CLCQ

Sector support

Community legal centres have been working for more than 30 years to advance human rights and social justice.

Our resources library illustrate the diversity of community legal centres’ work and the relevance of social justice and human rights for our communities.

Queensland’s community legal centres advocate for increased human rights protections, laws and practices that are socially just.

Find resources on these topics

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are entitled to the same legal rights as the non-Indigenous population of Australia and to equality before the law at all stages of the legal process.

Access resources and read more

Children and young people are fully entitled to respect for their human rights.

Access resources and read more

Family law and child support systems should exist to assist equally all members of the family group and refrains from alienating individuals.

Access resources and read more

Security of housing, as well as being a human right in itself, is fundamental to the achievement of many other basic entitlements.

Access resources and read more

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. Human beings of all sexual orientations and gender identities are entitled to the full enjoyment of human rights.

Access resources and read more

All individuals with a mental illness should have access to treatment and should be able to enjoy a meaningful life in which they are able to participate equally in society.

Access resources and read more

People with a disability are entitled to the fulfilment of the same rights as every other individual.

Access resources and read more

A sentenced prisoner has rights and entitlements. A prisoner has the right to:

  • Talk to a lawyer – a Legal Aid Queensland lawyer, a community legal service lawyer or a private lawyer
  • Make complaints
  • Sue for damages
  • Receive medical care
  • Vote in federal elections if the sentence is three years or less
  • Apply to transfer to another prison, including interstate.

Access resources and read more

Australia has a responsibility to facilitate the right to asylum of individuals with a well-founded fear of persecution or similarly serious threats to their life or safety.

Access resources and read more

An individual’s entitlement to human rights does not deteriorate with age but rather that these rights require protection at all stages of life.

Access resources and read more

Women should have the right to equality of opportunity and outcome with their male counterparts. Gender-based discrimination against women is profoundly unjust and an affront to human dignity.

Access resources and read more

Children and young people are fully entitled to respect for their human rights.

Access resources and read more

Issues in society

All people, regardless of their background or present circumstances, should be able to access sufficient assistance (legal or non-legal) to enable them to know, understand and stand up for their rights in the public domain. Individuals should be able to seek and achieve justice through the system of courts established to achieve this end.

Access resources and read more

Protections in the areas of credit, debt and insurance are vital in order to protect consumers.

Access resources and read more

Domestic and family violence is not acceptable and must be prevented. Information, services and support is available for people in Queensland impacted by domestic and family violence.

Access resources and read more

It is a human right of all people in need to an adequate level of income support, protected by law. The right to social security is enshrined in five human rights treaties to which Australia is a signatory.

Access resources and read more