Vic treaty takes on new-age democracy

As Victorian Aboriginals work on developing a treaty with the state they are moving with the times, adopting online voting and dropping the eligibility age.

People gathered at the Victoria's Treaty Advancement launch.

Victoria's Treaty Advancement Commission has adopted online voting and lowered the eligibility age. (AAP)

The world's oldest living culture is taking a modern-age approach to democracy in a push to strike Aboriginal treaty in Victoria.

Online voting will be available for Aboriginal Victorians, including those as young as 16, to elect representatives to the First Peoples' Assembly.

The Assembly aims to design a framework for future treaty negotiations.

Helping the push towards treaty is AFL club Richmond and its sister organisation, the Korin Gamadji Institute, Treaty Advancement Commissioner Jill Gallagher announced on Thursday.

The partnership will propel the issue further into the mainstream, with the treaty logo to feature prominently during the Dreamtime at the 'G match on May 25, including on the Tigers' guernsey and playing ground.

"It's a platform that is quite special, it has a great reach to not only Aboriginal people but non-Aboriginal people, but in this case it helps us get the message out," Ms Gallagher told AAP.

After years of in-depth consultation with communities across the state to map a path to treaty, significant progress is expected in 2019.

The First People's Assembly will be created to replace the Treaty Advancement Commission and work with the state government to prepare for negotiations, including ground rules.

About 30,000 will be eligible to vote on the assembly and will need to be registered on the electoral roll.

"We need to consider traditional ways of doing business as much as we can, but we also had to be practical in the year 2019," Ms Gallagher said.

To extend the reach and encourage participation voting can be done online, via post or in person during the two-week election in July.

Age eligibility was dropped to 16 and prisoners can also enrol.

Ms Gallagher said efforts to develop treaty had already been exhaustive.

"When you look at the immense challenges that we have in this space - we've been colonised for 230 years. Colonisation, whether people like to recognise it or not, was brutal and very rapid, for southeast Australia anyway. It did a lot of damage," she told AAP.

"We actually have an opportunity to create something that is going to eventually get treaties for Aboriginal people in this state that is going to actually recognise the wrongs of the past.

"It resets our relationship as first peoples of this state with the state, but more importantly with the rest of the Victorian population."

FIRST PEOPLES' ASSEMBLY VOTE

* May 10 - enrolment opens

* May 27 - candidate nominations open

* June (date TBC) - candidate nominations close

* July 8 - voting opens

* July 21 - voting closes

* August - results released

* Who can vote? Aboriginal Victorians from age 16 and traditional owners who no longer live in the state

* What will be the makeup? Twenty-one members elected through a vote of Victorian Aboriginal communities, and 12 seats allocated to each formally-recognised traditional owner group.


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Source: AAP


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