Workplace agreements and Indigenous-friendly workplaces
Loading...
Date
Authors
Hunter, Boyd
Gray, Matthew
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of New South Wales
Abstract
The rate of employment of Indigenous Australians is
much lower than that for other Australians. One of the
reasons for this is that Indigenous employees have a
higher rate of job turnover than other employees. Flexible
work arrangements such as cultural or ceremonial leave
and Indigenous-specific provisions can assist Indigenous
employees remain employed when they face competing
demands from the workplace as well as their family,
community and cultural obligations. The availability of
such work arrangements may also make it more attractive
for some groups of Indigenous people to take up paid
employment. This paper uses data on federal workplace
agreements to analyse the extent to which agreements
contain provisions that are likely to create more
Indigenous-friendly workplaces and how this has changed
since the mid-1990s. There has been a marked increase
since 1997 in provisions in agreements for the recruitment,
promotion and other conditions of employment for
Indigenous Australians (including cultural or ceremonial
leave). This in itself is a positive development, but these
Indigenous-friendly provisions are still concentrated
in particular workplaces, presumably where there is a
sound business case for the organisation introducing these
provisions. If the gap in employment outcomes between
Indigenous and other Australians is to be further closed,
Indigenous-friendly workplaces will need to become
commonplace. The policy challenge is to encourage all
businesses, especially small-to-medium size businesses,
to embrace more inclusive workplace conditions.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Indigenous Law Bulletin
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
DOI
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description