The solutions to ending gender-based violence aren’t a mystery. The problem is that governments refuse to act on them
When a social crisis becomes too big to ignore, governments reach for their most powerful instrument: the royal commission. It compels decision-makers to testify, forces institutions into the open, and produces sweeping blueprints for reform. It suspends business-as-usual politics and focuses the nation’s attention on injustice and institutional failure, establishing what went wrong, who was responsible and what must change. Few other mechanisms so publicly expose injustice or centre the voices of people who’ve been harmed.
Over the past 50 years Australia has held more than 130 royal commissions, placing a powerful microscope on some of the most intractable areas of social injustice: Aboriginal deaths in custody, institutional child sexual abuse, predatory banking practices, violence against people with disability. Governments called them because institutions routinely failed and caused significant harm.