National Human Rights Consultation - Appendix 5
Appendix 5 –
Australian Human Rights Commission activities during the National Human Rights
Consultation
- The Australian Human Rights Commission (the Commission) has undertaken an
extensive range of human rights education activities to support engagement in
the National Human Rights Consultation (the Consultation).
1 Consultation
materials
1.1 ‘Let’s
talk about rights’ toolkit
- To help organisations and individuals participate in the National
Consultation process, the Commission produced a toolkit, Let's talk about
rights, available at www.humanrights.gov.au/letstalkaboutrights/index.html and in printed form. Copies of the toolkit were distributed during Commission
workshops and presentations, and were also sent to relevant stakeholders by
email and post. The Commission also developed and distributed submission forms
to make it easier for people to make a submission.
1.2 ‘Let’s
talk about rights’ for children and young people
- The Commission developed a guide for children and young people, available at www.humanrights.gov.au/letstalkaboutrights/youth.html and in printed form. The guide explained the purpose of the Consultation, and
how children and young people could make a submission about the human rights
issues they felt most strongly about. Copies of the toolkit for children and
young people were distributed during Commission workshops and presentations, and
were sent to relevant stakeholders by email and post. The Commission also
developed and distributed submission forms designed specifically for children
and young people to make it easier for them to make a submission.
2 Roundtables
2.1 Australian Human
Rights Group roundtable
- On 19 February 2009 the Commission and the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public
Law co-hosted the second Australian Human Rights Group roundtable, held at the
Commission. The roundtable brought together 40 key organisations and individuals
who support a Human Rights Act for Australia to discuss approaches to the
National Human Rights Consultation. Father Frank Brennan and Mary Kostakidis
from the Consultation Committee addressed the roundtable during the opening
session.
2.2 Roundtable on
constitutional issues arising from a Human Rights Act
- On 22 April 2009 the Commission hosted a roundtable to bring together
experts in constitutional law to discuss how a Human Right Act could avoid the
potential constitutional difficulties identified by the Hon Michael McHugh AC QC
in his presentation at the Commission on 5 March 2009. Participants agreed that
it is possible to draft a Human Rights Act that retains a mechanism to notify
Parliament if a court finds that a law is inconsistent with human rights in a
way that is constitutionally sound. A record of what was agreed at the
roundtable was submitted to the Consultation Committee and subsequently publicly
released. A copy of the statement is provided in Appendix 3 of this submission.
3 National workshop
series
-
The Commission conducted a series of national workshops in each state and
territory to support community sector engagement in the Consultation. The
workshops included general community sector organisation workshops as well as
some sector-specific workshops and briefing sessions with refugee groups,
disability groups and Indigenous groups. The Commission also conducted workshops
aimed at community legal centres and the legal profession. - A list of the sessions is below:
4 February
|
Sydney Indigenous community session
|
16 February
|
Sydney Indigenous community session
|
27 February
|
Sydney submission writing workshop held in conjunction with the Gilbert +
Tobin Centre for Public Law and the Australian Law Reform Commission |
10 March
|
Brisbane community sector workshop
|
10 March
|
Brisbane community legal centre workshop (presented in conjunction with the
Queensland Association of Independent Legal Services Inc) |
10 March
|
Brisbane legal workshop
|
11 March
|
Toowoomba community legal centre workshop
|
17 March
|
ACT women’s sector workshop
|
18 March
|
ACT legal workshop (presented in conjunction with the Welfare Rights and
Legal Centre) |
18 March
|
ACT community sector workshop (presented in conjunction with the ACT
Council of Social Services) |
19-20 March
|
Canberra Indigenous community session
|
24 March
|
Sydney workshop for refugee and asylum seeker organisations (presented in
conjunction with Amnesty International Australia) |
26 March
|
Brisbane women’s sector workshop
|
30 March
|
Cairns legal workshop
|
30 March
|
Torres Strait Prescribed Bodies Corporate consultation, Badu Island
|
31 March
|
Cairns Indigenous community workshop
|
1 April
|
Townsville legal workshop
|
1 April
|
Townsville Indigenous community workshop
|
2 April
|
Palm Island Indigenous community workshop
|
15 April
|
Adelaide community sector workshop (presented in conjunction with the SA
Council of Social Services) |
15 April
|
Adelaide legal workshop
|
16 April
|
Adelaide session at Byron Place Community Centre
|
16 April
|
Adelaide session (in conjunction with The Salvation Army and Adelaide
Family Support Services) |
21 April
|
Hobart community sector workshop
|
21 April
|
Alice Springs Indigenous community meeting – Lhere Artepe Traditional
Owners |
21 April
|
Alice Springs community legal centre workshop
|
21 April
|
Alice Springs Indigenous community meeting – Tangentyere
Council |
22 April
|
Devonport and northern Tasmania community sector workshop
|
22 April
|
Alice Springs community workshop
|
24 April
|
Yuendumu Indigenous community workshop
|
27 April
|
Darwin community legal centre workshop
|
28 April
|
Yirrkala Indigenous community meeting – Laynhapuy Homelands
Association Incorporated |
28 April
|
Sydney community sector workshop
|
30 April
|
Darwin Indigenous community workshop
|
30 April
|
Darwin community legal centre meeting – NT Welfare Rights Workers
|
30 April
|
Perth workshop for culturally and linguistically diverse communities
|
30 April
|
Perth legal workshop
|
1 May
|
Perth community sector workshop
|
1 May
|
Perth workshop for Indigenous legal organisations
|
4 May
|
Kununurra Community Legal Service workshop
|
7 May
|
Fitzroy Crossing Indigenous community workshop
|
1 June
|
Workshop for people with an intellectual disability
|
3.1 Engaging children
and young people
-
The Commission also conducted a program of workshops around the country
aimed at youth advocates and children and young people themselves. A summary of
the workshops for young people and/or their advocates is provided in Appendix 6. - In addition to specific workshops and materials, the Commission conducted a
variety of online activities to engage children and young people in the
Consultation. This included a Commission presence on Facebook and MySpace, and
the facilitation of online discussion and information relevant to the
Consultation on youth portals such as Heywire (http://blogs.abc.net.au/heywire) and
JustAct (http://www.justact.org.au/action-35-realise-human-rights/).
Commission staff also participated in discussions about human rights in the e-festival of ideas, an online youth conference run by Vibewire.
4 Seminar
series
- The Commission organised and hosted a seminar series to support engagement
in the Consultation:- 17 February 2009: UK Human Rights Act as a ‘parliamentary
model’ of rights protection: lessons for Australia, presented by Mr
Murray Hunt, Legal Adviser to the UK Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human
Rights. An audio recording of the seminar is available at: http://www.humanrights.gov.au/letstalkaboutrights/events/Hunt_2009.html. - 5 March 2009: A Human Rights Act, the courts and the Constitution,
presented by the Hon Michael McHugh AC QC. An audio recording of the seminar and
Mr McHugh’s paper are available at: http://www.humanrights.gov.au/letstalkaboutrights/events/McHugh_2009.html. - 28 April 2009: The Constitution and a Human Rights Act (co-hosted by
the Commission and the Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies), presented
by Mr Mark Moshinsky SC, Professor Adrienne Stone and Associate Professor
Kristen Walker.
- 17 February 2009: UK Human Rights Act as a ‘parliamentary
5 Speaking
engagements
- The President and Commissioners have delivered speeches at a broad spectrum
of events across Australia to encourage involvement in the Consultation. These
speeches are available on the Commission website at http://www.humanrights.gov.au/about/media/speeches/human_rights/index.html.