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Beyond Tolerance: National Conference on Racism. 12 - 13 March 2002. Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission

Speakers & Panel ChairsMedia ReleasesOrganisations Represented


Moving beyond tolerance towards the elimination of racial discrimination in Australia
Dr William Jonas

Introduction

The World Conference Against Racism in Durban last September was an inter-governmental conference but one in which the active participation of civil society, anti-racism NGOs and national human rights institutions was strongly encouraged. Governments were requested to consult widely as they prepared for the Conference and national human rights institutions and NGOs addressed the conference plenary.

With financial support from the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Mrs Mary Robinson, HREOC undertook preparatory consultations commencing with a national summit and a youth summit in Canberra in May 2001 and then moving around the country in 26 local consultations and focus groups over the next 2 months. We also received 42 written submissions.

The records of our consultations have been posted on our website and summarised in the small yellow booklet titled "I want respect and equality": A Summary of Consultations with Civil Society on Racism in Australia.

That booklet was widely and I think mischievously misrepresented by some media as a report which put forward HREOC recommendations. The Daily Telegraph editorialised, under the title "Democratic freedoms threatened", against a "sweeping media code of conduct to prevent racial prejudice", supposedly put forward by me. [1] Columnist Piers Ackerman wrote that I had "apparently relied on material solicited from people who believe they are owed positions of power and responsibility in society because of the colour of their skin, their gender, or their particular language or choice of clothing". [2]

In one sense this national conference on racism is the culmination of the World Conference process for Australia and I would like to spend some time highlighting the key findings and proposals which have emerged in all of our consultations to date: the national consultations last year, the World Conference itself and this national conference. What have we learned about the nature of racism in Australia and about strategies for combating it?

The causes and manifestations of racism in Australia

I concluded at the close of my consultations last year that racially discriminatory practices are widespread, institutional in nature and practiced at all levels of society. Every community consultation identified the Indigenous people of Australia as those worst affected by racism. One Indigenous woman told us:

"We just live with racism every day. It's like getting up, washing your face and having a cup of tea."

Of course the damage done by racism is incalculably worse than that somewhat resigned comment might suggest.

The legacy of colonialism was identified as the main cause and source of racism in contemporary Australia, particularly as it affects Indigenous people.

Colonisation is an inherently racist process. In Australia it involved land theft, massacres, destruction of religious sites, denial of citizenship, forcible removal of families from their lands and of children from their families, enforced 'assimilation' and many other destructive policies and practices. Andrew Jakubowicz argued yesterday that in fact the colonisation process is still going on and even amounts to low level warfare against Indigenous peoples. Winsome Matthews reminded us that the process has dislocated Indigenous people from their spiritual and cultural identity and Monica Morgan detailed how the Yorta Yorta native title claim failed because the claimants could not establish to the satisfaction of a Federal Court judge that they had not been dislocated from their spiritual and cultural identity and ties with their lands. The dispossession is repeated.

Until there is genuine and effective reconciliation which redresses all the crimes committed against Indigenous peoples and is permeated with understanding and respect for Indigenous peoples' rights, there is simply no chance for Australia to overcome racism against them.

In our regional consultations British colonisation was also seen as having created public institutions which are very resistant to accommodating cultural diversity. They are outstandingly monocultural and therefore less accessible and of less service to non-British Australians.

During last year's national consultations, the education system was often cited in this context: the school system was seen as a product of a specific cultural model, one unresponsive to cultural differences in learning and teaching. Many participants identified the limited resources provided for teaching English as a Second Language and for the maintenance of other community languages as discrimination which affects both Indigenous and non Indigenous communities.

Other causes of racism in Australia identified during the national consultations last year included

  • widespread ignorance about other cultures - and we can add about some religions in light of reactions here to Muslims in the wake of the September terrorist attacks on the United States
  • fear and isolationism in difficult economic times and
  • a fierce resistance among those who currently wield power to the idea of sharing it.

During the middle of last year we were perhaps discussing largely hidden and subtle causes of racism. From the Tampa crisis onwards, however, it has emerged just how close to the surface Australian racism and xenophobia really are making 'playing the race card' so easy for the Coalition and so tempting for the Opposition.

There has been general agreement at this national conference that "Australia is a racialised country" [3] and that "Australian society is polarised". [4]

Australia has failed to tackle adequately structural discrimination in the labour market. Indigenous people are still largely excluded and people from some non-English speaking background communities still experience high unemployment with the persistence of labour market segmentation along ethnic and gender lines.

We have also singularly failed to reduce Indigenous over-representation in prisons. Although we can celebrate Territory Labor's qualified repeal of mandatory sentencing, today we witness increasing numbers of local government councils passing bylaws that will inevitably increase Indigenous people's acrimonious contacts with police and, in some cases, private security agents and council enforcement officers with the added risk of additional incarceration as a result.

Strategies to combat racism and racial discrimination - what we know

It is clear from this brief recital of just some of the findings about the causes and contemporary manifestations of racism, that strategies to combat it need to be highly calibrated to the subtleties of institutionalised, systemic, discrimination and multi-faceted to confront racism head-on in each sector, even each locality, where it is found.

National Australia Bank-funded research conducted for the Human Rights Council of Australia has confirmed that community human rights awareness raising campaigns need to be locally driven and responsive to the local environment.

One local environment with which we need to work is the school. The Durban Declaration recognised the significance of education as both cause of racism and potential solution. The conference recognised:

… that education at all levels and all ages, including within the family, in particular human rights education, is a key to changing attitudes and behaviour based on racism [and] xenophobia and to promoting tolerance and respect for diversity in societies

The conference also affirmed:

… that such education is a determining factor in the promotion, dissemination and protection of the democratic values of justice and equity, which are essential to prevent and combat the spread of racism …; [5]

Participants in our consultations last year argued that the lack of adequate and appropriate representations of Indigenous and immigrant history and experiences within education curricula is an expression of racism and a cause of further racism based on ignorance. There was a significant consensus in favour of fundamental change reflecting cultural, religious and linguistic diversity in school curricula, assessment tools, teaching styles and family engagement. This will require a very significant cultural shift over a period of time. It is not time yet to rest on our laurels about those initiatives which have occurred, however important they have been, such as the employment of Indigenous education workers and the introduction of some cross-cultural awareness training for both teachers and students.

One of the recommendations arising from the consultations was that:

State and territory education departments evaluate and, where necessary, rewrite existing school curricula to ensure that they recognise Indigenous history and the struggles and impacts associated with colonisation, as well as the important role of migration and the contribution of migrants in our nation's development. Such review and rewriting must take place in consultation with Indigenous and migrant communities. The content of these curricula should become compulsory for all students. [6]

The World Conference Against Racism was also very much alive to the contribution to racism of lies about history with the conference emphasising:

… the importance and necessity of teaching about the facts and truth of the history of humankind from antiquity to the recent past, as well as of teaching about the facts and truth of the history, causes, nature and consequences of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, with a view to achieving a comprehensive and objective cognizance of the tragedies of the past; [7]

Teachers and other public officials must be aware of their human rights obligations and accountable for them. The power they wield may not be quite the power of life and death in Australia today, but it is certainly a power to affect survival, well-being and social inclusion and cohesion.

The national consultations also identified a more diverse public workforce as critical to change and recommended recruitment strategies, leadership programs and appropriate training to enhance the representation of Indigenous people and minority groups in public sector employment, the judiciary, education and parliament. [8]

Key public influencers must also be encouraged if not required to act responsibly. The World Conference recognised "that the media should represent the diversity of a multicultural society and play a role in fighting racism". [9] The Conference emphasised "the importance of recognizing the value of cultural diversity and of putting in place concrete measures to encourage the access of marginalised communities to the mainstream and alternative media through, inter alia, the presentation of programmes that reflect their cultures and languages". [10] The Conference also called for

Media to develop of a voluntary ethical code of conduct and self regulatory measures, and of policies and practices aimed at:

(a) Combating racism
(b) Promoting a fair representation of social diversity
(c) Combating the dissemination of racial hatred
(d) Promoting respect among all peoples and
(e) Avoiding stereotyping. [11]

Participants in HREOC's national consultations also called for a media code of conduct with effective monitoring mechanisms including community representatives and effective and transparent complaint mechanisms and enforcement provisions. [12]

Media were also a focus at this national conference. Randa Kattan pointed out that a public interest defence won't work for media gratuitously and irrelevantly racialising the issues being reported. Winsome Matthews suggested the media needs a human rights charter, especially to assist journalists avoid breaching customary law.

Other proposals made by conference participants have included

  • the call by Lillian Holt, Yin Paridis and Amrita Dasvarma that we need to focus on and analyse whiteness, white racism and white privilege as the sources of oppression and disadvantage in this country
  • the call by Jeremy Jones and Randa Kattan for the formation of cross-community initiatives and coalitions of people of goodwill
  • and the need to recalibrate anti-racial vilification policy and law identified by Kath Gelber, Alan Gold and others.

Where to from here?

As Australia's Acting Race Discrimination Commissioner, I am committed to following up the outcomes of my national consultations, the World Conference Against Racism and this national conference.

Within my broad statutory functions there is much that I could take on. There are three critical factors which will be taken into account in our planning as to where to go from here. The first is the limitations of my budget. Second is the need to deploy my resources strategically on projects and programs most likely to bring about change. And third is the importance of working together with other anti-racism agencies, NGOs and civil society.

For the remainder of this year, in ways which are still to be finally planned out, the Commission will focus on the role and responsibilities of the media, school education and Indigenous rights. Attention will also be given to the adequacy of anti-discrimination legislation and complaint handling practice. One area of specific concern, to be addressed in collaboration with our State and Territory counterparts, is the utility of current legislation in addressing systemic discrimination.

I look forward to your comments on these priority areas and your participation in our planning and development as well as our implementation of relevant and necessary projects to promote respect for diversity and equality for everyone in Australia.

It remains for me to thank most warmly all participants in this national conference against racism, speakers and panel chairs most particularly, to acknowledge the organisational work of HREOC staff and consultants and to declare the conference closed.


Endnotes:

1. Wednesday 5 December 2001, page 26.

2. The Daily Telegraph, Thursday 6 December 2001.

3. Winsome Matthews, Panel 2.

4. Andrew Markus, Panel 1.

5. Durban Declaration para 95.

6. HREOC "I want respect and equality" (2001) Recommendation 14.

7. Durban Declaration para 98.

8. HREOC "I want respect and equality" (2001) Recommendations 9 and 10.

9. Durban Declaration para 88.

10. Durban Programme of Action para 142.

11. Durban Programme of Action para 144.

'12. HREOC "I want respect and equality" (2001) Recommendation