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Aboriginal Legal Service in Sydney, Australia | Non-profit organisation



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Aboriginal Legal Service

Locality: Sydney, Australia

Phone: +61 2 9213 4100



Address: Suite 460 311-315 Castlereagh St 2000 Sydney, NSW, Australia

Website: http://www.alsnswact.org.au/

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25.01.2022 Yuin Country: Bushfire & Emergency Response Coordinator. Work closely with and provide information to solicitors regarding Bushfire and Covid issues that arise in the community. Represent ALS at relevant working parties. Interested? Take a look at the full Job Description on our website: https://www.alsnswact.org.au/coordinator_bushfire_and_emerg



22.01.2022 "We have seen time and time again that police are not held accountable for their excessive use of force and violence towards people in society." "What is radical is living in a society where acts of violence are accepted because a blue uniform is worn or where racist legislation exists." "It is not so radical to say we need to defund police and pour much needed funds and resources into areas that improve social issues such as housing, health, education and employment. These, ...in turn, reduce the incarceration rates of Aboriginal people and reduces the over-reliance of degrading and dehumanising punitive measures such as prisons. It also addresses the social issues that impact on the disproportionate numbers of Aboriginal people in prison." #BlackLivesMatter https://www.theguardian.com//defunding-the-police-and-abol

21.01.2022 Peter Stapleton is hosting our NAIDOC Week yarn this Friday. He's a solicitor who has been associated with the Aboriginal Legal Service since the early days in 1970s Redfern, and has served as an Honorary Board Member of the ALS NSW/ACT for 15 years. What would you like to ask Peter and our panelists? Register for our free lunchtime panel to celebrate 50 years of the ALS: https://us02web.zoom.us//6216042/WN_7P9_Zse7Q_eb0wGm2WL8Vg

19.01.2022 "I was targeted by the police on the side of the main road once at peak hour. Two officers pulled my pants down leaving me completely exposed without explaining anything when they found nothing on me. They just got in the car and drove off while I was left hanging my head. I was humiliated and traumatised, from that moment I just speak when spoken to and nothing more with the police. Strip-searches are a deeply humiliating and degrading practice. It’s deeply concerning, but... not surprising, that new data released today shows that Aboriginal people continue to be targeted by NSW police. Each and every day our communities are subjected to systemic racism this must stop. https://www.sbs.com.au//data-reveals-indigenous-people-reg



19.01.2022 Are you interested in sharing your story with the disability royal commission? We've teamed up with Your Story Disability Legal Support to provide culturally appropriate support for Aboriginal participants. To find out more, call 1800 77 1800 (toll-free) or visit https://yourstorydisabilitylegal.org.au/. Or if you prefer, you can directly call our disability support lawyers - Eleanor Holden on 0429 086 599 or Mark Munnich on 0429 105 356.

18.01.2022 "He could have been home the very next day when he was going to be acquitted. Why didn't he make it? I believe he didn't make it because of the colour of his skin" "I still say today that the prison system killed my son" - Nioka Chatfield #justice4tane #blacklivesmatter... https://www.abc.net.au//inquest-rules-tane-chatfi/12597572

17.01.2022 We're hiring an Events & Partnerships Coordinator. The primary focus of this role will be support the planning and development of the ALS' 50th anniversary celebrations. Click on this link to apply now!... https://www.alsnswact.org.au/events_and_partnerships_coordi See more



17.01.2022 **This post contains the name and image of someone who has passed away.** Thin Black Line is a new podcast from ABC Indigenous that investigates the arrest and death of Daniel Yock, an 18-year-old Aboriginal man who died in custody in 1993. This talented and loved young man didn't have to die, and nor did the hundreds of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander brothers and sisters who have died in custody since. This NAIDOC Week we say it loud, say it clear: #BlackLivesMatter here.

16.01.2022 On Remembrance Day & during NAIDOC Week, we take some time to remember those veterans too often forgotten: the thousands of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander servicemen who defended a country that didn't recognise them as citizens. This land is theirs - #AlwaysWasAlwaysWillBe. This photo from December 1940 is of Aboriginal servicemen training in Victoria. Sadly, their names have been lost. You can read a little of their story here: https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C295502

15.01.2022 Solicitors (Crime & Care Protection) - various roles, grades and locations: Sydney and Regional NSW. Click on this link to browse our numerous opportunities. https://www.alsnswact.org.au/jobs

15.01.2022 What a deadly video. "There is so much potential in unlocking the power of Indigenous knowledge," says Yuin and Wiradjuri barrister, Tim Goodwin. "Believe in yourself, apply, go for it." Australia needs more Aboriginal lawyers - could you be one of them? Tag a future lawyer in the comments

14.01.2022 The COVID response of Aboriginal communities and organisations shows how much can be achieved when we lead our own solutions. What more evidence do governments need that Indigenous peoples are the most qualified to manage our own affairs? Just check this out "A rapid response by Aboriginal leaders to stop the virus worked. Of the 907 deaths and 27,698 cases in Australia, including 685 deaths in aged care, there have only been 149 cases among Indigenous Australians. There were no cases in remote communities and not one death of any Indigenous person. Only 13 Indigenous people were hospitalised."



14.01.2022 "Governments across Australia must put an end to police brutality and racism and commit to independent investigations of deaths in custody. When someone dies at the hands of the police, the law should require a transparent, independent investigation, so that there can be truth and accountability. If the police remain untouchable, then Aboriginal people will continue to die in custody and the police will continue to inflict colonial violence on grieving families. For my family, there can’t be justice without accountability."

12.01.2022 We welcome the news that Dubbo will soon have a drug rehabilitation facility - something the ALS has been calling for. Drug dependency should be treated as a health issue, not a criminal justice issue. Our communities are safer and stronger when we support people to overcome addiction rather than criminalise them for it. You can view our full media release on the Dubbo announcement here: https://www.alsnswact.org.au/dubbo_drug_rehabilitation

12.01.2022 We should be supporting kids to thrive in community and culture, not separating them from their families by locking them up in harmful prisons. Tune into this lunchtime conversation hosted by Sydney Ideas today, to hear more about the campaign to #RaiseTheAge.

11.01.2022 NATSILS expresses outrage over the government's decision to provide additional funding in the 2020 budget for the Australian Federal Police while ignoring Indigenous legal services and Closing The Gap.

10.01.2022 The ALS has today welcomed a commitment by the ACT Greens to set an ambitious target to end the disproportionate imprisonment of Aboriginal people within 10 years, and called on other parties to follow suit. Aboriginal people are strong, smart and resilient. Yet everyday our people are forced into the quicksand of the criminal legal system at vastly disproportionate rates due to discriminatory laws, targeted policing and systemic failures. Aboriginal people deserve a decisi...ve and genuine commitment from all parties to urgently address the utterly shameful treatment of our communities in the criminal legal system. For a long time, we have been calling on all Governments to set ambitious justice targets aimed at ending the imprisonment of Aboriginal people, and we welcome the ACT Greens commitment today. It is critical that all parties shift away from punitive approaches, and prioritise justice reinvestment strategies and community-led approaches said ALS Chairperson Mark Davies. The ALS calls on all parties to move beyond the status quo and set ambitious goals to improve justice outcomes for Aboriginal people. These goals must be matched with the requisite investment in community-led approaches and recognise the critical and unique role that Aboriginal community controlled organisations play in providing cultural safe services and supports to Aboriginal people. #actvotes #justicereinvestment https://www.alsnswact.org.au/als_calls_for_all_act_parties_

07.01.2022 We're Hiring - Project & Adminstration Officer, Moree as part of the Just Reinvestment Program - Identified role https://www.alsnswact.org.au/project_and_administration_off

05.01.2022 'Five Aboriginal deaths in custody since June is a national emergency that needs urgent leadership, the National Aboriginal and Islander Legal Services (NATSILS) has said. The death of 49-year-old Sherry Fisher-Tilberoo 10 days ago while on remand in the Brisbane watch-house is the fifth Aboriginal death in custody since June, bringing to at least 441 the number of people who have died in custody since the royal commission handed down its final report in 1991. Our people are... dying in custody every few weeks this is a national emergency and we demand urgent national leadership" said Nerita Waight, Co-Chair of NATSILS. There are multiple coronial [inquests] on foot and two police charged with murder for fatal shootings. This cycle of violence, neglect and avoidance of accountability of police and corrections must end, before more of our people die" Black Lives Matter is not a slogan, Waight said. This is a movement which will not end until there is justice for every family.' #BlackLivesMatter https://www.theguardian.com//national-emergency-urgent-lea

05.01.2022 Lidia Thorpe: Victoria's first Aboriginal senator has urged an end to deaths in custody and mass incarceration. If we’re to right these wrongs we need to fix the system" That means ending deaths in custody and the mass incarceration of First Nations peoples, righting the wrongs of the past and moving forward through Treaty, and reversing the entrenched economic inequality that this pandemic has highlighted" ... https://www.theguardian.com//lidia-thorpe-victorias-first-

04.01.2022 It's great to see the appointment of an Aboriginal deputy guardian for children and young people in NSW. This is a welcome first step in response to the Family Is Culture report, which last year made 125 recommendations to reduce the over-representation of Aboriginal children in the child protection system. We hope to see the first deputy guardian, Richard Weston, entrusted with real scope to make the changes needed for our kids - including implementing all those other recommendations.

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