Australian Universities Face Accreditation Risk Over Antisemitism Commitments
New laws from July 15 will require universities to demonstrate action against antisemitism and other racism, as a taskforce launches a social cohesion hub.
Auf einen Blick
- Australian universities risk losing government funding accreditation if they fail to address antisemitism under new laws effective July 15.
- The Antisemitism Education Taskforce, formed after the Bondi attack, has launched a social cohesion hub for schools, while the Greens criticize the initiative for creating a "hierarchy of racism."
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Warum es wichtig ist
New laws from July 15 will require Australian universities to commit to addressing antisemitism to maintain government funding accreditation, following recommendations from the Antisemitism Education Taskforce established after last year's Bondi terror attack.
Australian universities have been warned they risk losing accreditation for government funding if they fail to commit to addressing antisemitism, under new laws that come into force next month.
"From 15 July, the university threshold standards will require universities to demonstrate the action they are taking to prevent and respond to antisemitism and other forms of racism," federal Education Minister Jason Clare said today.
The changes were considered a top priority by the Antisemitism Education Taskforce, which said it "provided detailed feedback" on the proposed legislative amendments, as part of an interim report released this morning.
The taskforce was set up after last year's Bondi terror attack to prevent, address and respond to antisemitism within the education system.
It has also launched a "social cohesion hub" for schools and teachers to combat antisemitism, with lessons on the Holocaust, avoiding hate speech and unconscious bias.
Roughly half of the 50 resources will focus on antisemitism.
"There is a lot that we as a country need to do to tackle antisemitism and improve social cohesion and what we do in education is an important part of that."
The government said the social cohesion hub would cost $6 million over five years to maintain.
"By putting these free online resources in one place, the [hub] will support schools and educators to help students at all stages of their education journey to combat antisemitism and other forms of discrimination," taskforce chair David Gonski said.
States are also piloting training designed by UNESCO, the specialised United Nations agency dedicated to promoting world peace, for Australian schools, teaching teachers and policymakers about best practice for addressing antisemitism and discrimination.
"My strong hope is that the hub together with the UNESCO teacher training program being piloted in Australia will help support schools to respond to the rising levels of antisemitism, as well as intolerance and prejudice more broadly," Jillian Segal, Australia's Special Envoy to Combat Antisemitism, said.
The Greens said the social cohesion hub would create a "hierarchy of racism where some victims are seen as worth and others are seen as an afterthought".
"[It] includes 24 resources on antisemitism, but just two on Islamophobia and one on First Nations hate," education spokesperson Mehreen Faruqi said.
"When some Australians are wrapped in the protection of the government, while others are left to weather the storm alone ... it is not going to lead to anti-racism or social cohesion."
The Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) has also been tasked with a wider review of the national curriculum due to be completed by the end of the year.
The taskforce said this review would "help identify, reject and prevent antisemitism and strengthen an understanding of Australian values".
"What we teach in schools is important here too. That's why education ministers have agreed to a focused review of the school curriculum," Mr Clare said.
"It will look at opportunities to combat antisemitism and strengthen understanding of Australian values."
Universities will still receive report cards
The review says the government will amend legislation to strengthen the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA), making a commitment to addressing racism a condition of accreditation.
TEQSA would also have powers to monitor a university's compliance to their commitments.
The education minister has the power to amend the legislation after consultation, without needing the changes to pass through parliament.
The mid-year review has also revealed universities had been asked by Ms Segal to provide a timetable for adopting a definition of antisemitism by the end of August.
Ms Segal tasked former vice-chancellor Greg Craven with delivering university report cards, grading each institution on its progress tackling antisemitism.
However, last month Professor Craven delayed the report cards after he found not a single university had adopted an enforceable definition of antisemitism.
The report cards will now be due in 2027.
The taskforce said it was considering further ideas from across the education sector on teacher professional development, student safety and changes to regulation and funding.
Academics and their union have voiced concerns that some definitions could threaten academic freedom by preventing criticism and scholarship on Israel.
The taskforce also revealed that a Commonwealth Research Grants Working Group would deliver advice by October on aligning grant decisions with a policy of combating antisemitism, hate and extremism.
The final report from the Antisemitism Education Taskforce is due to be handed to the government in December.
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
Australian universities will be required to demonstrate action against antisemitism and other racism from July 15 to maintain government funding accreditation.
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Tagen
University report cards on the adoption of an enforceable definition of antisemitism will be due in 2027.
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Jahren
Offene Fragen
- How will universities specifically demonstrate action against antisemitism?
- What will be the final recommendations of the Antisemitism Education Taskforce in December?
- How will the curriculum review address the Greens' concerns about a "hierarchy of racism"?



