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Chandi Bates
Media and Communications Manager

Albanese Government must respect High Court ruling and stop punishing migrants and refugees
The Albanese Government must not proceed with knee-jerk, rushed legislation which continues to curtail people’s right to freedom after the High Court decision in NZYQ, the Human Rights Law Centre and Asylum Seeker Resource Centre said today.
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Lobbying reform the next frontier for political integrity in Australia
The Human Rights Law Centre today welcomed Monique Ryan’s Lobbying (Improving Government Honesty and Trust) Bill 2023 as the most ambitious proposal to regulate lobbying put before federal parliament in decades.
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Civil society groups condemn prosecution of war crimes whistleblower David McBride
The prosecution of war crimes whistleblower David McBride will deter whistleblowers and undermine press freedom, a coalition of civil society groups and unions have said on the opening day of McBride’s trial.
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Indefinite immigration detention unlawful: High Court rules
The High Court has today ruled that it is unlawful and unconstitutional for the Australian Government to detain people indefinitely in immigration detention. The Human Rights Law Centre and UNSW’s Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law appeared as amici curiae – friends of the court – to successfully argue that detention is unlawful for any person the Government is unlikely to remove in the foreseeable future.
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Legal challenge to indefinite immigration detention begins in the High Court
The High Court will tomorrow hear a landmark legal challenge to the Australian Government’s power to detain people indefinitely in immigration detention. The Human Rights Law Centre and UNSW’s Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law will appear at the hearing as amici curiae – friends of the court – to argue that detention is unlawful for any person the Government is unlikely to remove in the foreseeable future.
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Public intoxication to finally be decriminalised
Next week on 7 November 2023, being intoxicated in public will finally be decriminalised. This is an historic and long overdue reform, with laws repealing the offence coming into effect next week.
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ACT becomes the first jurisdiction to Raise the Age to 14
ACT Government has passed long awaited legislation to raise the age of criminal responsibility to 14 years old by 2025. While the move to raise the age to 14 in the ACT is cause for some celebration, delaying this reform to 14 until 2025 and including exceptions for some 12 and 13 year old children is both extremely disappointing and immensely frustrating.
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Australia’s corporate human rights watchdog must be strengthened
The Human Rights Law Centre has called on the Australian Government to strengthen the powers of Australia’s principal corporate human rights watchdog, the Australian National Contact Point for Responsible Business Conduct.
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ACT Government moves to recognise the right to a healthy environment in Human Rights Act
The Human Rights Law Centre applauds the ACT Government for introducing legislation to enshrine the ‘right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment’ into the Human Rights Act 2004. If passed, the Barr Government will be the first government in Australia to recognise the standalone right to a healthy environment in law.
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Human Rights Law Centre publishes FY22-23 equitable briefing data
The legal profession does not currently reflect the community that it serves, and as a human rights organisation we have a responsibility to help address this. Working with counsel who have a diversity of perspectives, experiences and backgrounds is good for our clients and good for the profession. Our Equity andf Diversity policy was developed in consultation with a range of stakeholders across the profession.
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Bail reform fails to meet family calls and Coroner’s recommendations
The Allan Government’s new bail laws will not meet minimum human rights standards and will mean people, including children and young people, are still needlessly funnelled into prisons, according to the Human Rights Law Centre.
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Voting rights must be upheld this referendum
The Human Rights Law Centre have questioned the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) over its decision not to deploy mobile polling booths in hospitals and for insufficient allocation of resources to mobile polling teams on Aboriginal homelands.
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