Access and Equity: Inquiry into the responsiveness of Australian Government services to Australia’s culturally and linguistically diverse population
Access and Equity: Inquiry into the responsiveness of Australian Government services to Australia’s culturally and linguistically diverse population
Australian Human Rights Commission Submission
to the Access and Equity Inquiry Panel
24 February 2012
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Table
of contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Recommendations
- 3. The richness of Australia’s diversity
- 4. A human rights-based approach
- 5. The conceptual framework for ‘access and equity’
- 6. Alignment of Access and Equity Strategy with other Australian Government Agendas
- 7. Governance arrangements for the Access and Equity Strategy
- 8. Access and Equity Reporting
1 Introduction
-
The Australian Human Rights Commission makes this submission to the Access
and Equity Inquiry Panel in its inquiry into the responsiveness of Australian
Government services to Australia’s culturally and linguistically diverse
population. -
The Commission welcomes the independent inquiry into Australian Government
services to ensure they are responsive to the needs of Australia’s
culturally and linguistically diverse population and appreciates the opportunity
to provide comments. This inquiry, to strengthen the Australian
Government’s Access and Equity Framework, is a key initiative of The
People of Australia Policy. - The Commission reaffirms its support for a Commonwealth access and equity
policy aimed at ensuring that Australians from all cultural and linguistic
backgrounds are able to participate as full members of the community and have
equitable access to Australian Government services and programs.
2 Recommendations
-
The Commission recommends that a human rights-based approach be adopted
through the Access and Equity Strategy – acknowledging the importance of
the principles of non-discrimination, equality, participation and inclusion
[Recommendation no. 1]. -
The Commission recommends that the accessibility issues faced by Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander peoples also be considered as part of a
whole-of-government approach to the Access and Equity Strategy, and that this
occurs in consultation and partnership with Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander peoples [Recommendation no. 2]. -
The Commission recommends the adoption of a new language framework for the
Access and Equity Strategy, which more specifically references people from
culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds as well as Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander peoples [Recommendation no. 3]. -
The Commission recommends that the Access and Equity Report includes
references to how the recommendations arising from community consultations
undertaken by the Federation of Ethnic Communities’ Councils of Australia
(FECCA) are reflected in the design, planning, communication, delivery and
contracting of policies, programs and services across all Australian Government
departments and agencies [Recommendation no. 4]. -
Consistent with Recommendation number 4, the Commission recommends that the
Access and Equity Report includes references to how the recommendations arising
from community consultations with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
have been taken into account by Australian Government departments and agencies
[Recommendation no. 5]. -
The Commission recommends that clearer and more measurable performance
standards, appropriate to all reporting departments and agencies, are provided
as part of the Access and Equity Strategy and that these performance standards
are embedded into the reporting template, to ensure they are addressed in
responses [Recommendation no. 6]. -
The Commission recommends that the Access and Equity Inquiry Panel consult
with Reconciliation Australia about their lessons and experiences in
implementing the Reconciliation Action Plan process [Recommendation no. 7]. -
The Commission recommends that the body responsible for the oversight of the
Access and Equity Strategy in the future regularly monitors the outcomes of
consultations and evaluations with the broader community regarding accessibility
of services. Further, the Commission recommends that Australian Government
departments and agencies encourage the partnership of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander peoples and people from culturally and linguistically diverse
backgrounds in the design and evaluation of their policies, programs and
services, to ensure they are accessible – and that these partnerships are
appropriately resourced [Recommendation no. 8]. -
The Commission recommends that, in principle, all contracted service
providers be required, through their contractual arrangements, to report on
their implementation of the Access and Equity Framework
[Recommendation no. 9]. - The Commission recommends that the Access and Equity Report continues to
include information from Commonwealth, state and territory and local governments
[Recommendation no. 10].
3. The richness of
Australia’s diversity
-
The Commission welcomed the release of Australia’s Multicultural
Policy, The People of Australia, in February 2011 and the commitment of
the Australian Government to recognise and maximise the positive effects of
migration to Australia, of which there are
many.[1] -
The Commission notes that cultural, linguistic and religiously diverse
communities are not confined to niche sections of the Australian community. As The People of Australia Policy notes, 44% of people in Australia were
born overseas or have a parent who was. Over 260 languages are spoken in
Australia and people in Australia identify with more than 270
ancestries.[2] -
The Commission recognises the contribution of the diaspora community (in
Australia and abroad) to Australia’s relationships with Europe, the Middle
East, Africa and the immediate Asia-Pacific region and the role migration has
played in Australia’s long-term productive capacity. -
The Commission also recognises the important contribution of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander peoples and their cultures to the fabric of the
Australian nation. -
The Commission has statutory obligations that involve monitoring
Australia’s compliance with international human rights treaties to which
Australia is a party. This includes functions conferred under the Racial
Discrimination Act 1975 (Cth) (RDA) and that relate to the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination 1966 (ICERD). -
In this context, the Commission – and the Race Discrimination
Commissioner and the Social Justice Commissioner in particular – has a
mandate to consider human rights issues concerning both Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander peoples and people from cultural, linguistic and religiously
diverse backgrounds. As such, the Commission has a distinct perspective on the
commonality of issues affecting both of these constituencies. - While this submission is focused on issues relating to Australia’s
culturally and linguistically diverse population, the Commission notes that
reconciliation, multiculturalism and access and equity have mutually reinforcing
objectives which operate concurrently in celebrating the diversity and cultural
richness of Australia.
4. A human rights-based
approach
-
The Commission advocates a human rights-based approach to multiculturalism,
access and equity and reconciliation. -
A human rights-based approach provides a principled framework to guide
policy development. It also enables governments, civil society, communities and
individuals to monitor progress over time in reducing inequality and
discrimination based on race, ethnicity, colour, culture, language or religion.
It offers an objective way of balancing competing interests and a common set of
shared values based on the recognition of the inherent dignity of all human
beings. In particular, it seeks to ensure the participation of people affected
by policy interventions, with a view to utilising human rights principles to
ensure empowerment of communities. -
In the context of access and equity, the human rights principles of equality
and non-discrimination are particularly relevant. The Commission notes that
achieving equality does not always mean that people are treated the same way.
While ‘formal equality’ involves treating everyone the same,
‘substantive equality’ allows for beneficial treatment of
disadvantaged groups so that they can, in the end, enjoy their human rights
equally. This is recognised in relevant international and domestic legislation. -
The ICERD contains principles of equality and non-discrimination. Article
1(1) of ICERD defines racial discrimination in a way that ensures that the
prohibition of discrimination includes discrimination on the basis of
one’s ethnic and national origin, extending discrimination beyond a
limited biological concept of race. -
Article 2(1) of ICERD extends the prohibition on discrimination by providing
States with a positive duty to develop a policy which seeks to eliminate racism
and promote understanding among all races, setting out the aims of such a policy
and how it should be implemented. Access and equity strategies adopted by
successive Australian Governments can be seen as a response to this positive
duty. -
Articles 1(4) and 2(2) of ICERD recognise that a State may not only need to
prohibit discrimination, but may also need to take positive steps to ensure that
groups who are disadvantaged because of their race, including ethnicity, will be
put into a position where they can enjoy their rights to the same extent as
others. -
The RDA responds directly to Australia’s obligations under ICERD and
promotes equality before the law for people of all races, national and ethnic
backgrounds. It prohibits discrimination in areas of employment, education,
sport, buying goods and using services. The RDA also makes racial vilification
against the law. -
Other international conventions which Australia has signed mandate the
protection of religious beliefs and cultural identity. The International
Convention on Civil and Political Rights 1966 (ICCPR) protects the right to
freedom of religion and belief. It provides that everyone has the right to adopt
the religion or belief of their choice, and to practice it in private or in
public. -
The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
1966 (ICESCR) protects the right of all peoples to self-determination and to
take part in cultural life. These protections are enhanced by a range of other
United Nations declarations and resolutions. -
Access and equity and multiculturalism provide policy frameworks that
complement Australia’s human rights obligations and enhancing
Australia’s community experience of cultural, linguistic and religious
diversity. - The Commission recommends that a human rights-based approach be adopted
through the Access and Equity Strategy – acknowledging the importance of
the principles of non-discrimination, equality, participation and inclusion
[Recommendation no. 1].
5. The conceptual
framework for ‘access and equity’
-
Access and equity has been in place as a policy framework since the 1980s as
a means to encourage Australian Government programs and services to consider
barriers facing people based on race, religion, language or culture. - Early statements made about the first official access and equity strategy in
1989 remain relevant today. The Australian Government’s National Agenda
for a Multicultural Australia: Sharing Our Future (1989)
stated:...our institutions are now required to respond to the needs
of a culturally and linguistically diverse society...It is in the interest of all Australians that the three tiers of Government
– Commonwealth, State and local – intervene where necessary to
manage our diversity in the interests of cultural tolerance, social justice and
economic efficiency. We need to plan...The reality of cultural diversity requires a positive policy response...
Mechanisms must be developed which will generate change of the appropriate
kind from within the organisations. To be effective, attitudinal change must
also occur to propel and sustain the structural changes...The objective [of the Access and Equity Strategy] is to make Commonwealth
departments responsive and to assess whether they are responding equitably
– and efficiently – to a culturally diverse clientele. Are programs
designed in such a way as to ensure that all Australians can gain access to
them? Are services being targeted efficiently to those in greatest need? Are
they being delivered in culturally appropriate ways?...By seeking to change the
management culture of our public administration, Access and Equity represents
the Government’s commitment to sustained structural change of the most
fundamental type.[3] -
The Commission considers that the Access and Equity Strategy should be based
on the principles of non-discrimination, equality, participation and inclusion
and should address the needs of people from culturally and linguistically
diverse backgrounds and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. -
The Access and Equity Strategy is currently directed at people with
culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. The Commission recommends
that the accessibility issues faced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
peoples also be considered as part of a whole-of-government approach to the
Access and Equity Strategy, and that this occurs in consultation and partnership
with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples [Recommendation no. 2]. -
This will ensure a more inclusive approach to providing responsive and
accessible programs and services to all segments of Australia’s culturally
diverse community. -
The Commission considers that the term ‘access and equity’, as
it specifically applies to Australia’s culturally and linguistically
diverse population, is unlikely to be readily understood by the broad community.
The generality of the language means that these terms could easily be
misunderstood to mean how Australian Government programs and services are made
accessible to particular groups within the community – for example, people
with a disability. -
The Commission recommends the adoption of a new language framework for
the Access and Equity Strategy, which more specifically references people from
culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds as well as Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander peoples [Recommendation no. 3]. - These changes will provide greater clarity about the meaning of Access and
Equity Strategy for government and the broader community.
6. Alignment of Access
and Equity Strategy with other Australian Government Agendas
-
The Commission notes that there is potential for the Access and Equity
Strategy to overlap with a range of other government policies or frameworks.
These include: - From a human rights perspective, a key theme common to each of these agendas
is the issue of substantive equality for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
peoples and culturally and linguistically diverse communities.
- The Commission considers that it would be beneficial to better integrate and
align the Access and Equity Strategy with these other Australian Government
agendas. Currently these policies operate within distinctive governance
structures, with gaps between their coverage and goals.
- Conceptually, the Access and Equity Strategy and the Social Inclusion Agenda
are inextricably linked. The most recent Access and Equity Report notes they are
connected “through the delivery of programs and services that support
social inclusion outcomes for disadvantaged
Australians.”[8]
- The Australian Government has adopted a set of principles to guide the
Social Inclusion Agenda, aspirations which include: reducing disadvantage;
increasing social, civic and economic participation; and developing a greater
voice, combined with greater
responsibility.[9] These aspirations
are directly relevant to culturally and linguistically diverse communities, who
face significant barriers to
employment,[10] as well as to
accessing safe and affordable housing – two key determinants of social
disadvantage and marginalisation. While the Social Inclusion Agenda is committed
to helping vulnerable new arrivals and
refugees,[11] it does not identify
culturally and linguistically diverse communities within its priority
groups.[12]
- Similarly, Closing the Gap for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
with respect to life expectancy, child mortality, access to early childhood
education, educational achievement and employment outcomes is identified as a
priority in the Australian Government’s Social Inclusion Agenda, but
receives no consideration in the Access and Equity Strategy.
- In terms of governance arrangements, the Commission notes that the Social
Inclusion Agenda is located within and managed by the Department of Prime
Minister Cabinet (PM&C); The People of Australia Policy and Access
and Equity Strategy are within the portfolio of the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship (DIAC); the Human Rights Framework sits with the
Attorney-General’s Department (AGD); and the Department of Families,
Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs (FaHCSIA) is responsible for
Indigenous policy co-ordination, programs and the promotion of
reconciliation.[13] The Close the
Gap agenda is governed by a number of Indigenous-specific National Partnership
Agreements through the Coalition of Australian Governments
(COAG).[14]
- The Commission considers that a whole-of-government approach to policy
development and service provision is required across these areas. This would
involve the Australian Government developing, monitoring and evaluating policy
in a holistic way that recognises that the right to equality is the foundation
underpinning all of these agendas.
- To this end, the Commission notes its previous recommendations to the Joint
Standing Committee on Migration’s Inquiry into Multiculturalism in
Australia, that the Social Inclusion Board:
- include appropriate membership from culturally and linguistically diverse
communities to ensure that issues facing communities that are marginalised and
suffer discrimination are addressed in the social inclusion policy process
- formalise strategic relationships with peak organisations including the
Commission, Australian Multicultural Council, the Federation of Ethnic
Communities’ Councils of Australia (FECCA), National Congress of
Australia’s First Peoples, Refugee Council of Australia and Settlement
Council of Australia to ensure a coordinated and holistic approach to social
inclusion, multiculturalism and reconciliation
- conduct strategic research and disaggregated data collection by ethnicity
and gender, in relation to culturally and linguistically diverse communities'
access to health, housing, education, legal and employment services including
experiences of racial discrimination.
- include appropriate membership from culturally and linguistically diverse
- The Commission also recommended that the Charter of Public Service in a
Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Australia be reviewed with reference
to the Social Inclusion Agenda, Australian Human Rights Framework and
Australia’s Multicultural Policy. Particular attention should be given to
compliance measures within Government and the need for publicly funded services
by non-government
organisations.[15]
- In addition to the Commission’s recommendations in this submission,
these suggestions provide opportunities to better align the Access and Equity
Strategy and the Social Inclusion Agenda.
7. Governance
arrangements for the Access and Equity Strategy
-
The Access and Equity Strategy does not have a legislative basis and is
currently administered by DIAC, which coordinates the reporting process.
Additionally, the Access and Equity Report is published every two years, despite
departments and agencies providing annual contributions to the Access and Equity
Report. -
The Commission notes that The People of Australia Policy states the
Australian Government will ask the Australian Multicultural Council to –
among other tasks – manage the Access and Equity Strategy from 2012, in
order to help strengthen the independence of reporting and to provide for a more
robust reporting framework. -
The Access and Equity Inquiry Panel queries whether the level of authority
for the Access and Equity Strategy, which is endorsed by the Australian
Government, is adequate. -
The Commission notes that a Commonwealth access and equity policy has
enjoyed continual support from successive Australian Governments since the
1980s, without having a legislative basis. - However, the benefits of establishing authority for the Access and Equity
Strategy in legislation would include:
- enshrining access and equity principles in legislation
- establishing a structure that would drive some key objectives of the
Strategy, including the role of the body administering the Strategy, the
Australian Multicultural Council
- facilitating broad community participation through the establishment of
advisory committees with broad representation, to provide further advice and
support to the development of the Strategy as required
- establishing accountability mechanisms
- following good practice established by some States in committing to the
advancement of access and equity through legislation
- providing a basis for multi-partisan commitment to the Strategy.
- enshrining access and equity principles in legislation
- Disadvantages of establishing legislative authority may include:
- losing flexibility in how access and equity may be administered by making it
more difficult to amend implementation and reporting processes
- being administratively onerous
- being an over-regulatory response.
- losing flexibility in how access and equity may be administered by making it
- The Commission believes that this review should provide suitable advice
about whether a legislative basis is required or whether in fact the current
arrangements are sufficient, and attention should be focussed on implementation
and application.
- The Access and Equity Inquiry Panel queries whether DIAC is the appropriate
agency to administer the Access and Equity Strategy and to coordinate the Access
and Equity Report, and questions whether another agency may be better placed to
do these tasks.
- In the Commission’s view, it is critical that an authoritative
governance mechanism exists within the Australian Public Service to ensure that
the Access and Equity Strategy successfully permeates the work of the Australian
Government as an effective policy framework. Such a mechanism should facilitate
a process that ensures that access and equity principles become embedded in the
attitude and culture of all Australian Government departments and agencies.
- The governance mechanism would ideally have adequate authority to promote
access and equity principles across the work of the Australian Public Service,
to provide high level policy and strategic advice to the Australian Government
about its continued development, and would include enhanced monitoring and
accountability mechanisms.
- The Commission considers that the current arrangement involving the
Australian Multicultural Council, in its oversight capacity of the Access and
Equity Strategy, provides a level of independence that will facilitate more
critical analysis than has been present in Access and Equity Reports to date.
However, the Commission is concerned that there must be adequate support
provided to the Australian Multicultural Council in this role for it to be
effective. This includes both resources and also in ensuring that the Access and
Equity Framework can be implemented in a whole-of-government manner.
- The Commission believes that the role of the Australian Multicultural
Council, may need to be enhanced beyond reporting processes and include:
- greater sharing of good practice examples
- the provision of advice and input into policy areas that raise broad access
and equity issues
- accessing external expertise, for example from the community
sector.
- greater sharing of good practice examples
- Evidence about the operation of the Social Inclusion Board should inform
this inquiry about the appropriate support for a whole-of-government approach to
access and equity.
8. Access and Equity
Reporting
-
As an agency that reports annually under the Access and Equity Strategy, the
Commission is well-placed to provide comments about the current reporting
process, as well as suggestions as to how it may be improved. -
The Commission notes that currently contributions to the Access and Equity
Report are annual, though the Report is published every two years. These
timeframes appear to be appropriate, and balance the need for regular reporting
with the desire to avoid onerous over-regulation. -
The Access and Equity Inquiry Panel queries how the input of FECCA should be
incorporated into the Access and Equity Report. -
Currently, on behalf of the Australian Government, FECCA undertakes annual
community consultations on the issue of accessibility of Australian Government
services to diverse communities. In the most recent Access and Equity Report,
this input was incorporated into Part 3 ‘Federation of Ethnic
Communities’ Council of Australia consultations’ of the Report
through two sections: community consultations and community-government
engagement.[16] FECCA’s
subsequent engagement with five key departments, addressing issues arising from
the consultations, is then summarised. FECCA’s complementary report, The Bigger Picture: joining up solutions to achieve access and
equity[17] is referenced. -
A key finding from FECCA’s work is that there is a need for ongoing
effort to provide accessible and equitable services to culturally and
linguistically diverse communities. -
While it is helpful to know how selected departments act on the
recommendations of FECCA’s community consultations, it would also be
useful to know how the results of these consultations are taken into account by
other Australian Government departments and agencies. -
The Commission recommends that the Access and Equity Report includes
references to how the recommendations arising from community consultations
undertaken by FECCA are reflected in the design, planning, communication,
delivery and contracting of policies, programs and services across all
Australian Government departments and agencies [Recommendation no. 4]. -
Consistent with Recommendation number 4, the Commission recommends that
the Access and Equity Report includes references to how the recommendations
arising from community consultations with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
peoples have been taken into account by Australian Government departments and
agencies [Recommendation no. 5]. -
The Access and Equity Inquiry Panel has asked a range of questions relating
to the purpose of access and equity reporting, how better performance reporting
may be achieved and the inclusion of performance standards. -
The Commission notes that the Access and Equity Strategy currently
encourages and supports all levels of government “to design, deliver,
monitor and evaluate their programs and
services”.[18] -
Under current arrangements, departments and agencies are provided with a
reporting template which seeks input on policies, programs and services and how
they meet the access and equity principles of responsiveness, communication,
accountability and leadership. -
The reporting template provided to departments and agencies encourages
discussion of specific projects and programs. While there are questions under
each principle that aim to address each of the strategies contained in the
Access and Equity Framework, it is unclear as to whether the questions in the
template apply to an individual program or the department or agency as a whole.
The reporting template also does not clearly indicate if answering each of the
questions is optional or mandatory. -
Additionally, the reporting template does not encourage reporting
departments or agencies to identify challenges or obstacles faced in addressing
the strategies, or to identify what steps have been taken to ensure better
consideration of the strategies in the future. -
In the Commission’s view, the Access and Equity Report should ideally
go beyond highlighting good practices and indicate how the Access and Equity
Strategy is being implemented successfully, as well as identify the challenges
that arise. This could be achieved by including questions in the template that
seek to identify challenges and what, if any, strategies are being used to
address those challenges. -
The Commission, for example, could provide additional information about
access and equity issues particularly faced by asylum seekers and refugees, or
by older people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds seeking
or receiving home or residential aged care services. However, the current
template does not provide for this type of feedback. -
The Commission notes that the Social Inclusion Agenda includes a more robust
national social inclusion measurement framework and reporting strategy,
“including public reporting by Commonwealth departments on strategic
change indicators (SCIs) that will show what agencies are doing to improve
social inclusion and how well they are achieving
it”.[19] This approach, which
identifies areas where extra effort is required, as well as successes that can
be built on, could be adopted in relation to access and equity principles. -
The Commission recommends that clearer and more measurable performance
standards, appropriate to all reporting departments and agencies, are provided
as part of the Access and Equity Strategy and that these performance
standards are embedded into the reporting template, to ensure they are addressed
in responses [Recommendation no. 6]. -
While the Access and Equity Strategy has a vital connection to direct
frontline services such as employment, health, welfare, tax and education, the
Strategy has relevance and applicability to the full suite of Australian
Government policies, programs and services. For example, the cultural competency
and responsiveness of departmental and agency staff will affect the
applicability and effectiveness of policies and services to the community at
large. -
Clearer and measurable performance standards would encourage departments and
agencies to go beyond highlighting one-off initiatives aimed at relevant
communities. It would instead encourage the development of more strategic goals,
and therefore greater accountability in delivering more accessible and equitable
Australian Government policies, programs and services. -
Measurable performance standards would encourage departments and agencies to
identify challenges, lessons learnt and steps put in place to assist in meeting
performance standards in the future. Measurable performance standards may also
reveal systematic challenges across the public sector, and encourage the
development of policy solutions to these challenges. -
It is hoped that this in turn would encourage access and equity principles
to be embedded into the culture and structure of Australian Government
departments and agencies, through their respective reporting frameworks,
regardless of whether they directly deliver programs and services, or whether
they are involved in policy development. - Standards could address the following issues:
- the process for identifying community needs
- the processes for including and encouraging the participation of communities
in the development of policies, programs and services
- the use, effectiveness and appropriateness of interpreter and translating
services
- how programs and services respond to community input and needs
- whether cultural competency within a department or agency has been
increased
- if the change in cultural competency within a department or agency has
enhanced its performance.
- the process for identifying community needs
- Where the standards are not relevant to particular departments and agencies,
this can be noted in the reporting process and independently assessed by the
Australian Multicultural Council.
- The cross-cultural competency of departments and agencies, and the
availability and usage of interpreters could be considered in measuring the
accessibility of services, as well as the service
outcomes.[20] Culturally appropriate
promotion and education strategies could also be used as a measure for both
accessibility and inclusion. International comparisons may provide useful
benchmarks for accessibility and inclusion.
- The Commission notes that the Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) model is a
proactive and accountable way of progressing access and equity issues with
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Through sustainable employment
and business opportunities, RAPs are business plans that aim to improve
relationships, as well as generate greater respect and equality between
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and other Australians. RAPs
demonstrate how workplaces can work towards reconciliation between Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander peoples and other people in the workplace, with each
RAP containing specific measurable commitment and actions in the areas of
relationships, respect and opportunities.
- Reconciliation Australia has recently released results of the first
comprehensive analysis report on the collective impact of the RAP program and
relationships between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and other
people in the workplace.[21] The
report identifies that there has been good progress in this area and that the
RAP program represents a model that works. The report also highlights areas for
improvement, including the need to increase reporting compliance
rates.[22]
- The Commission recommends that the Access and Equity Inquiry Panel
consult with Reconciliation Australia about their lessons and experiences in
implementing the Reconciliation Action Plan process [Recommendation no.
7].
- The Access and Equity Inquiry Panel has queried whether the current
self-reporting regime is adequate or whether there should be some independence
in the assessment of departments’ or agencies’ performance.
- As noted previously in this submission, the Commission considers that the
shift in the management of the Access and Equity Strategy to the Australian
Multicultural Council, will result in greater independence in the assessment of
departments’ and agencies’ performance.
- The Access and Equity Inquiry Panel has not specifically requested comments
on the impact of general community feedback on the Access and Equity Strategy.
However, the Commission notes that a significant amount of work is done by
government departments, agencies and the non-government sector to hear directly
from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and people from culturally
and linguistically diverse backgrounds about the accessibility of
government-funded programs and services. Information is obtained through regular
evaluation, research and consultations.
- Recent research that the Commission has conducted with the African
Australian and Arab and Muslim Australian communities has identified two major
issues regarding the accessibility of government-funded programs and services:
language and cultural competency. [23] These research projects have sought
to ensure that issues facing these communities are expressed in their own words
and through direct input from the communities through consultations. The
projects have also involved working with steering committees and community
reference groups.
- Issues affecting accessibility of programs and services have included:
- lack of cultural competency and flexibility to adequately meet client needs
in the education context
- language barriers for parents which affect their engagement with
schools
- lack of sufficient information
- lack of culturally appropriate approaches
- problems with accessing interpreters, including appropriate use of
interpreters in the area of health
- language barriers to accessing legal services and the law generally
- language barriers and lack of cultural competency in child protection
systems
- perceptions of being targeted and over-policed by police and law enforcement
officials
- problems understanding the employment, health and housing systems
- dealing with experiences of discrimination and racism in the transport
context.
- lack of cultural competency and flexibility to adequately meet client needs
- Community members are not always likely to report these issues directly to
government and government-funded programs and services. There can be reluctance
to report negative experiences due to fear of victimisation, lack of trust in
authority to take action, lack of knowledge about the law and complaints
processes, the perceived difficulty in making a complaint and the perception
that outcomes are
unsatisfactory.[24]
- The Commission recommends that the body responsible for the oversight of
the Access and Equity Strategy in the future regularly monitors the outcomes of
consultations and evaluations with the broader community regarding accessibility
of services. Further, the Commission recommends that Australian Government
departments and agencies encourage the partnership of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander peoples and people from culturally and linguistically diverse
backgrounds in the design and evaluation of their policies, programs and
services, to ensure they are accessible – and that these partnerships are
appropriately resourced [Recommendation no. 8].
- The Access and Equity Inquiry Panel has requested comments in relation to
access and equity obligations for contracted service providers.
- As the Discussion Paper notes, “access and equity applies to all
Government funded policies, programs and services, irrespective of whether they
are delivered by Government departments, agencies, or contracted bodies such as
community organisations or commercial
enterprises.”[25]
- The Commission recommends that, in principle, all contracted service
providers be required, through their contractual arrangements, to report on
their implementation of the Access and Equity Framework [Recommendation no.
9].
- While the input of all levels of government into the Access and Equity
Report is not specifically raised by the Access and Equity Inquiry Panel, the
Commission notes that initiatives at the Commonwealth, state and territory and
local government levels are included in the most recent Access and Equity
Report. The Commission considers that this is a strength of the Report, as it
provides a snapshot of the effect of the Access and Equity Strategy across all
levels of government.
- The Commission recommends that the Access and Equity Report continues to
include information from Commonwealth, state and territory and local
governments [Recommendation no. 10].
[1] Australian Human Rights
Commission, ‘Multiculturalism policy welcomed’ (Media Release
16 February 2011). At: http://www.hreoc.gov.au/about/media/media_releases/2011/13_11.html (viewed 17 February 2012).
[2] Australian Government, The People of Australia: Australia’s
Multicultural Policy (2011) at page 2. At: http://www.immi.gov.au/living-in-australia/a-multicultural-australia/multicultural-policy/ (viewed 21 February 2012).
[3] Office of Multicultural Affairs, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, National Agenda for a Multicultural Australia: Sharing Our Future (1989),
pages 51-52. At: http://www.immi.gov.au/media/publications/multicultural/agenda/agenda89/toc.htm (viewed 13 February 2012).
[4] Department of Immigration and Citizenship, Australia’s Multicultural
Policy (2011). At: http://www.immi.gov.au/living-in-australia/a-multicultural-australia/multicultural-policy/ (viewed 17 February 2012).
[5] Australian Government, Social Inclusion (2011). At: http://www.socialinclusion.gov.au (viewed 17 February 2012).
[6] Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs, Closing the Gap (2009). At: http://www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/indigenous/progserv/ctg/Pages/default.aspx (viewed 17 February 2012).
[7] Attorney-General’s Department, Australia’s Human Rights
Framework (2012). At: http://www.ag.gov.au/Humanrightsandantidiscrimination/Australiashumanrightsframework/Pages/default.aspx (viewed 17 February 2012).
[8] Australian Government, Access and Equity in Government Services Report
2008-10 (2011) at page 12. At: http://www.immi.gov.au/about/reports/access-equity/2010/ (viewed 21 February 2012).
[9] Social Inclusion Unit, Social Inclusion Principles (2011). At: http://www.socialinclusion.gov.au/what-social-inclusion/social-inclusion-principles (viewed 21 February 2012).
[10] See, for example, Ethnic Communities Council of Victoria, ‘Real Jobs:
Employment for Migrants and Refugees in Australia’, ECCV Policy Discussion
Paper No 3. 2008. At: www.eccv.org.au/library/doc//ECCVDiscussionPaper3-RealJobs.pdf (viewed 1 February 2012); Val Colic-Peisker and FaridaTilbury, Refugees and
Employment: the effect of visible difference on discrimination (Final Report),
Centre for Social and Community Research, Murdoch University, January 2007. At: www.cscr.murdoch.edu.au/_docs/refugeesandemployment.pdf (viewed 1 February 2012); Alison Booth, Andrew Leigh, Elena Varganova, Does
Racial and Ethnic Discrimination Vary Across Minority Groups? Evidence from a
Field Experiment (2009) At: http://apo.org.au/research/does-racial-and-ethnic-discrimination-vary-across-minority-groups-evidence-three-experiment (viewed 1 February 2012).
[11] Social Inclusion Unit, The Australian Public Service Social Inclusion policy
design and delivery toolkit (2009) at page 11. At: http://www.socialinclusion.gov.au/resources/aust-govt-publications (viewed 22 February 2012).
[12] Social Agenda Priority areas: homeless, children at risk of long term
disadvantage, Indigenous Australians, people living with mental illness or
disability and their carers; communities experiencing concentrations of
disadvantage and exclusion, jobless families and low-skilled adults, as
identified in: Social Inclusion Unit, Social Inclusion Priorities (2011). At: http://www.socialinclusion.gov.au/what-social-inclusion/social-inclusion-priorities (viewed 22 February 2011).
[13] See Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, Administrative Arrangements Order
made on 9 February 2012 (2012). At: http://www.dpmc.gov.au/parliamentary/index.cfm (viewed
20 February 2012).
[14] Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs,
Closing the Gap: National Partnership Agreements (2009). At: http://www.facs.gov.au/sa/indigenous/progserv/ctg/Pages/national_partnerships.aspx (viewed 20 February
2012).
[15] Australian Human
Rights Commission, Submission to the Joint Standing Committee on Migration in
its Inquiry into Multiculturalism in Australia (2011). At: http://www.humanrights.gov.au/legal/submissions/2011/20110429_multiculturalism.html (viewed 20 February
2012).
[16] Australian
Government, note 8 at pages 55-59.
[17] FECCA, The Bigger
Picture: joining up solutions to achieve access and equity (2011). At: http://www.fecca.org.au/publications/access-and-equity (viewed 21 February 2012).
[18] Access and Equity Inquiry Panel, Access and Equity: Inquiry into the
responsiveness of Australian Government services to Australia’s culturally
and linguistically diverse population December 2011 Discussion Paper (2011)
at page 8. At: http://www.immi.gov.au/living-in-australia/a-multicultural-australia/government-approach/government-services/access-equity-inquiry.htm (viewed
21 February 2012).
[19] Social Inclusion Unit, Measurement and Reporting (2011). At: http://www.socialinclusion.gov.au/about/social-inclusion-priorities/measurement-and-reporting (viewed 22 February 2012).
[20] For further discussion on cultural competency, please see Australian Human
Rights Commission, Social Justice Report 2011 (2011) at pages 8-9 and
150-164. At: http://www.humanrights.gov.au/social_justice/sj_report/sjreport11/index.html (viewed
22 February 2012).
[21] Reconciliation Australia, Reconciliation Action Plan: Impact Measurement
Report 2011 (2011). At: http://www.reconciliation.org.au/home/reconciliation-action-plans/rap-impact-measurement-report (viewed 15 February 2012).
[22] As above, at pages 3 and 63.
[23] Australian Human Rights
Commission, In Our Own Words - African Australians: A review of human rights
and social inclusion issues. At: http://www.humanrights.gov.au/africanaus/review/index.html (viewed 15 February 2012); Australian Human Rights Commission, Ismaع
– Listen: National consultations on eliminating prejudice against Arab and
Muslim Australians (2004). At: http://www.humanrights.gov.au/racial_discrimination/isma/report/index.html (viewed
15 February 2012).
[24] Australian Human Rights Commission, Ismaع – Listen: National
consultations on eliminating prejudice against Arab and Muslim Australians,
as above.
[25] Access and Equity
Inquiry Panel, note 18 at page 10.