Civil Liberties Australia's Constitution & History
Constitution
A copy of the current constitution of Civil Liberties Australia Incorporated (Association No. A04043) can be found by clicking here. The current version (V4) incorporates changes arising from the 2007 Annual General Meeting, which is the last time the constitution was altered (information correct at 1 Aug 10).
Background
Civil Liberties Australia (CLA) is a national organisation based in Australia's capital city, Canberra, which stand(s) for people's rights, and goes in to bat for everyone's civil liberties. It is non-party political and independent of other organisations. It is funded by its members and donations – CLA does not receive funding from other sources.
CLA monitors police and security forces, and the actions and inaction of politicians. It reviews proposed legislation to make it better, and keeps watch on government departments and agencies, according to its website, www.cla.asn.au
The organisation aims to keep Australia the free and open society it has traditionally been, where you can be yourself without undue interference from 'authority'. CLA was first formally registered on 10 December 2003. Current office bearers are located under the 'The Board' tab associated with this page. At 31 December 2008, CLA had about 225 members (190 full members, 35 student members).
CLA concentrates on trying to anticipate problems, rather than being reactive, and on providing answers to generic problems, rather than trying to correct one-off, individual cases. We focus on cases where an individual issue illustrates a general trend.
Efforts continue on restoring a proper balance in civil liberties in Australia, and a return to the traditional rule of law. We aim to ensure civil liberties and human rights, affected hugely by more than 50 pieces of anti-terrorism legislation introduced as a result of the 11 September 2001 aircraft attacks on New York and the Pentagon in the USA, are given the appropriate weight that they used to be given.
CLA is also working on civil liberties/human rights issues of Pacific Island nations, including Papua New Guinea and Timor Leste, with a view to offering help to form civil society groups if requested.
A major internal project is to identify and promulgate the precise rights of Australians to protest outside their national Parliament House.
CLA has proposed a worldwide 10/10 For Life campaign, asking nations to declare a 10-year moratorium on the death penalty from 10 October 2010. It is asking the Australian Government, which is opposed to state execution, to lead an anti-death penalty campaign in the Asia-Pacific region.
Within Australia, CLA is campaigning for more community involvement in setting guidelines for police, in particular in use of stun guns and police chases.
- CLA has facilitated Law School internships studies on emerging issues in recent years: 2006:
- an analysis of international human rights law in relation to climate and environment change;
- 2007: an analysis of the impact of the post-11 September 2001 laws on Australian society, and recommendations for how the nation can return to the traditional rule of law;
- 2007: analysis and recommendations on personal and proxy medical consent laws;
- 2007-8: research and recommendations for new national laws and regulations in relation to DNA: and
- 2009: analysis of the constitutional and legal situation in Fiji and its possibility of returning to a country which respects its Bill of Rights.
History
CLA is the second civil liberties group formed in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT). From about the mid-1970s to the late 1990s, a Canberra-based organisation called the ACT Council for Civil Liberties (ACTCCL) held regular meetings under the presidency for many years of barrister Laurie O'Sullivan, and then in its final years of lawyer Jon Stanhope, who later was elected to the ACT Legislative Assembly and subsequently became Chief Minister (re-elected Oct 09 for a further four years). On 1 July 2004, he introduced the first Human Rights Act ('Bill of Rights') in any Australian jurisdiction. Other noted personalities involved in the earlier ACTCCL were Forbes Gordon, a lawyer and grazier from Braidwood who was instrumental in the founding of the group, and Jennifer Saunders, a prominent female barrister who was President when it ceased to operate around 2000-2001.
After forming in December 2003, the new CLA decided to operate nationally from 2006-7 when the launch of its first website showed a need for civil liberties help, advice and monitoring in all States and Territories. The CLA Board decided to concentrate on any area in Australia where civil liberties and human rights are under threat, keeping a particularly watch on rural and regional areas, and in growing outer areas of major capitals, where there are no formal groups.
Join us
You can join or renew your membership to Civil Liberties Australia by clicking here.
Donate to Civil Liberties Australia
To make a donation to Civil Liberties Australia click here.




DIRECTOR: Frank Cassidy
DIRECTOR: Tim Vines