Advocate, Nov 2020

Page 13

WERTE! ◆

ACTU Indigenous Conference & Organising Conference 2020

Racism is a union issue On 16 November, the ACTU held its Indigenous Conference online with attendees present from most of the affiliate unions. There was a large contingent of NTEU Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander members and staff who presented sessions, gave addresses and answered crucial questions on a wide variety of topics. The Indigenous Conference featured a welcome, a keynote and four different workshops which were run multiple times so attendees could attend them all. Of particular note was the session 'Racism is a Union Issue'. This featured Adam Frogley, NTEU National A&TSI Director with Nareen Young, Industry Professor at Jumbunna Institute of Education and Research. Both panellists revealed findings of surveys on the racism and discrimination A&TSI workers still experience in the workplace.

I'm Not A Racist, But... Starting with the two reports the NTEU has done based on member surveys – I'm not a racist, but… (2011) and I'm still not a racist, but… (2018) – Adam Frogley took attendees through the distressing levels of racism and discrimination, lack of cultural respect and lateral violence reported by A&TSI people working within the university sector. It was particularly noted that in the 7 years between the two reports, the situation had actually gotten worse on campus. These findings were further reinforced by Nareen Young's presentation of the Gari Yala (Speak The Truth) report which was launched on the same day as the Conference. In this report, based again on survey responses, it was found that 44% had experienced racial slurs in their workplace, 39% had reported being treated unfairly due to their background, and a staggering 59% had experienced comments based on their appearance which others in their workplace deemed not 'looking' Aboriginal enough, or 'being pretty for an Aboriginal person'. All this

ADVOCATE VOL. 27 NO. 3 ◆ NOV 2020

leads to a negative workplace experience and it's crucial that workplaces educate and adjust their practices.

Black Lives Matter Sharlene Leroy-Dyer, Acting Chair of the NTEU A&TSI Policy Committee, anchored a panel on the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement in Australia which featured Ashley Rose (FSU) and Celeste Liddle (NTEU). Ash Rose spoke of lobbying the various unions in NSW to support a BLM statement which would in turn commit them to a series of actions to educate members and agitate as unions for the implementation of the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, amongst other things. This multiple union statement then was sent on to the NSW Government to lobby them to make changes. Celeste spoke about the BLM movement more broadly – its origins online and then in riots following the deaths of two African-American men in 2014; its resurrection in 2016 in the lead-up to the US election and the global solidarity movements; and then the rallies this year. Celeste spoke of the continual issues trying to get the Australian public to recognise the parallels in Australia with things such as deaths in custody and the continual high incarceration of Indigenous peoples. There is a need for people to become more educated and interested in what is happening domestically, as over 440 Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander people have died since the Royal Commission findings were handed down. Change remains painfully slow whilst families continue to grieve. A session on Voice, Treaty, Truth, along with another on A&TSI people advancing in jobs was held. All sessions were repeated for the ACTU Organising Conference and were deemed highly successful. ◆ Celeste Liddle, National A&TSI Organiser Gari Yala (Spreak The Truth)

bit.ly/3kGUL5x I'm Not A Racist, but... and I'm Still Not A Racist, but...

nteu.org.au/atsi/publications

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Articles inside

Cathy Moore elected new WA Division Secretary

1min
page 49

Jonathan Hallett steps down as WA Div Sec

1min
page 49

Pep Turner takes over as Tasmanian Division Secretary

1min
page 48

Tasmania farewells Kelvin Michael

1min
page 48

Out from under the cover of COVID

5min
pages 35-36

2020 Joan Hardy Scholarship goes to Sonja Dawson

3min
page 47

Sara Ranatunge awarded 2020 Carolyn Allport Scholarship

2min
page 46

Anna Stewart Memorial Project continues in 2020

5min
pages 42-43

Vale Prof Tracey Bretag

3min
page 43

National Council during COVID

4min
pages 40-41

Building on the moment

3min
page 37

Delegate Profile: Professor Peter Dabnichki, RMIT

7min
pages 38-39

Hong Kong trade union leader re-arrested

1min
page 36

Wear It Purple Day: mostly remotely

3min
page 34

Fractured futures? Recent transformations of academic work

6min
pages 32-33

AUR: recent past and near future

1min
page 29

Higher education should be for everyone

4min
pages 22-23

Curtains for Theatre & Performance

6min
pages 24-25

Wage theft is core university business

4min
pages 30-31

Tales from the trenches

3min
page 26

Jacqui Lambie is right: It just got harder for working class kids like me to go to university

3min
pages 20-21

Clear-felling environmental expertise

5min
pages 18-19

Job-Ready Graduates Bill passes into law

5min
pages 14-15

Online Forums see greater member involvement

2min
page 15

A response from ‘No Concessions’ casuals to ‘Letter to a fellow worker

5min
page 4

Racism is a union issue

2min
page 13

NTEU launches legal action against JMC alleging sham contracting

2min
page 7

Flawed foreign relations bill tightens the reins on university independence

4min
page 8

2020: A year like no other

4min
pages 3, 5

USYD professor arrested at protest

3min
page 7

Meeting COVID challenges

3min
pages 4, 6
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