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Following the Voice failure, Indigenous politicians are calling for the UN’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples to be implemented. What is it and what would it mean?

The Voice referendum was a disappointing result for many, but there is hope that much of its vision could be achieved via a different path. The Joint Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs has presented a report to federal parliament calling for the implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
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After the Voice defeat, we can never again allow politics to suspend the cause of Indigenous justice

Australians rejected the proposal for a Voice to Parliament embedded in the constitution. This week marked 100 days since that unsuccessful referendum. By now we expected those who campaigned against the constitutional reform would have stepped up with their proposals about how to improve the lives of Indigenous Australians. Alas, there has been only a deafening…
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The Voice: It’s a Marriage Proposal not a Divorce Petition

The No campaign repeatedly says that Australians should not support the Voice because it is divisive. This fundamentally misconstrues what we are being asked to vote on. The Voice is like a marriage proposal, not a divorce petition. It is about unity, not division.
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The untold story of disability discrimination in Australia’s election and referendum procedures

Australia has been called ’the most voter-friendly country in the world’, a label which obscures the fact that Australia’s electoral laws deny some people with physical or motor disabilities the opportunity to cast a genuinely secret vote, and infringe upon their right to equal participation. Efforts to amend this issue have thus far fallen on…
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“For with them our futures rest”: Reflections on the Voice to Parliament from a lifetime advocating for the self-determination of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children

Reflecting on a lifetime on advocating for self-determination of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, Adjunct Professor Muriel Bamblett reflects on the upcoming referendum on a First Nations Voice.
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‘Ask Us First’: a student-lead Castan Centre for Human Rights Law Voice to Parliament Clinic project

Last week, we launched a video campaign for the upcoming referendum. First Nations professors, artists, athletes and experts answer Australia’s questions about the Voice to Parliament. Designed to restore fact, nuance and personal perspectives to the Voice conversation, ASK US FIRST was created by Monash University law students in the Castan Centre Voice to Parliament…
