Briefing Paper
The Way Forward –
A Ten Point National Action Plan to Prevent Child Abuse and Neglect
11
July 2007
The way forward from here
is for the Federal Government to lead the development of a National
Action Plan to prevent and respond to child abuse and neglect within
all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities with the support
and involvement of states and territories, SNAICC and other representative
Indigenous organisations.
This Action Plan must fund both short and long term measures and
programs to reverse the over representation of Indigenous children
in child protection and their under representation in early childhood
services and education. This will require investment from all states
and territories as well as the Federal Government.
To support the Action Plan the Federal Government should convene
a National Indigenous Children’s Well Being and Development
Taskforce including representation from all state and territory
governments, SNAICC and other representative Indigenous organisations
to develop measures for consideration at COAG. The Taskforce should
report directly to the Council of Australian Governments (COAG)
and oversee implementation of the Action Plan on a long tern basis.
SNAICC’s Ten Point
National Action Plan
1. Safety
is paramount - responsive child protection. Allegations
of child abuse and neglect must be investigated in a child centred
way. Ensure child protection systems are well resourced to respond
when called upon to properly investigate and intervene where children
are at risk of abuse or neglect.
2. Support for children – remove perpetrators
not the children. Focus interventions on removing the risk
and perpetrators from children rather than children from their families
and communities. This requires extra funding and support for local
community family support and counseling services and working in
partnership with a child’s extended family, family friends
and local community services.
3. Effective
policing - speak up against violence and abuse. Ensure
the appropriate levels and forms of policing within communities
are in place to enable people to speak out against violence and
abuse without placing their own safety at risk.
4. Early
intervention. Improve access to Indigenous community based
early childhood, childcare, family support and child welfare programs
to support families to access help early and promote children’s
well being.
5. Connections
to culture. Maintain children’s rights to be connected
with their extended family and community and their cultural and
spiritual heritage – child removal is a last resort.
6. Build
on strengths. All Aboriginal families and communities have
strengths and capacity to support and nurture their children. Governments
must do things with local communities not to local communities.
Recognise and build on the strengths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander families, communities and kinship systems and develop workforce
and community capacity.
7. Healing and
restoration. Victims and perpetrators need access to a
range of healing and therapeutic programs including alcohol and
substance abuse rehabilitation, counselling and healing programs
and family restoration programs to rebuild family relationships
across generations.
8. Safe and Healthy
communities. Disempowered communities with woeful housing,
extreme poverty, chronic alcohol and substance abuse, few early
childhood programs or health services, no economic base and inadequate
schools are likely to have high rates of abuse and neglect. Well
planned large scale investment over generations is required to create
safe and healthy communities for all Australian children.
9. Listen
to and do what works. Evidence on effective child protection
systems from Australia and overseas demonstrates that community
based and managed child protection systems achieve the best results.
Governments should act on the best evidence and advice available
– children deserve nothing less than a thorough response.
10. A national
response for a national emergency. The Prime Minister has
called child abuse in Aboriginal communities a national emergency
– but the government has only developed a short term response
for the NT. The problem requires sustained national commitment from
all states, territories the commonwealth and non-government agencies
planned and monitored through a National Indigenous Children’s
Well Being and Development Taskforce.
SNAICC has written to
Minister Brough and requested:
- That the Federal government establish under COAG a national
taskforce to lead the development of a national action plan as
proposed and outlined by SNAICC
- That the NT Emergency Response Taskforce be immediately expanded
to include a senior experienced child protection practitioner;
- That the Federal Government and the NT Emergency Response Task
Force convene a national forum to hear the views of experts and
stakeholders including Indigenous chid and family welfare specialists
on:
– Maximising the impact of the emergency response with the
NT;
– Key areas for action in the development of longer term
responses for the NT and all other states and territories.
More Information:
SNAICC
Phone: (03) 9489 8099
Email: [email protected]
Keep up to date
You can find out more
about SNAICC's responses to the federal government's intervention
on child abuse in NT. In the information on SNAICC's
NT Response Update page is regularly updated.
What else SNAICC is doing
on this issue
Overview
of SNAICC's Response to the NT Emergency Measures
Responding
to Child Abuse in NT – What You Can Do
First published
11 July 2007
< Back to SNAICC's
NT Response UPDATE page
< SNAICC
News
|