This year’s National Reconciliation Week theme, All In, is a direct challenge to every Australian to move beyond passive support and commit wholeheartedly to reconciliation, not just this week, but every day. For environmental regulators, this challenge is particularly important.
Indigenous Australians hold a unique and enduring relationship with land and country that predates, and in many cases directly informs, the regulatory frameworks within which our agencies operate. Effective regulation of land, environment, and natural resources requires real partnership with First Nations communities, open consultation, and shared decision-making that recognises knowledge systems that have managed these environments sustainably for tens of thousands of years.
Being All In as a regulatory practitioner looks different depending on where your agency sits in its journey. For some, it means deepening existing partnerships with Traditional Owners and embedding Indigenous Land Management knowledge into risk and compliance frameworks. For others, it means reviewing engagement approaches to ensure they are culturally appropriate and do not inadvertently create barriers to First Nations participation. For all of us, it means taking an honest look at whether our agencies reflect the communities we serve and the country we regulate.
Reconciliation is also a workforce question: do we create organisations where First Nations staff can contribute fully, where cultural obligations are respected rather than worked around, and where leadership reflects community diversity is a part of regulatory excellence?
How to get involved
National Reconciliation Week is a useful moment to check in on existing commitments, review progress, and identify the next practical step for your organisation. Here are some ideas for regulators and regulatory practitioners to put into practice this week:
- Attend or host a National Reconciliation Week event within your agency or region and encourage staff at all levels to participate
- Review your agency’s Reconciliation Action Plan, or start the conversation about developing one if your organisation does not yet have one
- Identify one existing regulatory process, whether that is a compliance approach, an engagement framework, or a risk assessment methodology, and ask whether it adequately reflects First Nations knowledge and perspectives
- Invite a Traditional Owner group or First Nations land management organisation to brief your team on country, connection, and what partnership in your region could look like in practice
- Look at your workforce and leadership and ask honest questions about representation, cultural safety, and whether your organisation genuinely supports First Nations staff to thrive
Reconciliation Australia offers guidance and resources for agencies at every stage, including support for developing and strengthening Reconciliation Action Plans.
Useful links
- National Reconciliation Week 2026
- Reconciliation Australia
- Reconciliation Action Plans
- Narragunnawali (for education and care services)
About National Reconciliation Week
National Reconciliation Week is observed from 27 May to 3 June each year, marking two landmark dates in Australia’s history: the 1967 referendum on 27 May, when Australians voted to include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the national census and allow the Commonwealth to make laws for them, and the High Court’s Mabo decision on 3 June 1992, which recognised the legal concept of native title for the first time. This year also marks 25 years of Reconciliation Australia, a milestone worth pausing to acknowledge.













