A letter to principals inviting their school to participate in My Vote My Voice this year on Monday 7 August. Please circulate this letter to your colleagues and any schools for which you have contacts. Expressions of interest are requested by the end of term (24th June), with the listing of students required up until the 21st of July.
Wednesday, 7 June 2023
Sunday, 21 May 2023
Mission Australia Survey
The Youth Survey 2023 is now open. Now in its 22nd year, it's the largest online survey of its kind in Australia and provides an important annual snapshot into the experiences and views of young people aged 15-19.
Take the survey, or share it with a young person so that their views are heard.
Be Part of History

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GenV Scientific Director Professor Melissa Wake GenV family: mother Saada, son Ali, baby Mya, Minister for Health Mary-Anne Thomas |
GenV Scientific Director Professor Melissa Wake said the project aimed to better understand and treat the causes of modern health problems such as obesity, asthma, autism, food allergies and mental illness. “Families that take part in GenV will make a difference to the future health of generations to come,” she said. GenV aims to help solve the complex problems facing children and adults and provide the opportunity to better predict, treat and prevent many different conditions. “Even in its start-up recruitment stage, GenV is already meeting this goal at a speed and scale that might not otherwise have been possible. Collaborators are already testing out new screens that could detect infections and syndromes in the newborn period, providing data on the long-term safety of vaccines in pregnancy and supporting a new registry for children born with hip problems.”
Thrive by Five from Jay Weatherill, Director
Up to 101,620 women would join or rejoin the workforce if the Childcare Activity Test was abolished - and our economy would get a $4.4 billion boost! These are just some of the incredible findings of a report by Impact Economics and Policy that was recently released. The report shows that the Activity Test is preventing parents, usually mothers, from joining or rejoining the workforce, and makes one thing very clear; it’s time for this confusing and complicated “test” to be abolished. I’ve heard stories from mums who would like to return to work or work more days but can’t, from parents who wish their child could have more days in early learning but don’t qualify for the subsidies needed to make it affordable, from families who are fearful of inadvertently running up a debt with Centrelink when their hours at work change. The Activity Test is a major barrier to families accessing early learning – in fact, its contributing to 126,000 children missing out on critical early childhood education and care, including single parent families – who are 3 times more likely to have children limited to 1 day a week of early learning and childcare. Parents have to update their activity regularly with Centrelink to ensure they are not overpaid – a nightmare for busy parents with changeable hours. The Activity Test actually discourages people from finding work.
As the new report shows, scrapping the test will benefit women, families, the economy and most importantly, children. That’s why I want to hear from you. Because while facts and statistics are critically important for making the case to scrap to the Activity Test, it is real stories from real people that change hearts and minds. Will you take a moment to share your story about how the Activity Test is affecting you or your family? Click here to tell us now.
Adviser Robyn Byrne OAM
Donna Ward says there's a 'singlehood penalty' for women like her. Australia-first research backs her up.
Saturday, 22 April 2023
From the President, Ronniet Milliken
Can the mind set in our community be changed so that EQUALITY for all is accepted as the BASE CASE - not something to aspire toward in 300 years! The strategy could be to end harassment and discrimination by the end of the decade.
In 2024 the Australia Equal Opportunity legislation enacted in 1984 will have been in place for 40 years. And the Racial Discrimination legislation will have been in place 50 years in 2025.
Other legislation, codes etc followed to set the standard for other demographics, and other perpetrators of discrimination and harassment. We are cautiously optimistic that the state and federal budgets will see further public investment in equality – most likely to address the outcomes of inequality and lack of respect. But we have seen the closure of the Office of the Family Violence Reform Implementation Monitor, ahead of successful culture change across our community.
Should the various Human Rights/Equal Opportunity/Racial Discrimination/Consumer Affairs and Trade Practices Commissions, WorkSafe, and WGEA actively take the message the EQUALITY and RESPECT message into the community – that this is the BASE case – not a ‘nice to have’.
A change of approach is required to increase awareness and prevention. It is not a matter of improving websites for the community to find and expecting small and medium businesses to take up expensive eLearning. What if our leaders and these public institutions ramp up awareness and advocacy? Might that reduce the incidence of harassment and discrimination? As a non-party political organisation, it was inspiring to hear from Senator Judith Troeth about what can be achieved by women leading our nation together across political party lines to achieve change. (see April Newsletter)
Mission Australia Survey
Mission Australia’s Youth Survey 2023 is now open. Now in its 22nd year, it's the largest online survey of its kind in Australia and provides an important annual snapshot into the experiences and views of young people aged 15-19.
Take the survey, or share it with a young person so that their views are heard. Open from March - August.
Celebrating International Women and Girls on Science Day
Marking the eighth annual UN International Women and Girls in Science Day, Minister for Education Natalie Hutchins said the upcoming Trades Fit Expo represents an excellent opportunity for female and non-binary students to explore career opportunities in STEM fields. The Trades Fit is an expo hosted by the Department of Education for female and non-binary students in years 9-12. Held over 10-11 May at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, the expo allows students to experience exciting career opportunities in traditionally male-dominated fields through interactive experiences and conversation with industry, in a way that focuses on their perspectives.
Humanitech Summit
This is Australia’s flagship event at the intersection of technology, social innovation, and humanitarian action. Led by Humanitech, an initiative of Red Cross, the 2023 Summit will explore how technology can be used in ways that benefit people and society. A full day of thought-provoking and insightful sessions from leading thinkers at the forefront of change.
Wednesday 17 May 2023, State Library Victoria, Register Now
Sunday, 12 March 2023
Young Women and Youth Activism

Susanne Legena CEO of PLAN Australia and members of her team including Youth Activists joined the meeting.
Susanne gave an overview stating that ‘PLAN is the charity for girls’ equality. We tackle the root causes of poverty, support communities through crisis, campaign for gender equality, and help governments do what’s right for children and particularly for girls. We believe a better world is possible. An equal world; a world where all children can live happy and healthy lives, and where girls can take their rightful place as equals.’ Plan believes a better world is possible and they can add value and have made some pretty big changes in the 80 years they have been around.
PLAN has Five Pillars: Learn; Lead; Decide; Thrive; Survive, designed to create young women leaders and change-makers. The Youth Activist Series (YAS), a 12 month leadership program, provides a platform for young people to learn more about global issues surrounding gender justice, and presents a space where they can build their capacity and campaign with young people all over the world. The purpose of YAS is to give participants the chance to drive real change that is informed by their voices and solutions.
Ruvimbo, one of the Youth Activist in the Youth Activist Series (YAS): Stand Up Against Street Harassment awareness and training program, PLAN International Australia proudly partnered with L’OrĂ©al Paris, to deliver this in Australia. This stemmed from research done, resulting in the mapping tool Free to Be Free to Be - Women's Safety Map | Plan International Australia, developed in collaboration with Monash University’s XYX Lab and young women. One tool developed is the Vic Police text-based reporting tool. This one-hour, virtual interactive training is being offered completely free, and will be delivered by Plan International Australia’s Youth Activists to the public and organisations across Australia. Stand up against street harassment - Plan International Australia
Siena, who works in digital marketing, outlined threats to online safety including time/autonomy children are online; sexualisation of and by young; grooming; radicalisation (especially boys). She believes that platforms/corporations don’t take enough responsibility, as they sell personal data to those who benefit by targeting individuals. Legislation/laws needed.
Young people came together from Vietnam, Indonesia and Australia to research how active bystander intervention can fight the growing levels of gender-based violence and harassment that young people experience online. These youth leaders worked together to design the guiding project questions, conduct focus groups with peers and now campaign for change! Their research focused on this question: What is needed to mobilise and support people to be active online bystanders when they witness online gender-based violence directed towards young people in all our diversity?
Their research showed that people are powerful agents of change and can be mobilised to be active bystanders but they need the education, tools and support to do so. Education systems and social media companies have a big and important role to play in equipping people to be active bystanders. Their findings, recommendations and ideas for action demonstrate that change is possible and it lies with all of us as individuals as well as with social media platforms and our government.
Jemma Enough is Enough! We need to address the barriers to women entering politics. In 2022, YAS and Youth Activists from Indonesia and Vietnam came together to collectively inform what inclusive, and truly representative, civic spaces could look like. It found that young people feel undervalued and powerless in participating in politics. The Voices for Change report explores young people’s leadership and political participation, and proposes solutions for a new way forward. This report was presented before the Minister for Youth. 2022-YAS-Report.pdf (plan.org.au)
Jemma is keen to link with the young NCWV group to possibly create youth programs, share ideas, support young people.
Susanne concluded and suggested we partner for change and have intergenerational dialogues.