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Racism must face in-depth scrutiny, inquiry told

May 8, 2026
By ABE MADDISON

An inquiry has been urged to take a broader look at the causes of racism against Aboriginal children to prevent “cumulative harm”.

In a submission to a Federal inquiry into racism against Aboriginal people, South Australia’s Guardian for Children and Young People Shona Reid said, for children, it is rarely something experienced as a single moment in time.

“It is experienced across a trajectory, shaping how they come into contact with systems, how they move through them, and where they ultimately arrive,” she wrote.

“What emerges from oversight is not a series of disconnected events, but a pattern of cumulative harm.”

Shona Reid has called for a more in-depth look at racism against Aboriginal children. (Jason O’Brien/AAP PHOTOS)

The inquiry is examining the prevalence, impacts and drivers of racism, hate and violence, as well as existing responses and opportunities for reform.

Ms Reid writes that if it was to meaningfully address racism, it must look closely at the systems that exercise the greatest power over Aboriginal children and young people’s lives.

Government data from 2025 shows that despite Aboriginal children accounting for  only 5.5 per cent of young people in SA, they represented 37.9 per cent of all children in care, and 39.8 per cent of all children in out-of-home care.

Aboriginal children are over represented in out-of-home care, putting them at risk of racism. (Lucy Hughes Jones/AAP PHOTOS)

“It is within these systems that racism is most consistently experienced and where reform has the greatest potential to change the trajectory of a child’s life,” she said.

Recognising this is a call to examine the architecture of the system itself, Ms Reid wrote.

“Without this, efforts to address racism will remain focused on surface-level change, while the underlying structures that produce inequity remain intact.”

The parliamentary inquiry into racism directed at Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people took evidence at a hearing in Adelaide on Friday.

Witnesses will include Ms Reid,  SA Commissioner for Aboriginal Children and Young People Dale Agius, and representatives from the SA Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisation Network, NPY Women’s Council, and the Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement.

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Peter Rowe

Peter Rowe leads First Nations News as Editor, with over three decades of experience across international newsrooms, digital platforms and media strategy roles. For the past 20 years, he’s worked in Australia – reporting, editing and advising on stories that shape public debate.