Celebration and commentary on twenty years of disability discrimination law in Australia:
Twenty Years: Twenty Stories: celebrating 20 years of the Disability Discrimination Act
Twenty years ago, life for millions of Australians got easier. The then Deputy Prime Minister in the Keating government, Brian Howe, introduced an Act that would, for the first time at a national level, make it unlawful for people with disability to be discriminated against. The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (Cth), became Australian law on 1 March 1993.
Twenty Years: Twenty Stories marks the Disability Discrimination Act's twentieth birthday with twenty inspiring stories on film.
Twenty years ago, life for millions of Australians got easier. The then Deputy Prime Minister in the Keating government, Brian Howe, introduced an Act that would, for the first time at a national level, make it unlawful for people with disability to be discriminated against. The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (Cth), became Australian law on 1 March 1993.
Twenty Years: Twenty Stories marks the Disability Discrimination Act's twentieth birthday with twenty inspiring stories on film.
- Governor-General Launches Twenty Stories, Human Rights Commission, 5th March 2013
- Strengthening Australia's Disability Laws, Damien Carrick, Law Report, Radio National, 27 February 2013
- Australia's DDA: not the sharpest tool in the shed, Rick Randall, Ramp Up 28th February, 2013
- The DDA: don't play down the law, Jennifer Morris, Ramp Up, 5th March 2013
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