Submissions Library

Please be aware that some of the content on this page contains potentially offensive or controversial material. If you are affected by the content and would like support, please contact 13 YARN on 13 92 76 or Lifeline on 13 11 14.

Yoorrook reserves the right not to publish all or part of a submission if it considers it inappropriate to do so. By publishing a submission, Yoorrook expresses no opinion about the content or accuracy of the submission or material referred to in the submission. Submissions are not published where the person making the submission has asked that it be kept confidential.

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Submission – Anglican Church, Victorian Dioceses

This submission was prepared by the Anglican Dioceses of Melbourne, Bendigo Wangaratta and Gippsland in response to a RFI made by the Yoorrook Justice Commission ahead of representatives from the Anglican Church appearing at a Yoorrook hearing.

Size: 300.06 KB
Date: 1 May 2024

Submission – Julie Saylor Briggs

Julie Saylor Briggs is a Torres Strait and Yorta Yorta woman.

This submission discusses the importance of Country.

Size: 59.07 KB
Date: 21 April 2024

Submission – Maureen Donelly

This submission contains truth telling records relevant to the Bunurong including evidence of Aboriginal people themselves as recorded by colonisers.

Please be aware that this submission contains sensitive material.

Size: 49.30 KB
Date: 12 April 2024

Submission – Keicha Day

Keicha Day is a a Gunditjmara/Yorta Yorta woman.

This submission is a trancript of Keicha discussing the impact of colonisation on Country and community.

Size: 503.13 KB
Date: 5 April 2024

Submission – Dr Wayne Atkinson

Dr Wayne Atkinson is a Yorta Yorta Elder and Senior Fellow at the University of Melbourne.

This submission includes papers from Dr Atkinson’s PhD thesis tracing the origins of reserves and the policy of segregation and control. Also includes is an historic analysis of land injustice in Victoria, drawing on Dr Atkinson’s knowledge as a principle claimant in the Yorta Yorta case.

 

Size: 241.55 KB
Date: 5 April 2024

Submission – Nikki Moodie

Nikki Moodie is a queer Gomeroi (Kamilaroi/Gamilaraay) woman, born to a Gomeroi mother on Gomeroi land. She is an educator and a researcher, with specialties in Indigenous higher education, leadership, governance and public policy. She had also been a member of Yoorrook’s Expert Advisory Committee since 2021.

This submission contains a personal narrative reflection about land injustice; a historical overview of land injustice; a discussion of accountabilities that might emerge from land justice; and a conclusion noting the benefits of Indigenous land justice for all Victorians.

Size: 118.46 KB
Date: 2 April 2024

Submission 2 – Environmental Justice Australia

Environmental Justice Victoria is a public interest environmental law practice. It provides legal advice and support to the community on public interest environmental issues, advocates for better environmental laws, and provides legal education to the community on environmental matters. It acts primarily for community organisations, Traditional Owners groups and NGOs on matters concerning environment and natural resources laws and policy.

This second submission covers the significance of laws governing land-use planning, environmental protection (pollution and waste), and environmental assessment to truth-telling, justice and treaty-making in relation to lands, waters and natural resources.

Size: 3.39 MB
Date: 27 March 2024

Submission – Andy Govanstone

Andy Govanstone is a historian who has been connected with the restoration of Taerak.

This submission reflects on the impact of invasion and proposes an appropriate location to include in a ceremony or process of recognition.

Size: 54.34 KB
Date: 25 March 2024

Submission – Waluwin Foundation

Waluwin Foundation’s purpose is to return Aboriginal people back to a productive, sustainable life on Country.

This submission is the Waluwin Foundation paper “How can First Nations people buy the farm? The re-establishing the First Nations agrarian economy”.

Size: 537.68 KB
Date: 2 March 2024

Submission – Kaiela Institute

The Kaiela Institute is a First Nations-led analysis and policy think tank.

This submission details how:

  • The colonial system ensured that all First Nations economic assets were stolen without recompense or provision of any other compensatory resources to maintain their livelihood.
  • The imposed legal and reserve system destroyed the supportive value of communities and families and effectively imprisoned and prevented First Nations people from participating in the growing economy.
  • The imposed legal and financial systems discriminated against First Nations people so that any economic support would only be at the poverty line at best and this was intended to facilitate control.
  • Institutional structures like banks combined with the informal colonial cultural systems of systemic racism to exclude First Nations people from any economic opportunities.
  • Many of the systemic, institutional and cultural barriers still operate in a discriminatory manner today.
Size: 96.00 KB
Date: 21 February 2024