Skip to content
Foreign Affairs Trade, Women

Public hearings commence for inquiry into gender equality as a national security and economic security imperative

Parliament of Australia 2 mins read

The Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade through its Human Rights Subcommittee will hold its first public hearing for its inquiry into gender equality as a national security and economic security imperative on Friday 27 March 2026.

Chair of the Human Rights Subcommittee, Mr Tony Zappia MP, said, ‘Australia is a global champion of gender equality. Today the Subcommittee will hear from government departments responsible for Australia’s foreign policy, defence and national security, to understand how the Australian government is promoting gender equality in this period of shifting global norms.’

‘The Department of Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade is the whole-of-government lead on the Women, Peace and Security Agenda. The Subcommittee will hear from implementation partners of Australia’s action plan for Women, Peace and Security, including representatives from DFAT, the Department of Home Affairs, the Department of Defence and the Australian Federal Police.’

‘The Subcommittee also looks forward to hearing from representatives from the Office for Women and the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research on issues relevant to the inquiry terms of reference, including the importance of gender equality to economic prosperity and food security, and their expertise on gender-responsive budgeting, research and policymaking.’

Further information, including the full terms of reference, is available on the Inquiry webpage.

Public Hearing Details

Date: Friday 27 March 2026
Time: 9:00 am–12:45 pm (AEDT)
Location: Committee Room 1R4, Parliament House, Canberra

The hearing will be broadcast live at aph.gov.au/live.

Media inquiries

James Peikert, Office of Mr Tony Zappia MP (Member for Makin, SA; Chair, Human Rights Subcommittee)
Ph: (02) 6277 4147 or (08) 8265 3100

For background information

Committee Secretariat
Ph: 02 6277 2313
[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 Committee’ button in the bottom right-hand corner of the page.

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Women
  • 25/03/2026
  • 10:58
Australia New Zealand Gynaecological Incology Group (ANZGOG)

Record attendance marks opening of ANZGOG’s 26th Annual Scientific Meeting

Record attendance marks opening of ANZGOG’s 26th Annual Scientific Meeting Gold Coast, Queensland | 25–27 March 2026 The Australia New Zealand Gynaecological Oncology Group…

  • Contains:
  • Foreign Affairs Trade
  • 25/03/2026
  • 09:00
Parliament of Australia

ACFID to give evidence at public hearing for conflict prevention inquiry

On Thursday 26 March 2026, the Foreign Affairs and Aid Subcommittee of the Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade will hear from the Australian Council for International Development (ACFID) as part of itsInquiry into the role of Australia's international development program in preventing conflict. The Chair of the Foreign Affairs and Aid Subcommittee, theHon Tim Watts MP, explained the Subcommittee looked forward to hearing from ACFID, Australia’s peak body for international development NGOs. ‘ACFID represents organisations working at the frontline of peacebuilding, humanitarian response and community resilience across our region. Their on‑the‑ground experience will give the Subcommittee…

  • Community, Women
  • 24/03/2026
  • 07:00
Monash University

New research reveals Japan’s demographic crisis masking deeper public frustration with gender inequality

As Japan grapples with another record low in births and continuing concern over its poor global ranking on gender equality, new Monash University research suggests public anxieties about inequality are often expressed indirectly rather than named outright. The study Demographic decline as an idiom of distress: rethinking gender (In)equality in Japan analysed more than 30,000 open-ended survey responses from across Japan and found that while respondents rarely used the term “gender inequality”, many voiced concern through the language of shōshi kōreika – the crisis of low birth rates and an ageing population. Lead author Dr Charles Crabtree, Senior Lecturer in…

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.