Decriminalising mental health: Submission to the Royal Commission into Victoria’s mental health system
The Human Rights Law Centre has made a submission to the Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System. The submission highlights that prisons are fundamentally ill-equipped to help people, especially young people, experiencing mental illness. The submission recommends that the Victorian Government should:
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support people experiencing mental health issues to remain in the community rather than locked up behind bars in prisons;
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provide more diversion opportunities and enact bail law reform to prevent the criminalisation of people living with mental illness; and
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raise the age of criminal responsibility to at least 14 years, to stop the early criminalisation of children.

Submission to 2025-26 Federal Budget consultation
The Human Rights Law Centre has put forward recommendations to the 2025-26 federal budget submissions across a range of issues, including campaigning for an Australian Human Rights Act, migration justice, prisoners’ rights, whistleblower protection and modern slavery.
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Submission to Surveillance Legislation Amendment (Identify and Disrupt) Act 2021 review
The Human Rights Law Centre is calling for stronger safeguards for the right to privacy and warned that these powers enable the AFP and ACIC to undertake significant invasions of privacy, encroach on the right to privacy, and threaten to have a chilling effect on the work of journalists and their sources.
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Submission to Inquiry into antisemitism at Australian universities
In a submission to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights’ inquiry into antisemitism on Australian university campuses, the Human Rights Law Centre has called for reforms that uphold Australia's commitment to international human rights standards, fostering a society that respects equality, freedom, and justice for all.
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