First research and impact evaluation report: addressing the torment of powerlessness: ‎ bagaraybang bagaraybang mayinygalang (BBM): empowering & alleviating: a health justice partnership (HJP) of the Hume Riverina Community Legal Service (HRCLS) & ‎Albury Wodonga Aboriginal Health Service(AWAHS) offering legal support for social & ‎emotional well-being with Aboriginal peoples in Northeast NSW and Victoria

Liz Curran, Nisan Alici

Research output: Book/ReportCommissioned report

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Abstract

This is the first of three annual Research and Impact Evaluation (RIE) Reports of a program entitled ‎‎‘Bagaraybang bagaraybang mayinygalang (BBM): Empowering & Alleviating: A Health Justice ‎Partnership (HJP) offering legal support for social & emotional well-being between the Hume ‎Riverina Community Legal Service (HRCLS) & Albury Wodonga Aboriginal Health Service (AWAHS). ‎This RIE has been embedded from service start up including in the way the funding application was ‎designed.‎

This RIE forms a part of an NSW Government funded service program that is ongoing and a part of ‎the ‘National Partnership Agreement’ between governments as Federal and State levels and the ‎legal assistance sector in Australia and is funded under the ‘mental health stream’) focusing on ‎AWAHS’s Aboriginal clients who are affected/impacted by poor mental health.‎

Conclusion and General Findings:
The data collected for this 2023 report suggests the BBM is already gaining traction in the Aboriginal ‎community, particularly in comparison to other similar MDP and HJP projects in start-up phase. The ‎project has seen staff of both agencies working together not only in its co-design but working ‎through emergent issues together with numbers in this short three-month startup phase when the ‎field trip and data was collected. This period has seen high numbers of clients seen already and ‎waiting lists. This is indicative of the leverage secured from the 7-year Invisible Hurdles project ‎where trust and familiarity had been built over the seven-year period between the two agencies.

‎The data also shows however that there is a high level of distrust in Aboriginal communities in the ‎catchment area which is shaped by previous experience with the legal system, service system, and ‎implications of colonisation. This project will need to address this for positive outcomes on the ‎social determinants of health and justice outcomes for Aboriginal clients. Despite these challenges, ‎the partners at a management level and staff participants in this research and impact evaluation are ‎already making positive changes to increase engagement, listen, hear, and adapt so that it is better ‎positioned to respond to identified ways of working to address inequality.‎
It is concerning that the data suggests high levels of ignorance about the law, with perceptions that ‎the role of the law is only when someone has ‘done something illegal’ rather than in the protection ‎of rights or to enforce those rights. It was clear that this ignorance is seen to be utilised by ‎authorities to suppress the Aboriginal community. This conclusion is based on some of the ‎narratives collected across different tools (thus testing and verifying each other) during the field trip ‎in April 2023.‎

There is also an element of members of the Aboriginal community identifying concerns that in ‎exercising their rights they risk reprisals against them by authorities. This highlighted the great need ‎not only for access to a lawyer but also the need to build legal awareness, capability, confidence, ‎empowerment, and advocacy skills in both the Aboriginal community and among the ‘trusted ‎intermediaries’ (TIs) namely AWAHS non-legal support staff and professionals who support the ‎community.

Significance:
Ella Baker, trailblazer of the African American civil rights and human rights activist is attributed with ‎saying, ‘in order to see where we are going, we not only must remember where we have been, but ‎we must understand where we have been.’ The data emerging highlights consistently that there are ‎significant flow-on effects from colonisation, these policies remain significant in relation to how they ‎affect Aboriginal people today and ought not to be ignored if efforts to eradicate racism, trauma and ‎human rights of Aboriginal Australians are to be advanced.

This is not unique to Australia. Around the world, colonised communities are still significantly ‎impacted in terms of their life outcomes and ability to advance the sustainable development goals ‎‎(SDGs), due to the impacts of colonisation on various minoritized populations. This includes ‎ongoing poverty, inequality, poor mortality rates and negative health and well-being. The growing ‎body of international research cannot be ignored in a report that examines the effectiveness of this ‎Health Justice Partnership that aims to improve justice and social determinant of health outcomes ‎for Aboriginal community members experiencing poor mental health and well-being. In addition, ‎the “Black Lives Matter” (BLM) is a worldwide movement which has also shaped recent and similar ‎movements in Australia within the Aboriginal community, particularly considering the ongoing ‎deaths in custody, over policing, and structural racism which has been consistently documented in a ‎range of Royal Commissions and Commissions of Inquiry.

The report makes some findings and recommendations directed at government, authorities, the ‎judiciary, the legal profession, funders as well as for the BBM itself. It identifies policy change ‎needed in specific areas. The authors and partners are also disseminating this report to shape and ‎inform replicable models and to make changes based on the evidence that address inequality, ‎discrimination and poverty through justice working alongside the Aboriginal community and health ‎and allied health services.‎

Original languageEnglish
Publisher Nottingham Trent University
ISBN (Electronic)9781399960267
Publication statusPublished - 11 Jul 2023
Externally publishedYes

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