Holocaust Remembrance Day.
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Ms Dhu inquest: Western Australia must come to terms with some hard truths
These are the questions that should be plaguing the WA government after an inquest heard of a brutal and inhuman death in custody, writes the HRLC's Ruth Barson.
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Reining in the NT's paperless arrest laws a must
Kumanjayi Langdon died alone in a Darwin police cell, after being locked up under the Northern Territory’s controversial “paperless arrest” laws. His crime was drinking in a public place, an offence that carries a $74 fine.
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Safe access to abortion clinics must be guaranteed by law
Legislation to create safe access zones around abortion clinics is another welcome step towards ridding our society of all forms of violence against women.
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Australian prisons need to improve to measure up to the UN's Mandela Rules
Australia is locking up more people than ever before and many of Australia's prison practices breach the UN's new standards, writes the HRLC's Ruth Barson.
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Will women ever be able to have it all?
If we want justice for women in the workplace we need to see work-life balance as an important issue for men as well as women - Catherine Branson QC's 2015 Law and Justice Address.
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Australia needs to lift its game to strengthen its bid for a seat on the UN's Human Rights Council
Australia should “lift its game” on human rights at home and abroad to strengthen its bid for a seat on the United Nations Human Rights Council, says a report by Human Rights Watch and the Human Rights Law Centre.
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Look at these devastating images again and let the horror motivate you to challenge injustice
Don't let the crocodile tears of our politicians persuade you otherwise - punishing the survivors of risky voyages will achieve nothing but more suffering, writes our Director of Communications, Tom Clarke.
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Cruel and costly boats policy: there is a viable alternative
Successive governments have been vying to draft the harshest refugee policies. We can do better than this, writes Hugh de Kretser.
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Aboriginal deaths in custody: NT's 'paperless arrest' police powers need urgent review
Another Aboriginal person was locked up for minor offences and died in custody. On these bare facts alone, as a nation we should be outraged, writes Eddie Cubillo.
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Indonesia lifting ban on foreign journalists is a step forward for human rights
The HRLC's Tom Clarke looks at whether the back-peddling has already begun on Indonesia's announcement that it will let foreign journalists into West Papua.
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State sponsored homophobia in Oceania: progress, emerging challenges & future directions
The HRLC’s Anna Brown contributed an essay on progress on the rights of lesbian, gay and bisexual people in the Oceania region to ILGA's 10th edition of its State-Sponsored Homophobia Report.
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Australia needs to be transparent on armed drones
The Australian government should come clean on its role in the US drone program before buying its own, writes the HRLC's Emily Howie.
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Bali 9: Time to death penalty-proof our AFP
Chan & Sukumaran have been denied the chance to learn from their mistakes. We owe it to them to learn from ours, writes the HRLC's Daniel Webb.
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Violence against women must be framed as the human rights violation that it is
While ongoing commitments and efforts to secure the rights of the world’s women and girls are commendable, on no measure can we say that our work is done, writes Natasha Stott Despoja, Australia’s Ambassador for Women and Girls.
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Attacks on our Human Rights Commission are part of a broader disturbing trend
The federal government is actively undermining a range of vital checks and balances and stifling criticism of its actions. This is corrosive for democracy and human rights, writes the HRLC's Hugh de Kretser.
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The year ahead in human rights
Human Rights Law Centre Executive Director, Hugh de Kretser, outlines what 2015 may have in store for human rights in Australia.
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The year in review and ahead for LGBTI rights in Victoria
There’s no question that 2014 was a big year for LGBTI equality in Victoria, but there’s still unfinished business on our wish list for 2015 writes the HRLC’s Anna Brown.
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Decency to one group of refugees shouldn't be contingent on licensing Scott Morrison to brutalise others
Scott Morrison's Migration and Maritime Powers Bill is a truly appalling piece of legislation. Its repugnance is surpassed only by the tactics used to secure its passage, writes the HRLC's Daniel Webb.
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