As campaigns on both sides make their final pitch to Australians about the proposed advisory body, we consider some minority representative bodies around the world.
As campaigns on both sides make their final pitch to Australians about the proposed advisory body, we consider some minority representative bodies around the world.
The controversial act, signed into in 2019, made Khoi-San traditional leaders and communities recognisable for the first time, but concerns arose over its potential impact on customary and informal property rights.
The new version of the Traditional Courts Bill (TCB) that I, and many other rural women have spent years grappling with, and are seeking to expose, is back in Parliament again. As before, there is nothing in the bill that acknowledges the structural exclusion and alienation that many women experience in such courts, and nothing but vague platitudes to address these burning issues. The more Parliament refuses to hear rural women’s voices against the TCB, the louder we will scream.
When the first version of the bill was defeated in Parliament, after five of the nine provinces refused to support it, Deputy Justice Minister John Jeffery established a reference group consisting of traditional leaders, four civil society individuals and government. I was one of the civil society participants in the drafting processes, and I remember that traumatic process very well. The keywords and content were changed so often behind our backs that we got confused about which version we were working o