Home > Articles > 30 years of reports into Aboriginal Australia
30 years of reports into Aboriginal Australia
List compiled by Marika Webb-Pullman, Jane Nethercote
and Sophie Vorrath
(from crikey.com on Friday 22/6)
We're constantly told about the numerous reports over recent decades
highlighting the state of Aboriginal Australia that have been ignored
or filed away.
Last year we wondered, how many reports, and what did they say? So we
compiled a list of at least 25 (mainly government) reports on the subject.
Today we update it:
1977: Final report on alcohol problems of Aboriginals, an Australian
parliamentary report, is released.
1979: Aboriginal Health, a report by the House of Representatives Standing
Committee on Aboriginal Affairs (HRSCAA), is released. It notes <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=c7619868-72be-4394-a0da-4ef0fd94c66d&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
that the "standard of health of Aborigines was still far lower than
the majority of Australians" and that "little progress had been
made in raising it". And its chairman Philip Ruddock notes: "When
innumerable reports on the poor state of Aboriginal health are released
there are expressions of shock or surprise and outraged cries for immediate
action. However ... the appalling state of Aboriginal health is soon forgotten
until another report is released."
1980: The Program Effectiveness Report, an internal Commonwealth Government
report (never publicly released) considers indigenous involvement in Aboriginal
health policy development, the introduction of specific indigenous health
initiatives and the existing arrangements for funding and administration
of indigenous health.
1981: The Commonwealth Government initiates a $50 million five-year Aboriginal
Public Health Improvement Program focusing on unsatisfactory environmental
conditions associated with inadequate water, sewerage and power systems.
&Royal Commission Report of Inquiry <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=67220b33-1834-4149-8aed-700842ff24e8&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
into the death of Bruce Thomas Leslie, the Aboriginal man who was wrongly
diagnosed as being drunk by ambulance officers and was taken to Tamworth
police station. An X-ray later showed he in fact had a fractured skull.
Leslie died of a brain haemorrhage.
1982: Strategies to help overcome the problems of Aboriginal town camps,
an HRSCAA report, is released.
A report looking at the disproportionate number of Aboriginal people
charged with minor offences <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=145be9aa-b021-4619-bf88-3d9e3904b951&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
is released by the SA Office of Crime Statistics releases. Findings include
the fact that more than 58% of all defendants appearing on drunkenness,
vagrancy, offensive behaviour and liquor-related charges in courts outside
the Adelaide metropolitan area are Aborigines, even though this racial
group constitutes less than 2% of the rural population.
1988: Australia has violated the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
according to a United Nations official sent to Australia to investigate
the conditions of Aborigines.
1989: &A National Aboriginal Health Strategy <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=2a817c32-ab39-42b9-a1b7-41a28dba1eae&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>,
the landmark final report of the National Aboriginal Health Strategy Working
Party (NAHSWP), is presented to the Joint Ministerial Forum. It determines
primary health <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=67a95779-5fbc-44a2-9be8-fddd821f5b6f&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
care is one of the key strategies for addressing Aboriginal health disadvantage
and identifies the need to develop more collaborative health service planning
processes. It also devotes a chapter to the impact of substance abuse.
1991: The final report of the &Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths
in Custody <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=553cfafc-f824-4d6d-9c4b-4f13034f35ca&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
(RCADC), which investigated 99 deaths of Aborigines in custody over a
nine-year period, is released. It finds that the disproportionate rate
at which Aboriginal people are arrested was the major and most immediate
cause of these deaths, and also reveals a history of racism and state
control of indigenous communities. It makes 339 recommendations.
The Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) launches the
&National Inquiry into Racist Violence <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=4fdb8392-f4e0-456a-b5a7-f8cd29af3cb5&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>,
which concludes that racist violence against Aborigines and Torres Strait
Islanders is endemic, nationwide and very severe.
1992: The Commonwealth Government announces a $150 million five-year
funding package, principally for the establishment of Aboriginal-controlled
drug and alcohol services.
1993: Health facilities available for Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders
should be completely revamped, according to a report tabled in Parliament.
The report, by the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Policy
Unit and the Health Department, finds that Aboriginal mortality is 3-4
times than the rest of the community, that mortality rates from pneumonia
are ten times higher than of the population as a whole and that mortality
rates from diabetes are nine times that of the population as a whole.
1994 : A National Aboriginal Health Strategy: An Evaluation finds that
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders face the health hazards of a hostile
and inadequate physical environment (contaminated water, poor sanitation,
and unsafe housing, transport and work conditions) and argues that "setting
up committees will resolve nothing" - what is needed is a bold and
clear national initiative that will "step over the shambles"
of previous efforts.
&The Report to the National Committee to Defend Black Rights:&
&Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Custodial Deaths Between May
1989 and January 1994 <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=a24f17fb-254c-4304-ae2b-919d4a817165&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
is released, finding that the the national rate of Aboriginal custodial
deaths has not decreased and that many of those who have died have done
so because key areas of reform highlighted by the RCIADIC have not taken
place.
1995: The Alcohol Report: Race Discrimination, Human Rights and the Distribution
of Alcohol exposes alcohol misuse and its impact on Aboriginal communities
in the Northern Territory and highlights the lack of consultation between
the NT Liquor Commission and indigenous communities, recommending amendments
to the Liquor Act (1978) to allow Aboriginal communities more control
over the provision of alcohol to their communities.
1996: The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health and Welfare Information
Unit (ATSIHWIU) undertakes a review to develop a National Plan for Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Health Information.
1997: The Health and Welfare of Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Peoples - a joint publication of the Australian Bureau of Statistics
and the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare - reveals that "almost
four in ten indigenous households were estimated to have either insufficient
income to meet basic needs (even before taking housing into account),
or not enough income to afford adequate housing."
1998: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Program <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=cdfabe9b-5524-48eb-8871-fb0646c599e7&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>,
a National Audit Office performance audit of the Department of Health
and Aged Care, reports that the life expectancy at birth of Aboriginals
and Torres Strait Islanders is 15-20 years lower than all Australians,
that for all causes of death combined there were 3.5-4 times more deaths
than expected among Indigenous people, and that indigenous people are
2-3 times more likely to be hospitalised.
1999: &National Aboriginal Health Strategy - delivery of housing
and infrastructure to Aboriginal and &Torres Strait& Islander
communities <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=7965ab76-3094-4d7b-a41c-8b1dfdada460&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>,
a National Audit Office performance audit of the Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Commission, reports that a lack of basic facilities, such
as access to adequate housing, water and waste removal, is contributing
to the high morbidity rate of indigenous Australians and that ATSIC was
not administering the housing program in a timely, costly or efficient
manner.
2000: &Health is life <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=b72ccbc5-1240-4f55-bc18-d964e0759a43&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>,
the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Family and Community
Affairs final report on indigenous health issues, finds a "lack of
clear delineation of responsibility for indigenous health," and that
the parties, particularly the states, indulge "wherever possible"
in shifting the onus for payment to another sector and that "the
lack of any real efforts to integrate community involvement into the planning
and delivery of health and related services" has been been one of
the biggest barriers to progress.
The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, in a report
on Australia's treatment of its indigenous population <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=edeb97fc-76a8-4cb3-a748-82477d865613&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>,
notes that "mandatory sentencing schemes appear to target offences
that are committed disproportionately by indigenous Australians"
in Western Australia and the Northern Territory and remains concerned
by "the extent of the continuing discrimination faced by indigenous
Australians in the enjoyment of their economic, social and cultural rights".
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer's responds: "We won't cop it any
longer. We are a democratically elected government in one of the most
liberal and democratic countries you will find on Earth. And if a United
Nations committee wants to play domestic politics here in Australia, then
it will end up with a bloody nose."
2001: The draft &National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health
Strategy <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=fb032c87-dcbc-4200-9597-ff2a7f182aa7&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
is released by the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health
Council, recommending greater resources be deployed on the issues of Aboriginal
substance misuse, community violence and suicide. It notes that many of
these issues were raised in the National Aboriginal Health Strategy (1989)
but "there was insufficient commitment to action following the 1989
strategy".
2002: The NHMRC Road Map: a strategic framework for improving Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander health through research <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=914a1604-5be8-42a5-b39c-fd66f2b9a707&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
is released, recommending that research needs to be targeted towards the
major causes and risks of poor health for Indigenous Australians - specifically
chronic diseases, injury (including assault and suicide), mental health,
drug and alcohol abuse, communicable diseases and maternal and child health.
2003: The 4th edition of the biennial report The health and welfare of
Australia's Indigenous Peoples 2003, is published by the ABS and the AIHW.
2004: A Canadian study reports that the quality of life of Australian
Aborigines is the second-worst in the world, while the general Australian
population ranks fourth-best in the world.
2005: The Australian Government appears again before the UN Committee
for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, which expresses serious
concern <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=8694b96a-a3ef-4763-be36-d7897c19d32c&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>
about the abolition of ATSIC, the lack of genuine progress in native title,
the continuing over-representation of indigenous peoples in prisons and
the extreme inequities between indigenous peoples and others in the areas
of employment, housing, health, education and income.
The biennial report from the ABS and AIHW shows that "overall, estimated
expenditure on health services provided to Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander peoples during 2001-02 was $3,901 per person -18% higher than
the estimated expenditure on services delivered to non-indigenous Australians
- which was due to high rates of care for Aboriginal people "involving
dialysis and hospitalisations for other potentially preventable chronic
conditions".
2006: Release of Ending family violence and abuse in Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander communities - Key issues, An overview paper of research
and findings by the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=1f03c70d-b35b-4569-86bf-967f0be0043c&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>,
2001 - 2006
Release of Breaking the Silence: Creating the Future. Addressing child
s-xual assault in Aboriginal communities in NSW. Report put together by
the Aboriginal Child S-xual Assault Taskforce, a group set up by the NSW
government following recommendations made in 2001.
2007:
Little Children are Sacred <http://redirect.cmailer.com.au/LinkRedirector.aspx?clid=d08991b5-3279-49b1-a22e-fd1721f87c23&rid=cf0044be-070a-4486-bd3b-1109bff34f17>,
co-authored by Pat Anderson and Rex Wild QC, is handed down. The Board
of Inquiry headed up by the pair was created by the Northern Territory
Government in August 2006 in order to investigate allegations of s-xual
abuse of Aboriginal children. The report identifies the keys to solving
the problem: education and reducing alcohol consumption.
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