Professor Megan Davis, UNSW Balnaves Chair in Constitutional Law and Pro Vice-Chancellor Indigenous, is the new Chair of the United Nations Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous People.
Ninety per cent of public submissions to the Indigenous Voice Co-Design Process support a referendum on a First Nations Voice to Parliament, a UNSW Indigenous Law Centre report finds.
The Indigenous Law Centre at UNSW Law and Justice has been at the forefront of Indigenous law research and reform for four decades – today its work and influence are helping change the nation.
Pro Vice-Chancellor Indigenous, Professor Megan Davis explores how Voice, Treaty and Truth can deliver on the unimplemented social justice package in response to the historic Mabo High Court Decision.
The launch of the new UNSW Indigenous Strategy, Education and Research website brings together the important work of the Office of the Pro Vice-Chancellor Indigenous and Nura Gili.
To bring in the new term and to start T2 O-Week, Bidjigal Elders & traditional owners Aunty Yvonne Simms and Uncle Glen Timbery came on campus for a Welcome to Country and Smoking Ceremony.
On the fourth anniversary of the Uluru Statement from the Heart, UNSW’s Professor Megan Davis joins Pat Anderson and Noel Pearson to welcome the Sydney Peace Prize announcement.
On the fourth anniversary of the Uluru Statement from the Heart, advocates say if the Commonwealth “legislates an Indigenous Voice, our lives will not improve”.
Vast majority of public submissions published to date in response to the Indigenous Voice Interim Report support a referendum on an Indigenous Voice to Parliament.
The Uluru Dialogue group based at UNSW Indigenous Law Centre says constitutional recognition cannot be dislocated from the idea of a Voice to Parliament.