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Here, where ancestral stories echo through the bush, the Dja Dja Wurrung have become the first Traditional Owner group to formally begin negotiating a local treaty under Victoria’s state-led Treaty process.
“If every Dja Dja Wurrung person feels something from the treaty process, I’ll be satisfied we’ve done the right thing.”
Victoria: The national leader for a treaty
Since then, the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria (the Assembly) has led a pioneering process to redefine the relationship between First Peoples and the state.
“Our community have been clear — they want action, and they want meaningful treaty negotiations,” she told attendees at the Dja Dja Wurrung cultural gathering.
Local aspirations, global context
For communities like the Dja Dja Wurrung, this is about reclaiming autonomy and creating lasting impact.
Economic justice and cultural renewal
For the Dja Dja Wurrung, that means having a say in local economic planning, land use and service delivery, with an emphasis on housing, education and language revival.
A national path forward?
“We need clans and nations represented at the local government level. Real change starts in community, not Canberra.”
A promise to the future
They are reclaiming their future. And in Victoria, the road to Treaty has already begun.