On the anniversary of the Voice Referendum, many of us are reflecting and speculating on what it was, what it meant, and where to from here.
Last year, we reflected with partners on what collaboration for peace-building and healing might look like after the Referendum, knowing that the work would continue, regardless of the post-Referendum scenario.
According to the scenario work done by CFI, the 2023 Referendum results fall between Scenario #1, Stabilising the Base, and Scenario #4, Narrow Escape.
Strikingly, the 2023 results and the 1999 results on the question of First Nations acknowledgement in the Australian Constitution are extremely similar. Overall percentages were close to identical: 60% NO and 40% YES.
There were some shifts in the electorate-level analysis, but the pattern remained largely similar. This means that while there are many indicators of change in the Australian relationships with First Nations, the Referendum results remained fixed for a generation between 1999 to 2023.
Today, as a diverse team, composed of First Nations leadership, coloniser and convict descendants, and multi-generation migrants, we acknowledged we live and work on unceded Aboriginal lands. We reflected together on what we are seeing in the national, state, regional, community and individual work for collaboration for peace-building and healing on the anniversary of the Referendum vote.
One year on, we see a lot of Both/And. The Referendum result was sweet (unprecedented support for self-determination, among Yes and some No voters) and sour (the fight for justice and truth-telling, and against racism, continues). We feel peace and fire, hope and fear, inspiration and frustration.
One year on, we hear calls for unity, but these can disguise calls for assimilation. What is needed is more collaboration that values differences of culture and knowledges. This means working together in the messy middle spaces shared by First Nations and other multicultural Australians, centring equity and justice.
This work ebbs and flows and calls for courage and truth-telling. Across Australia, we see communities and networks continue to advance this work.
We recognise the uneven load in the fight for justice and self-determination that is carried by First Nations peoples in Australia, especially women, in the aftermath of the Referendum.
Yet there is love and strength, as our collaborative work for peace-building and collective healing continues.
Anna Powell Mark Yettica-Paulson Sarah Callaghan Susan Yazbeck Min Wah Voon Angela Rutter John Hibble Bec Fry @rodney green Caroline Aow Muktasree Chakma Monique Lerchner Laura Barnes