Australian Capital Territory Community legal centres in the
Australian Capital Territory include: • The
Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT), an ATSILS, was Australia's first free legal service when its first office was established in
Redfern, Sydney, and it was also first to provide a
Custody Notification Service in 2000. • The Youth Law Centre (YLC) of
Legal Aid ACT provides free legal advice to youth aged between 12 and 25. It provides advice on many areas some of which include family law, employment and apprenticeships, criminal law and traffic offences. • Canberra Community Law provides free legal advice and representation on matters of social security and tenancy, street law and discrimination and
disability law. • The Women's Legal Centre provides services to women.
New South Wales CLCs in
New South Wales operate with the support of a peak body Community Legal Centres NSW (CLCNSW). there are 41 members of CLCNSW, including: • The
Justice and Equity Centre, founded in 1982 as the
Public Interest Advocacy Centre, a strategic litigation and policy community legal centre based in central Sydney. • The
Kingsford Legal Centre has operated since 1981 at
University of New South Wales,
Kingsford as part of their
Faculty of Law. • Marrickville Legal Centre is a non-profit community legal centre based in south-west Sydney but serving the whole of NSW, established in 1979. • The
Redfern Legal Centre was the first Community Legal Centre in New South Wales and the second in Australia, established in March 1977. • Seniors Rights Service provides free, confidential advocacy, advice, education and legal services to older people in New South Wales, including advice on
retirement villages and strata living. • The Tenants' Union of NSW was established in 1976 and is the peak
non-government organisation representing the interests of tenants, including boarders, lodgers and other marginal tenants; Aboriginal tenants; public and community housing tenants and renters under other types of lease arrangements. It is the resourcing body for the statewide network of Tenants Advice and Advocacy Services (TAASs), and specialises in NSW residential tenancies law. •
Women's Legal Services NSW promotes women's human rights by providing free and confidential legal advice and referral, creating publications and running training workshops for community and support workers, and pursuing law and policy reform. The organisation specialises in domestic violence, family law,
sexual assault and discrimination law. The
Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT) is an ATSILS, and operates separately from the above.
Northern Territory CLCs serving the
Northern Territory include: • Central Australian Aboriginal Family Legal Unit (CAAFLU) • Central Australian Women's Legal Service (CAWLS) • The
Darwin Community Legal Service (DCLS) • Katherine Women's Information and Legal Service (KWILS) • The
North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency (NAAJA) is the largest legal service in the Northern Territory, with offices in
Darwin,
Katherine Tennant Creek,
Nhulunbuy and
Alice Springs. It also operates the
Custody Notification Service (since January 2019). • The
Top End Women's Legal Service (TEWLS) was founded in 1996, following a recommendation of the
Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC). It provides free legal advice, community legal education and advocacy on issues of importance to women across the Greater Darwin area.
Queensland Queensland has a large number of CLCs, many of which provide services to their local area. Some of those which provide services statewide include: • Basic Rights Queensland; • Caxton Legal Centre; • LawRight (formally known as QPILCH); • LGBTI Legal Service provides legal services to members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and intersex community. It was officially launched in July 2010 by former
Australian High Court Judge The Hon.
Michael Kirby ; • My Community Legal, Gold Coast; • Prisoners' Legal Service. • Refugee and Immigration Legal Service (RAILS); • Tenants Queensland Inc.; and • Women's Legal Service Queensland. The
peak body for CLCs in Queensland is Community Legal Centres Queensland (CLCQ).
South Australia Community Legal Centres South Australian Inc. (CLCSA) is the peak body for all Community Legal Centres in South Australia. There is a network of centres which are allocated to different zones across the state, as well as specialist services which focus on areas such as
homelessness, Aboriginal family violence, asylum seekers, women, consumer credit and other areas. The
Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement (ALRM), founded as the result of a
grassroots movement in 1972, is an independent Aboriginal community-controlled organisation governed by an all-Aboriginal Board, which provides legal services as well as acting as an advocacy and lobby group for Aboriginal people across the state. It has also operated the state's
Custody Notification Service informally for some time, but the change in law to make it compulsory for
SAPOL to notify ALRM only took effect on 2 July 2020, after the
Black Lives Matter protests had highlighted the issue of
Aboriginal Deaths in Custody. The move was welcomed by ALRM, which had been lobbying for it for years. ALRM also represents families at
coronial inquests and runs an Aboriginal Visitors Scheme (AVS) in response to the
Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody recommendation, to support Aboriginal people who have been taken into
police custody.
Tasmania Statewide CLCs in
Tasmania include: • The Tenants' Union of Tasmania provides information, legal advice and representation to residential tenants in matters arising from their tenancy. • The Women's Legal Service is a free community legal service based in
Hobart but providing legal services for women throughout Tasmania. • Refugee Legal Service Tasmania is a volunteer legal service dedicated to providing advice to refugees, asylum seekers and other humanitarian entrants who reside in Tasmania. • Worker Assist Tasmania is a free service for injured workers in Tasmania. The service provides information, assistance and advice relating to Workers Compensation, Return to Work and Rehabilitation following a workplace injury and the Asbestos Related Diseases Compensation Fund. There are also regional CLCs in Hobart,
Launceston and
North West Tasmania. Statewide specialist CLCs include: • Djirra – Aboriginal family violence • Q+Law (state-wide LGBTIQA+ legal service) • Seniors Rights Victoria • The Tenants Union Victoria (TUV) • Women's Legal Service Victoria •
Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service (VALS), which operates the Custody Notification Scheme • Youthlaw There are also a number of local centres including the Fitzroy Legal Service which was established on 18 December 1972, making it Australia's first non-Aboriginal community legal centre. The
Consumer Action Law Centre (CALC) is primarily a "campaign-focused consumer advocacy organisation", but also acts as a CLC by providing free legal advice and pursuing litigation on behalf of "vulnerable and disadvantaged consumers" across Victoria.
Western Australia • The Community Legal Centres Association of WA is the peak organisation representing the 28 CLCs operating in
Western Australia which provide free or low-cost legal help to the community. • The Woman's Law Centre is based in
Perth and provides legal advice on such areas as family law, sexual harassment and sexual assault and divorce applications. ==ATSILS==