cover image: Annual report 2022 — 23

20.500.12592/ttdz4gg

Annual report 2022 — 23

13 Dec 2023

Acknowledgement of country *Privacy disclaimer The ASRC would like to acknowledge the Throughout this report, some of the names, Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation as identities and details of people seeking traditional owners and custodians of the asylum and their stories have been land on which the ASRC stands. [...] 22,500 people rallied in the space of 19 days to Additionally, after 11 years of advocacy in the donate $5.2 million to enable the ASRC to remain education space, we finally saw access to TAFE solvent, stable and strong into the future. [...] The ASRC has been proud to play a reaffirmed their commitment to the vision we are working towards together – an Australia where that influenced role in these and many other significant campaigns and work alongside refugees and refugees and people seeking asylum are safe, the situation and other dedicated refugee advocates and respected, and afforded the opportunities and the measures organisation. [...] We have Prior to the restructure and the introduction of the worked closely with charities and mainstream visa and I can work, I’ll come back new Response and Support program, the former housing providers funded by the State Casework Program provided intensive, holistic and offer the same kindness.” government to provide more access to housing. [...] Safety: All people in Australia should have internal and external to the ASRC, to strengthen calling on the Albanese Government to let people access to safety nets and mainstream social the influence of our grassroots community of seeking asylum work, study and access a fair support, as well as having all of their human asylum-seeker advocates and achieve systemic social safety net.
Pages
48
Published in
Australia