Showing posts with label Law & Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Law & Justice. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 July 2018

Invitation to a Special Event at KWM - "What does the future hold for refugees in Australia? "

are hosting an event on behalf of the 



We are honoured to be one of their community impact partners. They have invited Sarah Dale, our Principal Solicitor, and I to Melbourne and offered us an opportunity to invite supporters of our work to their offices for this event.

We would like you, as one of very valued supporters, to join us.

It's been a busy year:
  • We assisted 4500 people with application assistance
  • We lodged 1700 applications.
  • We were assisted by 900 volunteers
  • 10 law firms, including King & Wood Mallesons provided hours of pro bono support to our lawyers.

What does the future hold? Join us for drinks on Thursday 19th July to find out!
Please RSVP events@racs.org.au 

Details on the attached invite.

Kind regards,

Tanya Jackson-Vaughan
Executive Director

Legal and Government Humanitarian Award winner 2017.

Refugee Advice & Casework Service (Aust) Inc.
Address: 1-3 Eurimbla Ave, Randwick NSW 2031
Client Line: (02) 8355 7227 | Reception Line: (02) 8317 6500
Mobile: 0417 204 098 | Fax: (02) 8004 3348
Email: tanya.jackson-vaughan@racs.org.au Website: www.racs.org.au


This communication and any attachments are confidential and may be privileged between RACS and the addressee only. Click here for our email disclaimer and advice on what to do if you received this email in error. 

We acknowledge the Traditional Owners, Custodians and Elders of the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation, past, present and future, on whose traditional land we work. 

Wednesday, 14 January 2015

Interfaith Worker Justice - some workers need all the help they can get

In Australia, we have a system of wage justice which, while it is not perfect, is far away from the experience of many workers in the USA. While the phrase "wage theft" is rarely heard in Australia, many of the actions cited in this video as wage theft do occur in Australia. They are usually dealt with by the Fair Work Commission or the relevant trade union. To find out more about Interfaith Worker Justice, please go here.

Saturday, 12 October 2013

Women of Islam - 9

Daisy Khan (USA, 1958-Present)

In 2005, Daisy founded the Women's Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality (WISE), the only cohesive, global movement of Muslim women around the world that works to reclaim women's rights in Islam using a human rights and social-justice based framework.
 
Further, in 2008, Daisy spearheaded the creation of the Global Muslim Women's Shura Council, whch is comprised of eminent Muslim women scholars, activists and lawyers from 26 countries.  The Council's statements have informed numerous university curriculums and legal opinions. 
 
Daisy is viewed as a credible, humane and equitable voice within the global Muslim community.
 
 
 

Friday, 11 October 2013

The 10th Assembly of the World Council of Churches (WCC) - October 2013

WCC 10th Assembly: hopes
and aspirations
           
WCC general secretary Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit
10 October 2013
The 10th Assembly of the World Council of Churches (WCC) begins at the end of October and promises to be one of the most diverse gathering of Christians in the world.

The assembly will be an opportunity for renewing the worldwide ecumenical movement – infusing it with honesty, humility and hope, according to the WCC general secretary.

As to why this is the case, Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, WCC general secretary, and a Lutheran pastor from the Church of Norway says, it is “through humility, honesty and hope that we can live together as humanity and a Church in a world, where justice and peace are fundamental initiatives and not merely words.”

The theme of the WCC assembly is a prayer “God of life, lead us to justice and peace”.

The assembly will take place from 30 October to 8 November in Busan, Republic of Korea.
It will bring around 3,000 participants from Asia, Pacific, Africa, Europe, Middle East, North America and Latin America, including a large number of young people and several thousand Korean Christians.

In the assembly, Tveit finds the foundation of his hopes in the legacy of the WCC which began in 1948 and has continued during the past 65 years. The member churches, Tveit says, will be harvesting fruits of the work of the WCC since the last WCC assembly in Porto Alegre, Brazil, 2006, while setting directions for a new ecumenical vision for the future. There are 345 member churches in the WCC and all but a few will be represented at the assembly.

Tveit expects the WCC assembly to be an opportunity of learning.

“Churches will engage in open and accountable conversations,” he said, about issues important to the church today such as mission and evangelism, faith and order, justice, peace and unity. This dialogue is significant for the WCC assembly as “justice and peace imply effectively addressing core values of the kingdom of God, the will of God, the creator,” he says.

The proposal made by the outgoing WCC Central Committee that the assembly initiates a pilgrimage of justice and peace can unite Christians in a unique way, according to Tveit. This aspect, he says, is also echoed in the call from Pope Francis in which he has proclaimed that the Church is here to serve, for justice and peace.

“This call makes us look beyond our boundaries and limitations journeying towards being a Church together. The assembly will bring a realization of what we have received. But, we are not finished with our tasks and we have to continue our work and prayers for the Christian unity.”

The WCC assembly will feature varied spiritual expressions from churches around the world. The participants will share these reflections of Christian unity through worship, Bible study and prayer.

Having the assembly in South Korea is significant, Tveit says. “The assembly will be a place for the global fellowship of the churches to express solidarity with the Korean churches, which have suffered separations and had been calling for the reunification of the divided Korean peninsula,” he said.

Simultaneously, Asia being one of the areas of rising economies in the world, Tveit sees a great potential for the assembly to provide a critical and hopeful voice in the reality of globalization and a development paradigm that needs to change to be just and sustainable. “The WCC assembly for the churches is a place to strengthen a deeper understanding of the Asian contexts through sharing, caring and dialogue,” he said.

“Praying that this is an assembly where we all meet the God of life, we also look forward to move forward together in a pilgrimage for justice and peace ,” he concluded.

The 1st WCC Assembly took place in Amsterdam, Netherlands in 1948.
Since then assemblies have been in held in
Evanston, United States, 1954; New Delhi, India, 1961; Uppsala, Sweden, 1968;
Nairobi, Kenya, 1975; Vancouver, Canada, 1983; Canberra, Australia, 1991;
Harare, Zimbabwe, 1998; and Porto Alegre, Brazil, 2006.
    
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service
for a just and peaceful world.
An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948,
by the end of 2012 the WCC had 345 member churches representing
more than 500 million Christians
from Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other traditions
in over 110 countries.
The WCC works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church.
The WCC general secretary is
the Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, from the [Lutheran] Church of Norway.

Thursday, 10 October 2013

Women of Islam - 7


 
Shirin Ebadi (Iran, 1947-Present)


In 2003, Shirin became the first Muslim woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.
 
As a judge in Iran, she was the first woman to achieve Chief Justice status. However, she was dismissed from this position after the 1979 Revolution.
 
As a lawyer, Shirin has taken on many controversial cases and in result, has been arrested numerous times. 
 
Her activism has been predicated on her view that, "An interpretation of Islam that is in harmony with equality and democracy is an authentic expression of faith. It is not religion that binds women, but the selective dictates of those who wish them cloistered."

From Huffington Post