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BackAustralian Universities to Adopt Legally Enforceable Anti-Racism Standards
Australian Universities to Adopt Legally Enforceable Anti-Racism Standards
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Guardian World8 sa önceEducation3 dk okuma

Australian Universities to Adopt Legally Enforceable Anti-Racism Standards

L'essentiel

  • Australian universities must adopt legally enforceable definitions of antisemitism, Islamophobia, and racism against Indigenous people from 2027.
  • This new standard aims to combat discrimination on campuses and follows recommendations from a Human Rights Commission report and the federal government's antisemitism plan.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

Australian universities will be required to adopt definitions on antisemitism, Islamophobia and racism towards Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people from next year under a legally enforceable standard. This follows a Human Rights Commission report finding racism was 'systemic' on campuses.

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Australian universities will be required to adopt definitions on antisemitism, Islamophobia and racism towards Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people from next year, under a legally enforceable standard designed to stamp out discrimination on campuses.

Details of the anti-racism standard will be published on Monday as university bosses, students and academics prepare to appear at the royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion.

A seperate set of governance principles will also become enforceable standards, including an obligation on public universities to publish vice-chancellor salaries, spending on consultants and the outcome of board meetings.

The introduction of a formal anti-racism standard was part of the antisemitism plan the federal government published after the Bondi massacre, and a recommendation from the Human Rights Commission’s landmark report on racism at Australia’s universities.

The Respect at Uni report found racism was “systemic” on campuses, revealing cases of Palestinian students being mocked with shouts of “terrorism”, First Nations students being compared to “petrol sniffers” in lecture halls and Jewish students being fearful of attending class.

Under the standard, the universities will be required to adopt a definition on antisemitism, Islamophobia and racism towards Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, create a “transparent” complaints process and issue guidances to students and staff.

The universities are allowed to use their own definitions, including for antisemitism, meaning the institutions will not be forced to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition.

The IHRA definition is contentious because of concerns it could be used to shut down criticism of the state of Israel.

Universities Australia last year adopted its own sector-wide definition of antisemitism, which stated that criticism of the Israeli government was not necessarily antisemitic but could be if it was ground in “harmful tropes, stereotypes or assumptions”.

An audit conducted by the emeritus professor Greg Craven on behalf of the antisemitism envoy, Jillian Segal, found no university was properly adopting the definition, prompting calls for stricter enforcement.

The federal education minister, Jason Clare, said there “was no place for antisemitism or any type of hate in our universities or anywhere else”.

“Unis will have to act to prevent racism and respond when it happens,” Clare said.

Compliance with the new standards will be enforced by the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency, which has the power to cancel the registration of a university, impose conditions on its licence and seek fines via the courts.

The government is planning to introduce laws in coming months to strengthen the powers of the regulator, which Clare has argued “has a sledgehammer and a feather, but not much in between”.

All universities will be required to adopt the anti-racism standard from 1 January 2027. The governance standards will apply to public universities from 1 January 2027, and private universities from 1 July 2027.

Universities’ handling of antisemitism on their campuses will be in the spotlight this week as higher education chiefs, academics and students give evidence at the latest block of hearings at the royal commission.

The president of the Human Rights Commission, Hugh de Krester, and Josh Keller from the Australian Academic Alliance Against Antisemitism are among the witnesses scheduled to give evidence at Monday’s hearing.

On Sunday Clare told Sky News he was anticipating “pretty horrific evidence” from Jewish students detailing the abuse, intimidation and harassment suffered on campuses.

“The universities were caught flat footed here and, in fairness to the universities, some of them have made important improvements over the course of the last few years – but not enough,” he said.

“There’s a lot more to do.”

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • Government will introduce laws to strengthen regulator's powers.

    Probable · En quelques mois

Questions ouvertes

  • Will universities adopt IHRA definition?
  • How will enforcement be practically applied?
  • What specific guidance will be issued?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Guardian World.

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