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Education Training, Employment Relations

Universities must act to stamp out shocking racism against staff

National Tertiary Education Union 2 mins read

A landmark study into racism at Australian universities has exposed appalling levels of discrimination in university workplaces, with the vast majority of staff who complained about racism dissatisfied with how universities handled their concerns.

The Australian Human Rights Commission's Respect at Uni study - the first comprehensive national investigation of its kind - found that one in five academic staff experienced direct racism at their workplace, with racism most commonly occurring in work meetings and shared staff spaces.

National Tertiary Education Union President Dr Alison Barnes said the findings were deeply disturbing for staff and students.

"This report shines a harsh light on the racism that staff experience every single day in Australian universities," Dr Barnes said.

"When one in five academic staff report experiencing direct racism, and university leadership is implicated in nearly half of those cases, we're seeing a systemic workplace crisis."

The study, which received responses from 18.3% of academic staff and 22.2% of professional staff across the sector, revealed devastating impacts on staff careers and wellbeing.

Almost half of all staff who experienced racism reported negative impacts on their careers, with a quarter of academic staff and 22% of professional staff denied promotions they felt they deserved. More than two in three staff experienced negative mental health impacts.

"Our colleagues’ careers are being derailed, their mental health is suffering, and they’re being driven out of the sector because of racism," Dr Barnes said.

The report exposed a catastrophic failure of university complaints systems, with only 15% of academic staff who experienced racism making a formal complaint - primarily due to fears of consequences and lack of trust in the process.

Of those who complained, 80% of academic staff were dissatisfied with how universities handled their concerns.

Just six per cent of students who experienced direct racism at university made a complaint, with the most common reasons for choosing not to complain being a fear of consequences or a lack of confidence that reporting would lead to any change.

"The complaints system is fundamentally broken with shocking consequences for students and staff," Dr Barnes said. 

"When 80% of staff who complain are dissatisfied, and a third say complaining actually harmed their career, universities are failing in their most basic duty of care to their most valuable asset."

Dr Barnes praised the important work of NTEU Victorian Division Assistant Secretary Professor Joo-Cheong Tham, who represented the union on the study's advisory committee.

"Professor Tham's expertise and commitment helped ensure this study captured the full extent of racism in our workplaces," Dr Barnes said. "His contribution has been invaluable in giving voice to the experiences of staff across the sector."

The NTEU is calling for immediate action on the report's recommendations, particularly establishing the Racism@Uni Working Group within six months.

"Universities can no longer ignore or minimise the racism experienced by staff. We need systemic change, genuine accountability, and a sector-wide commitment to becoming truly anti-racist workplaces,” Dr Barnes said.

"University staff deserve to work in environments free from racism and discrimination. The evidence is clear, the harm is documented - now it's time for universities and government to act.”


Contact details:

Matt Coughlan 0400 561 480 / [email protected]

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