Skip to content
Crime, Legal

Intelligence and Security Committee to review citizenship cessation powers

Parliament of Australia 2 mins read

The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security (PJCIS) has commenced an inquiry into the operation, effectiveness and implications of Subdivision C of Division 3 of Part 2 of the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Citizenship Act), which provides for citizenship cessation determinations.

The PJCIS is undertaking this review three years after amendments were made to the Citizenship Act in 2020 that established the current citizenship cessation regime.

Subdivision C of Division 3 of Part 2 of the Citizenship Act empowers the Minister for Home Affairs to make a determination ceasing the citizenship of an Australian for certain conduct, or following conviction for certain serious offences, relating to matters such as terrorism, treason, espionage and foreign incursion. The Subdivision sets out public interest considerations to which the Minister must have regard, and procedural requirements that must be followed, in making any determinations to cease a person’s citizenship. A person’s Australian citizenship may not be ceased if as a result the person would not be a citizen or national of any country.

Mr Peter Khalil MP, Chair of the PJCIS, said “This review will provide a valuable opportunity to consider the current security environment and the use by the Australian Government of its citizenship cessation powers. Three years into its operation, the review is an opportunity for the Committee to assure itself that Australia’s citizenship cessation regime is legally robust, fair and proportionate.

“The Committee will also be interested in discussing the status of these provisions following consideration by the High Court since they were enacted, notably in the 2022 Alexander case”, Mr Khalil added.

The Committee requests submissions to the inquiry by Thursday 8 February 2024.

Further information on the inquiry can be obtained from the Committee’s website.

Media inquiries:

Chair Mr Peter Khalil MP, via Lachlan Hinds
0455 999 677
[email protected]

For background information: 

Committee Secretariat, Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security
(02) 6277 2360
[email protected]

For more information about this Committee, you can visit its website. On the site, you can make a submission to an inquiry, read other submissions, and get details for upcoming public hearings. You can also track the Committee and receive email updates by clicking on the blue ‘Track this Committee’ button in the bottom right hand corner of the page.

More from this category

  • Legal
  • 22/04/2025
  • 11:21
Johnson Winter Slattery

Johnson Winter Slattery launches Insolvency & Restructuring Case Summaries publication, 2024 year in review, with commentary on more than 50 essential cases

Johnson WinterSlattery (JWS) has launched the next edition of its comprehensive Insolvency & Restructuring Case Summaries publication, providing commentary on the most high-profile and…

  • Contains:
  • Legal
  • 16/04/2025
  • 12:46
Slater and Gordon

Slater and Gordon files shareholder class action against Paladin Energy Limited

Slater and Gordon Lawyers have filed a class action against uranium miner Paladin Energy Limited alleging Paladin engaged in misleading or deceptive conduct and contravened its continuous disclosure obligations. The class action has been brought on behalf of investors who bought shares over a five-month period. The claim, filed in the Victorian Supreme Court, alleges investors incurred financial losses after acquiring Paladin (PDN.AX) shares between 27 June 2024 and 11 November 2024. On 27 June Paladin advised the ASX that its Langer Heinrich Mine was likely to produce 4.0-4.5 million pounds of uranium concentrate in FY25, at a cost of…

  • Contains:
  • Information Technology, Legal
  • 16/04/2025
  • 08:00
UNSW Law & Justice

Hear me out: What if AI could help solve your legal problems?

If you are facing an injustice and don't know where to turn, a new AI assistant trained by lawyers on NSW legal protections empowers you to take action. An innovative partnership between UNSW Kaldor Centre Director Professor Daniel Ghezelbash and the National Justice Project has created a simple way to exercise your rights:Hear Me Out, a free online platform that helps you to understand and lodge a formal complaint. “The complaints process can be daunting at best and inaccessible at worst, but the power lies in being aware of your rights,” says Prof. Ghezelbash. Lodging a formal complaint involves reporting…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.