Challenges to Religious Freedom: Conversion Practices law passed, ALRC report released

A brief update on two significant challenges to religious freedom which have emerged over the last few days.

First, in NSW, the Conversion Practices Ban Bill 2024 has been rushed through both Houses of Parliament, receiving final approval on Friday March 22 after an all-night debate in the Legislative Council, and is now awaiting the Royal Assent. I posted about this Bill recently. There I said:

Legislation of this sort has been introduced in other jurisdictions around Australia and elsewhere. The aim of banning oppressive and violent practices designed to “convert” someone’s sexual orientation from homosexual to heterosexual is good, of course. But those practices, while they may have existed some time ago, are really no longer around. The problem with these laws now is that their drafting can be so broad that they interfere with the ordinary teaching of religious doctrines and life within families. These laws are also often premised on the assumption that “gender transition” is a good thing which should be freely available to children, whether or not with parental permission. They raise important issues of concern to all those interested in the welfare of children, whether or not from a religious perspective.

In that more detailed post I outlined the problems with the Bill. I noted that it is at least better than some others which have passed, especially the bad Victorian law. But none of the suggested amendments put forward by faith groups and the Opposition and other members were accepted by the government, which had the numbers with the Greens to push it through unchanged.

So churches and other religious groups will need to consider carefully where the line can be drawn between counselling which urges someone to live in accordance with God’s will (by not engaging in sex outside a man/woman marriage, or by living in line with one’s biological reality), and counselling which “suppresses” a person’s “sexual orientation” or “gender identity”. The Bill (soon to be an Act) will also put a thumb on the scales of advice to those wrestling with gender confusion, in favour of “affirming” treatment, when the scientific evidence is becoming increasingly clear that for young people, puberty blockers and other such treatments are not shown to be of help, and lead to massive bodily change which can usually not be reversed.

The Act, once given assent, is due to come into operation in one year.

The second concerning development is that on Wednesday 21 March the Australian Law Reform Commission released its report Maximising the Realisation of Human Rights: Religious Educational Institutions and Anti-Discrimination Laws (ALRC Report 142). Far from “maximising” human rights, the report (as expected by those who spoke to some of its researchers) would have the effect, if adopted, of seriously impairing the operation of faith-based schools around Australia. In brief, it recommends removal of all of “balancing clauses” in the federal Sex Discrimination Act 1984 which currently recognise the need to balance the religious freedom of faith-based schools with rights of teachers and students not to be detrimentally treated on the basis of sexual activity or “gender identity”. In particular, this would remove (among other provisions) section 38 of that Act, which allows faith schools to operate in accordance with their religious ethos when making staffing and educational decisions.

The Prime Minister has noted that the government has not made a decision to formally accept these recommendations. He has indicated, however, that since the report was made available to the government in December, two draft pieces of legislation have been prepared (though not made publicly available). He has indicated he would like bi-partisan support from the federal Opposition. It has to be said that views on these issues seem so strongly held that this seems unlikely. But it will all depend on the wording of any proposed laws.

Australia needs to decide if it wants to offer parents the option of having their children educated in faith-based schools, or not. Many parents have signalled they want this option, by sending their children to such schools. But if those schools find that their very reason for existence, operating in accordance with a religious world-view, is taken away, it seems likely that many will decide it is not worth continuing operations. The federal government needs to listen very carefully to all sides of this debate.

More issues with the Queensland Anti-Discrimination Bill 2024

I am happy to present a guest post today from Associate Professor Mark Fowler, raising more issues of concern from a religious freedom perspective with the recently released proposed Anti-Discrimination Bill 2024 . Dr Mark Fowler is Principal, Fowler Charity Law, Adjunct Associate Professor, University of Notre Dame, School of Law, Sydney and an External Fellow at the Centre for Public, International and Comparative Law, University of Queensland.

The concerns can be broadly grouped as follows:

  1. The Bill’s exception for employment by religious institutions would enact the most restrictive regime in Australia;
  2. The Bill will require religious institutions to provide services against their religious beliefs;
  3. The imposed ‘duty to eliminate discrimination’ will require religious institutions to proactively engage in activities that do not conform to their religious beliefs; and
  4. The Bill fails to protect religious individuals from discrimination when they engage in collaborative effort with fellow believers. 

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NSW Conversion Practices Bill- risks to religious freedom

The NSW government has introduced a Conversion Practices Ban Bill 2024 into the Parliament, with the apparent aim of moving it through very quickly. Legislation of this sort has been introduced in other jurisdictions around Australia and elsewhere. The aim of banning oppressive and violent practices designed to “convert” someone’s sexual orientation from homosexual to heterosexual is good, of course. But those practices, while they may have existed some time ago, are really no longer around. The problem with these laws now is that their drafting can be so broad that they interfere with the ordinary teaching of religious doctrines and life within families. These laws are also often premised on the assumption that “gender transition” is a good thing which should be freely available to children, whether or not with parental permission. They raise important issues of concern to all those interested in the welfare of children, whether or not from a religious perspective.

But laws of this sort can in particular have significant implications for religious freedom. I have previously provided a detailed analysis of the Victorian legislation on this topic, noting the serious problems that law has created. The good news in NSW is that the government does seem to have listened to some of the concerns about the law raised by religious leaders and other concerned citizens. The Bill is certainly an improvement on the Victorian model. But there are a number of areas where it could be clearer in protecting important rights of all members of the community, to speak and act freely in accordance with their convictions and biological reality.

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Queensland – new proposed discrimination law

The Queensland government has released a draft of a proposed new discrimination law for public comment. The proposed Anti-Discrimination Bill 2024 will make some radical changes to Queensland law, and of interest here is that it will seriously impact religious freedom in that State. One of the ways that religious freedom is protected in Australia is through the inclusion in discrimination laws of “balancing clauses” (provisions that balance the right not to be discriminated against, with the important right of religious freedom). But the new Bill will dramatically narrow those clauses.

I am pleased to present a guest blog post commenting on some religious freedom impacts of the draft Bill, from Dr Alex Deagon, an Associate Professor in the School of Law at QUT, and an internationally recognised researcher in religious freedom.

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