Steps towards greater understanding

Australia is a multicultural nation, and Maurice Blackburn continued to work towards better embracing cultures with the launch of the firm's Guide to Religious and Spiritual Diversity.

The guide was developed by the firm's lawyers Azmeena Hussain and Jacinta Lewin in consultation with the Australian Multicultural Foundation, and focuses on the nine most popular religions and spiritualities in Australia.

The aim of the guide is to further raise awareness of and educate staff about religious and spiritual beliefs in our society, and in turn allowing staff to better understand and continuously improve their working relationships.

It is a practical guide designed to help staff in their everyday work, and has details about greetings, protocols for interviewing, the most appropriate way of communicating with someone of the opposite gender, and how someone each religion or spirituality would prefer to take an oath or affirmation.

Maurice Blackburn also opened its doors to Indigenous barristers to mark NAIDOC Week, and many lawyers took the opportunity to attend a networking lunch in our Melbourne office where they met Victorian Bar Indigenous Lawyers Committee Chairman Daniel Star and several Indigenous barristers.

NAIDOC Week's traditions are traced back to the 1920s, when Aboriginal groups sought to increase awareness in the wider community of the status and treatment of Indigenous Australians. Maurice Blackburn has been doing the same thing for many years, especially through landmark legal cases such as the Aboriginal Stockman's case and the current Muckaty Station land rights issue.