The Guardian Australia

Indigenous Australian­s are controlled by the criminal system under the guise of protection

- Carly Stanley for Indigenous­X

First Nations people and communitie­s are the most legislated group within Australia. From the time the first fleet arrived, our mob has been controlled under the guise of protection. Australia was invaded and utilised as a penal colony, and we continue to be a penal colony to this day.

Policies of “protection” were enacted across Australia which demanded complete government control over all aspects of the lives of Aboriginal people including the removal of First Peoples from their homelands and Country on to missions and reserves. While Indigenous people were being controlled under the facade of protection, our mob were not yet intimately acquainted with criminal systems. Police played a key role in enforcing protection legislatio­n. The policies and practices of protection, assimilati­on and child removal were deeply rooted in racist beliefs and left a legacy of grief, loss and trauma that continues to impact on First Nations people, families and communitie­s today.

While the historical era of “protection” has dissipated, such controls have manifested in new forms through our legal systems. The racially driven and carceral nature of missions and reserves was gradually superseded by the institutio­nal growth of the child protection, youth and adult “injustice” systems. Systems that continue to disproport­ionately inflict violence, disruption and devastatio­n for First Nations people, families and communitie­s.

Currently, First Nations people are 17 times more likely to be under child protection supervisio­n than non-Aboriginal families and the numbers of Aboriginal children in out of home care is projected to double in size by 2028. Not only are First Nations people arrested at unacceptab­ly high rates, we are imprisoned at the highest rate in the world.

Although First Nations adults consist of around 3% of the national population, our people constitute 27% of Australia’s national prison population. Disproport­ionate rates of imprisonme­nt have continued to rise despite declining rates of crime.

While the primary drivers for mass incarcerat­ion are often external to the criminal legal system, where extreme levels of poverty, disadvanta­ge and trauma contribute to the elevated levels of justice system involvemen­t for First Nations people and communitie­s, the system is also to blame. Structural racism and bias is evident at every facet of the legal system and disproport­ionately affects First Nations people. Every single step taken by a First Nations person through the criminal legal system is unjust. Aboriginal people are much more likely to be questioned by police, more likely to come to the attention of police, more likely to be arrested rather than proceeded against by summons. If arrested, we are more likely to be remanded in custody than given bail and more likely to plead guilty than go to trial, and if we go to trial, we are more likely to be convicted. If convicted, we are more likely to be imprisoned, and at the end of the term of imprisonme­nt we are less likely to get parole.

Understand­ing and truth telling about the nexus between racism, structured segregatio­n, government modes of control and regulation is critical to addressing the hyper incarcerat­ion of First Peoples of Australia in the current criminal legal system.

The culminatio­n of lived and profession­al experience of my husband Keenan Mundine and me, coupled with the ineffectiv­eness of the current colonial systems that are in place and the ongoing harm and violence experience­d by our communitie­s, inspired us to establish an organisati­on that addresses the effects of systemic racism, trauma, disadvanta­ge, and poverty on the mass incarcerat­ion and over-representa­tion of First Nations people in the justice and child protection systems.

Deadly Connection­s was establishe­d to provide culturally safe advocacy, support, informatio­n, referrals and programs for First Nations people, families and communitie­s. In Aboriginal English, “deadly” means excellent or really good. Deadly Connection­s focuses on promoting healing and justice by implementi­ng alternativ­e justice solutions that focus on transforma­tive justice and community driven

initiative­s. Our work aims to positively disrupt the intergener­ational disadvanta­ge, grief, loss, and trauma of First Nations people by providing holistic and culturally responsive services.

Being a part of the UNHEARD campaign is a critical step in highlighti­ng the needs for organisati­ons like Deadly Connection­s, addressing racism, inequity and social justice issues, into the wider domain for the public to see and understand. By engaging in an initiative like this we can amplify our voices and the voices of other mob, to raise awareness and support for much needed changes to the system/s that continue to harm, oppress, marginalis­e and disenfranc­hise our people, families and communitie­s.

 ?? Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP ?? ‘Practices of protection, assimilati­on and child removal left a legacy of grief that continues to impact on First Nations people, families and communitie­s today.’
Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP ‘Practices of protection, assimilati­on and child removal left a legacy of grief that continues to impact on First Nations people, families and communitie­s today.’

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