Indigenous Advisory Council

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Indigenous_Advisory_Council an entity of type: Thing

The Indigenous Advisory Council (IAC), also known as the Prime Minister's Indigenous Advisory Council, was established by then Prime Minister of Australia, Tony Abbott. The council was created on 25 September 2013, announced on 23 November 2013 and its inaugural meeting was on 5 December 2013. As of 2021, Roy Ah-See is co-chair, with a vacant co-chair seat left by Andrea Mason’s departure. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Indigenous Advisory Council
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rdf:langString The Indigenous Advisory Council (IAC), also known as the Prime Minister's Indigenous Advisory Council, was established by then Prime Minister of Australia, Tony Abbott. The council was created on 25 September 2013, announced on 23 November 2013 and its inaugural meeting was on 5 December 2013. The Indigenous Advisory Council is an advisory board, its type classified as "Ministerial Councils and Related Bodies including those Established by the COAG". Its terms of reference were outlined at the first meeting, with its purpose stated as "to provide advice to the Government on Indigenous affairs, and will focus on practical changes to improve the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people". Its size was set at 12 people, comprising both Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians, who would meet three times each year. Malcolm Turnbull, who became Prime Minister in 2015, established the Indigenous Policy Committee of Cabinet in 2016, to "support better engagement with Cabinet Ministers, their portfolios and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, including through collaboration with the Indigenous Advisory Council". He temporarily suspended the IAC at the end of January 2017, with its initial terms of reference being wound up on that date. Six members were appointed for a second term of the council, announced on 8 February 2017, with a further appointment on 22 May 2017. No chairs were appointed to the IAC for its second term, in a deliberate move by Turnbull. (However, at some point since then, co-chairs were appointed.) The co-chair of the National Congress of Australia's First Peoples, Jackie Huggins, expressed a wish to work with the new body. As of 2021, Roy Ah-See is co-chair, with a vacant co-chair seat left by Andrea Mason’s departure.
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