Commission to lead historic anti-racism study into universities

The 黑料情报站 will lead a groundbreaking independent study to better understand and address the dangerous prevalence of racism at universities, after receiving $2.5 million in Commonwealth funding.
Race Discrimination Commissioner, Giridharan Sivaraman said the study will be 鈥渃omprehensive鈥, with university students and staff to share their experiences of racism, and additional research undertaken to assess structural racial barriers. It will address all forms of racism, including the antisemitism, Islamophobia and anti-Arab racism currently being seen on campuses, and systemic racist practices against First Nations student and staff.
"In its work over many years, the Commission has heard that universities can be sites of racist conduct and practices. This study will give them the evidence and roadmap to change,鈥 Commissioner Sivaraman said.
鈥淲hether it be international or migrant students, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people or those from racialised backgrounds, and identifiable religious faiths, there are countless stories of discrimination, targeted hate and harm at universities. This is an incredible opportunity to hopefully put an end to such behaviour.
鈥淭he research will not just be about addressing interpersonal racism, but will investigate systemic racist practices that limit people鈥檚 right to education and progression in employment. We need to ensure people鈥檚 safety and maximise their chances to succeed.鈥
Commissioner Sivaraman welcomed the initiative, which implements part of a key recommendation from the Universities Accord, and said he hoped the findings will become a foundational piece to guide all Australian universities.
鈥淥ur research will be centred on people鈥檚 lived experiences, with a strong focus on First Nations students and staff,鈥 Commissioner Sivaraman said.
鈥淲e will take a robust independent approach that is trauma-informed, providing the government and higher education sector with recommendations that help us understand where things currently stand, and how they can be improved.
鈥淭he Commission鈥檚 ongoing work to support the development of a National Anti-Racism Framework has already identified the urgent need to address racism in the university system.
鈥淲e are excited to work on this historic study to uphold human rights principles for both staff and students.鈥
Media contact: media@humanrights.gov.au or 0457 281 897