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Kids Helpline Symposium 2016 15 September Help Seeking by Children and Young People: Past, Present & Future
Kids Helpline Symposium 2016 15 September Help seeking by children and young people: Past, Present & Future Kids Helpline (KHL) first opened its phone helpline to children and young people 25 years ago. On the first day of opening, 3,200 young people called Kids Helpline. 25 years of providing counselling and support has seen more than 7.5 million contacts responded to nationally. Over the years we have made remarkable achievements and seen changes not only in why kids contact us but also how they do this. In 1991, the internet did not exist the way we think of it today. In today’s world kids no longer go online they live online. Young people’s help seeking pathways and preferences over the last 25 years have constantly evolved – socially, culturally and technologically. KHL responds to these changes through innovation and service delivery. We believe it’s important to share this knowledge as it can inform ongoing service development, including the Australian mental health reform process. No other organisation in Australia provides what KHL does with extensive contact with young help seekers. This gives KHL a unique insight into the help seeking behaviour of children and young people. We have invited topic experts to contribute to discussion about the past, present and future of help seeking by children and young people. We invite you to join us to help Australia continue to provide services that are supportive, child-focused and responsive. Panel Host: Megan Mitchell, National Children’s Commissioner Megan is Australia’s first National Children’s Commissioner. Her appointment marks a significant step in the protection of children in Australia with the rights and interests of children, and the laws, policies and programs that impact on them being top of the Commission agenda. -
Inaugural Speech of the Honourable David Clarke
INAUGURAL SPEECH OF THE HONOURABLE DAVID CLARKE The Hon. DAVID CLARKE [8.11 p.m.] (Inaugural speech): I also oppose this legislation. In speaking for the first time I do so with a great and abiding recognition of the responsibilities that my new office places upon me and with the hope that my time spent here will be productive in service to the people of New South Wales. I come to this House as one who by conviction and belief respects, supports and upholds its history and traditions. As a member of the Legislative Council I will resist with all the vigour I can any and all attempts to bring about this House's demise, to weaken its powers or to diminish its stature and traditions in any way. Over the years many outstanding and distinguished members have served in this Chamber. The late Jim Cameron was a member whose values and social beliefs I identify with. He had a unique and inspirational capacity to espouse values in noble and uplifting language as befits such noble values. A former and distinguished President of the House, Johno Johnson, representing an historic political institution of our country, the Australian Labor Party, has also been courageous, forthright and determined, especially in his elevation of the family, his defence of the right to life of the unborn child and his denunciation of abortion. He continues to champion these causes outside this Chamber. I deem it an honour to find myself serving in this House at the same time as Deputy-President Reverend the Hon. -
Appendix 3D Post-Federation Unification Proposals
3D-1 Appendix 3D Post-Federation Unification Proposals Appendix 3D provides a summary of Unification proposals that have been advocated in the years following Federation in 1901. The proposals included here reflect the collection assembled to assist the preparation of this thesis, and are by no means an exhaustive collection, but they document several historically significant findings and suffice to demonstrate that Unification and related reforms has been seriously proposed on numerous occasions since Federation, as was also the case in the decades leading up to Federation, as described in Appendix 3A. This appendix has five sections. The first, in Table 3D-1, provides a compilation of extracts from literature sources on post-Federation Unification proposals and the claimed benefits of unification. The second and third briefly summarise policies of the Australian Democrats and Australian Greens political parties which show that these parties support Unification or related government structure reforms. The fourth and fifth then describe summaries of Unification proposals and related proposals (including New States proposals) put forward in two series of events in 1997 and 1998: (1) 128 community forums conducted by the National Australia Day Council and the Australian Local Government Association in 1997 as part of the Australia Consults initiatve, and (2) 58 Local Constitutional Conventions (LCCs) conducted in 1997 and 1998 by the Constitutional Centenary Foundation in conjuction with local government organisations and 66 participating councils. The summaries included here are edited versions of summaries originally prepared in 2001. Selected Extracts on Post-Federation Unification Proposals Table 3D-1 below presents a compilation of literature extracts describing Unification proposals and the claimed benefits of such proposals. -
Same-Sex Marriage, Freedom of Speech and Religious Liberty in Australia – a Critical Appraisal
Solidarity: The Journal of Catholic Social Thought and Secular Ethics Volume 7 Issue 1 Religious Liberty Article 4 2017 Same-Sex Marriage, Freedom of Speech and Religious Liberty in Australia – A Critical Appraisal Augusto Zimmermann University of Notre Dame Australia, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/solidarity ISSN: 1839-0366 COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING This material has been copied and communicated to you by or on behalf of the University of Notre Dame Australia pursuant to part VB of the Copyright Act 1969 (the Act). The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further copying or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. Do not remove this notice. Recommended Citation Zimmermann, Augusto (2017) "Same-Sex Marriage, Freedom of Speech and Religious Liberty in Australia – A Critical Appraisal," Solidarity: The Journal of Catholic Social Thought and Secular Ethics: Vol. 7 : Iss. 1 , Article 4. Available at: https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/solidarity/vol7/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you by ResearchOnline@ND. It has been accepted for inclusion in Solidarity: The Journal of Catholic Social Thought and Secular Ethics by an authorized administrator of ResearchOnline@ND. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Same-Sex Marriage, Freedom of Speech and Religious Liberty in Australia – A Critical Appraisal Abstract Passing legislation to approve same-sex marriage presents an immediate challenge to free speech and religious liberty. Unfortunately examples from all over the world reveal that legalisation of same-sex marriage may infringe the fundamental rights of the citizen. -
APR 2016-07 Winter Text FA2.Indd
Printer to adjust spine as necessary Australasian Parliamentary Review Parliamentary Australasian Australasian Parliamentary Review JOURNAL OF THE AUSTRALASIAN STUDY OF PARLIAMENT GROUP Editor Colleen Lewis Modernising parliament for future generations AUTUMN/WINTER 2016 Minority government: a backbench and crossbench perspective Parliamentary committees connecting with the public • VOL 31 NO 1 31 VOL AUTUMN/WINTER 2016 • VOL 31 NO 1 • RRP $A35 AUSTRALASIAN STUDY OF PARLIAMENT GROUP (ASPG) AND THE AUSTRALASIAN PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW (APR) APR is the official journal of ASPG which was formed in 1978 for the purpose of encouraging and stimulating research, writing and teaching about parliamentary institutions in Australia, New Zealand and the South Pacific Membership of the Australasian Study of (see back page for Notes to Contributors to the journal and details of AGPS membership, which includes a subscription to APR). To know more about the ASPG, including its Executive membership and its Chapters, Parliament Group go to www.aspg.org.au Australasian Parliamentary Review Membership Editor: Dr Colleen Lewis, [email protected] The ASPG provides an outstanding opportunity to establish links with others in the parliamentary community. Membership includes: Editorial Board • Subscription to the ASPG Journal Australasian Parliamentary Review; Dr Peter Aimer, University of Auckland Dr Paul Reynolds, Parliament of Queensland • Concessional rates for the ASPG Conference; and Dr David Clune, University of Sydney Kirsten Robinson, Parliament of Western Australia • Participation in local Chapter events. Dr Ken Coghill, Monash University Kevin Rozzoli, University of Sydney Rates for membership Prof. Brian Costar, Swinburne University of Technology Prof. Cheryl Saunders, University of Melbourne Dr Jennifer Curtin, University of Auckland Emeritus Prof. -
Samuel Griffith Society Proceedings Vol 11
What a nice Referendum – Pity about the Debate Sir David Smith, KCVO, AO It has been said of British government that, at its heart “lies a mystery – the Constitution, the rules of the game under which power is fought for, then distributed or constrained once gained”, and that “the system by which government operates baffles ministers themselves – let alone MPs, commentators and the general public”.1 Having served the Australian system of government for the whole of my working life, I believe these words apply equally to Australia. As two Commonwealth Government inquiries have shown, Australians are abysmally ignorant of just how they are governed or what their Constitution says and means.2 This lack of knowledge on the part of the electorate has enabled republicans to misrepresent our present Constitution and to deceive and mislead the Australian people about the changes they wish to make to it. Earlier this year, in a speech to the National Press Club, Andrew Robb, convenor of Conservatives for an Australian Head of State, was sharply critical of the draft wording of the question to appear on the referendum ballot paper, saying its failure to refer to the replacement of the British monarch by an Australian citizen would have a negative impact and provoke a negative reaction from people.3 He also objected to the inclusion of the word “Republic” on the ballot paper.4 And only this week, in a submission to the Joint Select Committee on the Republic Referendum, Malcolm Turnbull said the terms “Republic” and “President” should be dropped from the referendum question because people do not understand what they mean.5 Two days later, responding to the ridicule and condemnation which resulted, Turnbull changed his submission to the Parliamentary Committee and conceded that these terms might stay.6 He proposed instead that the question refer to the President replacing the Queen as Head of State. -
Daniel Ortlepp 4 Pages
Objection 26 Daniel Ortlepp 4 pages 2020-21 Western Australian redistribution – objection to redistribution proposal Att: WA Redistribution Secretariat Australian Electoral Commission Locked Bag 4007 CANBERRA ACT 2601 Submitted electronically 16 April 2021 Dear Commissioners, Objection to redistribution proposal – names of proposed Divisions of Moore and Pearce I write to propose that the Federal division names Moore and Pearce be retired, and that new names commemorating significant Indigenous figures be given to these Divisions. Historical context Since the abolition of the Division of Kalgoorlie in the 2008 redistribution, no Western Australian division has been named for an Indigenous person or word. While I welcome the Commission’s proposal to acknowledge Sadie Canning MBE in the name of the Division of Canning, this change only raises the proportion of Western Australian divisions named for an Indigenous person or word to 1 in 15, or 6.7%. This is well below the current national figure of 15.2%. In its history, Western Australia has only had two divisions named for an Indigenous word, the geographic names of Coolgardie and Kalgoorlie (now both retired). No Western Australian division has ever been named for an Indigenous person. As only 19 names have ever been used for Western Australian divisions, it is clear that the current pace of change cannot be relied upon to provide acknowledgement, in the Federal electoral system, of Western Australia’s past and present Indigeneity. Recent precedent exists for retiring a divisional name in order to honour a neglected historical figure, as when the Tasmanian Division of Denison was renamed the Division of Clark in that state’s 2019 redistribution. -
David Flint Looks at Recent US Attempts at Law Reform Editing That the Press Council Found Changed a Letter's Meaning * Professi
2 AUSTRALIAN PRESS COUNCIL NEWS, FEBRUARY 1994 arrived unanimously at the opposite Remember, this is the Innisfail The extent of that implied outcome. The law in NSW, of course, Advocate we are talking about, not The constitutional protection is extremely was not the same as that in Sydney Morning Herald. qualified. Nevertheless, the thinking Queensland. And the defamatory material in behind it may well have been a silent influence on the w ay the court saw But that is not the point. The issue is question was a small advertisement, the contending interests. the procedure used by the court to not a painstaking expose on public balance the competing interests. finances in another country. This approach may also have been influenced by recent criticism from In 1988, the rights of defamed Filipino All of this, however, was not a legal academics Stephanie Palmer and businessman Eduardo Cojuangco statement of legal principle and may Ian Cram. In separate articles in 1992, were so important that the court lead to nothing. But it does raise the they stated that English courts actually saw them as part of the tantalising possibility that the High generally give the free flow of public interest in the administration Court may be changing the way it information insufficient weight of justice. balances the contending interests in whenever it is part of a judicial Such a grand description obviously cases involving free speech. balance. weighed heavily in the judicial The balance between individual balance, so heavily that it was By definition, the harm caused to the reputation and the broader interest of considered to be "paramount". -
Constitutional Reform, Then and Now Speech to ACT ARM Dinner 2 June 2007 Andrew Leigh
Constitutional Reform, Then and Now Speech to ACT ARM Dinner 2 June 2007 Andrew Leigh Introduction I acknowledge Ngunnawal people, the traditional owners of the land, and thank the organisers – Terry Fewtrell and John Warhurst – for inviting me. I also acknowledge the waiters, who are doing a terrific job tonight. We in the Australian Republican Movement have a special affinity with you. We are all waiters. We have been waiting a very long time. Twelve years ago next Thursday, then Prime Minister Paul Keating strode to the floor of parliament, and said firmly ‘It is the government’s view that Australia’s head of state should be an Australian’. Keating admitted that some were unsure about the prospect of change, but said ‘Governments can wait for opinion to force their hand, or they can lead. They can wait for the world to change and respond as necessity demands, or they can see the way the world is going and point the way.’ A dozen years later, some of you may feel that Australia is no closer to being a Republic than it was in 1995. But I want to argue tonight that the challenges of the early-21st century are not that different from the challenges of the late-19th century federation movement. Just as they felt frustration and disappointment in the 1890s, so we do today. In particular, Australian Republicans face the same three challenges as supporters of federation in the 1890s: The wrong economic climate Radical supporters Extreme enemies The wrong economic climate Let me begin by talking about economics. -
Her Majesty at 80: Impeccable Service in an Indispensable Office
1 HER MAJESTY AT 80: IMPECCABLE SERVICE IN AN INDISPENSABLE OFFICE by David Flint Foreword by Tony Abbott, MP Australians for Constitutional Monarchy 2 ©2006 by David Flint HER MAJESTY AT 80: IMPECCABLE SERVICE IN AN INDISPENSABLE OFFICE ISBN Printed by Cover Design: Phuong Van Published 2006 by Australians for Constitutional Monarchy Level 6, 104 Bathurst Street, Sydney 2000 3 HER MAJESTY AT 80: IMPECCABLE SERVICE IN AN INDISPENSABLE OFFICE David Flint Foreword by Tony Abbott, MP Australians for Constitutional Monarchy 4 FOREWORD by the Hon. Tony Abbott, MP In this monograph, Professor Flint does more than just lay out the now well-understood arguments against becoming a republic. He also articulates compelling reasons for remaining a monarchy. The case against any particular form of republic is a strong one, as the 1999 referendum result demonstrated. The case for the monarchy is equally strong but much less frequently put as it relies on instincts which are deeply felt but not so easy to justify in a relentlessly utilitarian age. The monarch is both a living human being and an official functionary deeply entrenched in Australia's institutional arrangements. The monarch is a body natural and a body politic, as Flint clearly and concisely outlines. The monarch's primary role is to provide a political personality above and beyond politics. In Australia, this role is mostly discharged by the governor-general. It is hard to conceive of an elected or appointed president acting with the dignity and restraint that has so far characterised our governors-general, including those who have been ex-politicians. -
21 Old Coast Rd, Lake Clifton - Park Home
Lots 19 - 21 Old Coast Rd, Lake Clifton - Park Home Redevelopment Environmental Impact Assessment Document Beck Advisory science+design COPYRIGHT STATEMENT FOR: Lot 21 Old Coast Rd Park Home Redevelopment Our Reference: 8707-2216-08R Final rev1 Copyright © 1987-2013 Ecoscape (Australia) Pty Ltd ABN 70 070 128 675 Except as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth), the whole or any part of this report may not be reproduced by any process, electronic or otherwise, without the specific written permission of the copyright owner, Beck Advisory. This includes microcopying, photocopying or recording of any parts of the report. Neither may the information contained in this report be reproduced, transmitted or stored electronically in any form, such as in a retrieval system, without the specific written permission of Beck Advisory. Quality Assurance Ecoscape (Australia) has implemented a comprehensive range of quality control measures on all aspects of the company’s operation and has Quality Assurance certification to ISO 9001. An internal quality review process has been applied to each project task undertaken by us. Each document is carefully reviewed by senior members of the consultancy team and signed off prior to issue to the client. Draft documents are submitted to the client for comment and acceptance prior to final production. Limitations Statement This report has been exclusively drafted for the needs of Beck Advisory. No express or implied warranties are made by Ecoscape (Australia) Pty Ltd regarding the research findings and data contained in this report. All of the information details included in this report are based upon the existent land area conditions, research provided and obtained, and so forth at the time Ecoscape (Australia) Pty Ltd conducted its analysis into the area. -
Creating a 21St Century Sustainable Society and Built Environment in Northern Australia
Creating a 21st Century Sustainable Society and Built Environment in Northern Australia. Issues Paper for Address and W orkshop to Launch of Centre of Excellence in Tropical Design (CETD) Townsville 2 December 2004 Peter Ellyard Introduction. The launch of a Centre of Excellence in Tropical Design in Townsville is a recognition that successful and sustainable living in the tropics requires: The creation, acquisition and utilisation of tropical knowledge about the true tropics, the monsoon tropics/ tropical savannah and the tropical arid environments, ñ W hat is required to ensure that these environments are sustainably utilised for human use, and what is required for humans to live successfully, healthily and sustainably in these environments. ñ Designs and innovations which lead to the creation of the products, services and technologies which enable humanity to live successfully, healthily and sustainably in the tropics. Most of these have yet to be created, and there are wealth-creating opportunities for those who create them. Design is one of the most powerful tools humanity has to shape the future. This becomes apparent if one considers the fact that the design based professions include engineering, architecture, industrial design, all kinds of planning (including urban, land use, transport, natural resource and social planning) and production planning such as design crop rotations planning and school curriculums. Good design integrates various entities into a coherent whole, preferably resulting in synergistic outcomes while avoiding antagonistic outcomes. One of the major roles of a Centre for Excellence in Tropical Design could be to develop the design principles and practices for use by all the design based professionals who work on shaping the future of tropical environments and human settlements .