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Submissions on human rights, gender, and drugs

Recently, the GLaD team have led or contributed to several submissions to law reform, human rights, and parliamentary inquiries. In this post, we summarise some of these submissions and highlight opportunities for law reform on gender and drugs.

Australian Law Reform Commission

The Australian Law Reform Commission is currently conducting an inquiry into justice responses to sexual violence. The inquiry forms part of the Australian Government’s commitment to strengthen and harmonise sexual assault and consent laws (following the Senate inquiry into current and proposed sexual consent laws in Australia), and to improve outcomes and experiences for victim-survivors in the justice system.

Our submission makes several recommendations on improvements to:

The Commission is due to report by July 2025.

Australian Human Rights Commission

The Australian Human Rights Commission is currently conducting a national project mapping threats to trans and gender diverse human rights in Australia. The project aims to map current and emerging threats to trans and gender diverse human rights, such as actions, circumstances, events, forces, groups, situations, trends, and other phenomena that endanger or violate trans and gender diverse human rights.

Our submission noted at the outset that the framing of ‘trans and gender diverse human rights’ is reductive and potentially counter-productive as it (wrongly) implies that there is a collection of human rights that accrue only to trans and gender diverse people that are often juxtaposed to the human rights of other people. A stronger framing would be ‘human rights of trans and gender diverse people’, which acknowledges that universal human rights apply to trans and gender diverse people rather than specific (and narrow) ‘trans and gender diverse human rights’.

Our submission also recommends that:

Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights

We have previously written about our submission to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights inquiry into Australia’s human rights framework.

The Committee has released its report and recommended the establishment of a national Human Rights Act, with an example Human Rights Bill included in their report. Our submission is cited three times in the report regarding discrimination, harassment and violence experienced by the LGBTIQA+ community as well as the importance of peak and peer organisations receiving training to better advocate for human rights in the delivery of services; and was one of 87.2% of submissions that supported the adoption of federal protection of human rights via a Human Rights Act.

The Committee also recommend several reforms to the Human Rights (Parliamentary Scrutiny Act) 2011 that reflect several of our recommendations, including:

The Australian Government is due to provide a response by August 2024, but no response has yet been provided.

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