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New Commonwealth Closing the Gap Report

A picture of the Closing the Gap report which has a red dust coloured background and a simple dot painting on the right hand side of several concentric circles linked together by a path of white dots.

The first Commonwealth Closing the Gap report has been released since it was the National Agreement in 2020. The new objective of the National Agreement on Closing the Gap is:

…To enable First Nations peoples and governments to work together to overcome the inequality experienced by First Nations peoples, and achieve life outcomes equal to all Australians.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s statement in the report begins by quoting Senator Patrick Dodson,

‘The track behind us is littered with the relics of policies, programs and projects that failed… mainly because they did not include Indigenous people in making the decisions’. That is a mistake we must learn from and, guided by the grace of that call, never repeat. My Government is firmly committed to opening our hearts and ears to First Nations voices – as partners in discussion and leaders with the wisdom to determine the nature and scope of the legislation and policies that affect them.

This refocus to include First Nations organisations as partners and joint-decision makers in the Closing the Gap initiative began under the Morrison government when the National Agreement was made between the Commonwealth, the Coalition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community-Controlled Peak Organisations (Coalition of Peaks), all state and territory governments and the Australian Local Government Association (ALGA).

Throughout the two years there has been a focus on building these partnerships as a foundation for long-term success in creating better outcomes for Indigenous Australians. This includes monitoring and reporting whether the partnerships are working and openness of governments to make formal agreements with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community-Controlled Peak Organisations (ATSICCPOs).

The National Agreement has four priority reforms which lay the foundation for future work between governments and ATSICCPOs, as well as 17 socio-economic outcomes across areas such as health, education, employment, housing, justice, safety, land and waters, culture, language and connectivity.

The four priority reforms are:

  1. Working with First Nations peoples to share decision-making authority through formal partnership arrangements in order to improve policy outcomes.
  2. Building the capability of First Nations organisations, particularly Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community-controlled organisations, so that they continue to deliver quality services.
  3. Ensuring that government organisations and institutions are culturally safe and responsive to the needs of First Nations peoples, including through the services they fund.
  4. Sharing access to location specifc data and information to support First Nations communities and organisations to have information and data that can inform decision-making by First Nations peoples for their communities.

Four of the 17 socio-economic targets are on track while the others are either improving but not on track, and worsening, not on track or there was no updated information on that target area. The report goes into each outcome and target and sets next steps for all.

The four on-track outcomes are First Nations babies born with a healthy baby weight (89.5%), number of children enrolled in preschool (96.7%), young people in detention in 2020-21 (23.2 per 10,000) and amount of land subject to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ rights or interests in 2021 (4,027,232km2).

Targets going backwards include the proportion of adults in prison (2222.7 per 100,000), children in out-of-home care (57.6 per 1000) and people who took their own life (27.9 per 100,000). Next steps outlined the implementation of National agreements and plans to improve these outcomes.

For more information and to read the report in full, go here (https://www.niaa.gov.au/news-centre/indigenous-affairs/commonwealth-closing-gap-annual-report-2022)   

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