Prime Minister’s plan to outlaw environment boycott campaigns is deeply concerning
Protest rights in Australia should be strengthened, not weakened the Human Rights Law Centre said in response to the Prime Minister’s announcement today that he will look to outlaw environmental campaigns targeting businesses.
Hugh de Kretser, Executive Director of the Human Rights Law Centre, said boycott campaigns to stop human rights abuses or to protect the environment were a legitimate protest tactic that should be protected.
“From ending slavery to stopping apartheid, boycott campaigns have played a critical role in achieving many social advances that we now take for granted,” said Hugh de Kretser. “The Morrison Government’s announcement that it is looking to ban certain boycott campaigns is deeply concerning.”
A secondary boycott is where a campaign seeks to pressure a company from doing business with another company involved in rights abuses or environmental harm. For example, a campaign might pressure a chocolate manufacturer to ensure that its supply chains don’t source cocoa from producers that use child labour.
“It’s vital that people can come together and campaign against not only the companies that are committing human rights abuses or harming our environment, but also the companies that profit from doing business with them.”
The Prime Minister’s announcement is the latest move in an undemocratic trend of governments across Australia trying to undermine people’s rights to protest, often at the behest of big corporations.
The Queensland Government has just passed laws criminalising peaceful forms of protest. The NSW Government is seeking to impose harsher penalties for certain protest activities and the South Australian Government is doing likewise. Harsh and excessive Tasmanian anti-protest laws were struck down by the High Court in 2017.
“Protest is an essential part of our democracy. To protect our democracy and help ensure a better future for all Australians, governments should be strengthening our rights to come together and protest, not weakening them.”
“One key way to protect our rights to protest is through an Australian Charter of Human Rights. A Charter of Rights would guarantee the rights that enable protest – freedom of speech, association and peaceful assembly.”
Media contact:
Michelle Bennett, Communications Director, Human Rights Law Centre, 0419 100 519
Media Enquiries
Chandi Bates
Media and Communications Manager

Rio Tinto to face scrutiny at AGM for response to Panguna mine disaster
As shareholders meet in Perth today for Rio Tinto’s AGM, communities living with the ongoing devastation from Rio Tinto’s former Panguna mine are calling for the company to urgently commit to funding long-term solutions.
Read more
Malinauskas Government must take historic opportunity and adopt Human Rights Act after inquiry recommendation
The Human Rights Law Centre has congratulated the South Australian parliamentary inquiry recommendation for a South Australian Human Rights Act.
Read more
Legal challenge filed against Tasmanian Parole Board’s decision to gag free speech
The Human Rights Law Centre has filed legal proceedings on behalf of Tasmanian grandmother, Susan Neill-Fraser, to challenge a restrictive parole condition placed on her by the Tasmanian Parole Board seeking to limit her ability to speak to the media.
Read more