Welcome to ANTaR
ANTaR is the preeminent non-Indigenous national advocacy organisation dedicated specifically to the rights - and overcoming the disadvantage - of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

The Federal Election 2010
ANTaR's election analysis
For more about the Federal Election 2010 click here
Ten years on: Are we there yet?
Ten years ago, hundreds of thousands of Australians walked across bridges in support of reconciliation.
We have much to be proud of in looking back over the past ten years, but injustice and disadvantage continue to affect Indigenous Australians. We have yet to fulfill the promise of the bridge walks to achieve equality and reconciliation.
So this year Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation (ANTaR) calls for a year of recommitment to reconciliation.
Show your ongoing commitment to reconciliation by doing a virtual bridge walk.
Some of ANTaR's other campaigns:
A Better Way
On Monday 21st June 2010, the Senate passed legislation which partially restores the racial discrimination protections in the NT and establishes a new compulsory income management scheme.
Read more...
Close the Gap
ANTaR has been campaigning for Indigenous health rights since 2004 and is one of the founding members of the Close The Gap coalition.Read more...
What's new?
ANTaR recognises that successful administration plays a critical role in assisting with the smooth running of the organisation.
ANTaR recognises that successful administration plays a critical role in assisting with the smooth running of the organisation. The administration assistant will provide clerical and administrative support to the ANTaR staff.
This position will provide job hunters with good administration and office assistance experience.
The report on the Northern Territory Emergency Response (NTER) by UN Special Rapporteur Professor James Anaya has been welcomed by ANTaR, the only non-Indigenous national advocacy organisation dedicated specifically to the rights - and overcoming the disadvantage - of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
ANTaR supports Professor Anaya’s moderate and measured approach and agrees with Anaya’s criticism of the Australian Government’s NTER, which “overtly discriminates against Aboriginal peoples, infringing their right of self-determination and stigmatizes already stigmatized communities”.
Angus Frith, ANTaR’s Acting President, said “The rights of Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory need to be upheld. This is not happening at the moment.”
UN Official to Report on Aboriginal Human Rights
17 August 2009
Prof. James Anaya, the UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Human Rights is visiting various centres in Australia over the next two weeks. His task will be to report back to the UN.
Several thousand Aboriginal people from across the Northern Territory and other parts of Australia, indigenous organisations, church leaders and local parishes, community and church social justice groups, Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation (ANTaR) and other organisations, as well as many ordinary citizens have signed a letter to the UN Special Rapporteur.

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