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New survey reveals journey towards reconciliation is on track

Karen Mundine

Reconciliation Australia CEO Karen Mundine Credit: courtesy of NITV

The 2022 Australian Reconciliation Barometer (ARB) shows mutual trust between First Nations people and other Australians is steady, and the journey towards reconciliation and greater justice for First Nations Peoples is on track. “That is really heartening in terms of having some solid foundations of our relationship is important, and also we’ve got some reasonable foundations of trust in which we can build. And we know how to build that, which is about is about creating knowledge, awareness, and connections between us,” said Reconciliation Australia CEO Karen Mundine.


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By Bertrand Tungandame

Source: SBS



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The 2022 Australian Reconciliation Barometer (ARB) shows mutual trust between First Nations people and other Australians is steady, and the journey towards reconciliation and greater justice for First Nations Peoples is on track. “That is really heartening in terms of having some solid foundations of our relationship is important, and also we’ve got some reasonable foundations of trust in which we can build. And we know how to build that, which is about is about creating knowledge, awareness, and connections between us,” said Reconciliation Australia CEO Karen Mundine.


The Australian Reconciliation Barometer (ARB) is a biennial, national research study, undertaken by Reconciliation Australia since 2008.

It measures attitudes towards reconciliation, using the five dimensions of reconciliation – race relations, equality and equity, unity, institutional integrity, and historical acceptance – to inform data collection and analysis.

The Reconciliation Barometer is the only survey undertaken in Australia that measures the progress of reconciliation between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and non-Indigenous Australians.


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