Australia and sanctions
Overview
The Australian Government is reforming Australia's sanctions laws to ensure they are fit for purpose and easier to understand. Reforms will be finalised before the Autonomous Sanctions Regulations 2011 sunset on 1 October 2027.
The reform process comprises the following phases:
- Review of Australia's sanctions laws (now complete)
- Government consideration of proposed reforms from the review (underway)
- Drafting legislative and regulatory amendments to implement reforms
- Release of exposure draft legislation for public consultation
- Passage of legislative reforms through Parliament.
Issues Paper
As part of phase 1, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) invited submissions to an Issues Paper on reforming Australia's sanctions laws, released on 30 January 2023:
- Issues Paper – Review of Australia's Autonomous Sanctions Framework [Word 400 KB]
- Issues Paper – Review of Australia's Autonomous Sanctions Framework [PDF 600 KB]
Submissions to the Issues Paper, and any other matter relevant to the Terms of Reference for the Review (provided below), closed on 26 February 2023.
- Terms of Reference – Review of the legal framework for autonomous sanctions [Word 210 KB]
- Terms of Reference – Review of the legal framework for autonomous sanctions [PDF 205 KB]
Submissions received by DFAT during this period are listed below. Some of the submissions received were provided in-confidence and have not been published.
Submissions Received
- Allens
- Australian Banking Association
- Australian Centre for International Justice
- Australian Council for International Development
- Australian Custodial Services Association
- Australian Financial Markets Association
- Care Australia
- Clifford Chance
- International Committee of the Red Cross and Australian Red Cross
- King & Wood Mallesons
- KordaMentha
- LexisNexis Risk Solutions
- Moulis Legal
- MUFG Bank
- Nyman Gibson Miralis Lawyers
- Professor Ben Saul
- Queensland University of Technology
- Refugee Council of Australia
- Save the Children
- Uniting Church in Australia
- The University of Queensland
- The University of Sydney
- Vietnamese Australian Lawyers' Association
Report on the review of Australia’s sanctions laws
DFAT’s Report on the review of Australia’s sanction’s laws provides stakeholders with a general overview of the review and next steps.