First Nations Grants in Australia: Funding Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are the First Nations of Australia — with over 65,000 years of continuous culture, connection to Country, and extraordinary knowledge systems. Despite this, First Nations Australians face persistent disadvantage across health, education, employment, and justice indicators — reflecting the ongoing consequences of colonisation, dispossession, and intergenerational trauma. Grant funding for First Nations communities must start from self-determination: communities defining their own priorities, leading their own solutions, and holding power over decisions that affect them.

The self-determination principle

Why self-determination matters

Decades of government-designed programmes imposed on First Nations communities have repeatedly failed:
- Communities know their own needs best
- Externally designed solutions often don't fit community context, culture, and relationships
- Community ownership of programmes produces better outcomes and sustainability
- Self-determination is both a practical strategy and a rights-based principle

What self-determination looks like in practice

  • Community-controlled organisations (ACCOs, ATSIC successors, Land Councils)
  • Indigenous governance structures making programme decisions
  • Indigenous staff and leadership in organisations serving communities
  • Community-defined priorities, not funder-defined ones
  • Long-term, flexible funding that allows community adaptation

Key government funders

National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA)

NIAA is the federal agency for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander affairs:
- Closing the Gap programmes
- Community-controlled sector support
- Employment and economic development
- Cultural heritage and language
- Specific programme grants across multiple domains

Indigenous Land and Sea Council (ILSC)

ILSC supports Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to acquire and manage land and water:
- Land acquisition grants
- Country management support
- Land-related business development
- Indigenous Protected Area support

Aboriginal community controlled health organisations (ACCHOs) and NACCHO

ACCHOs are funded through the Department of Health to provide primary health care — community-controlled health model.

State governments

States fund First Nations programmes through:
- Department of Communities (WA), DET/DHAC (various states)
- Aboriginal Affairs departments
- Justice reinvestment
- Education programmes

Philanthropic First Nations funders

The Minderoo Foundation

Minderoo has invested significantly in Indigenous wellbeing — justice, education, childhood.

The Paul Ramsay Foundation

Ending cycles of disadvantage — significant First Nations investment.

Vincent Fairfax Family Foundation

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community-led development.

Ian Potter Foundation

Arts, culture, and community for First Nations peoples.

BHP Foundation

Mining industry philanthropy with significant First Nations programmes.

Philanthropic sector generally

Indigenous Philanthropy Australia and CGCA provide frameworks for funders engaging with First Nations communities.

Types of funded First Nations programmes

Health

  • Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs)
  • Closing the Gap health targets
  • Maternal and child health
  • Mental health and social and emotional wellbeing
  • Rheumatic heart disease (predominantly First Nations)
  • Ear health and hearing (elevated rates in remote communities)
  • Dental and oral health

Education

  • Early childhood education and care (ECEC)
  • School attendance and engagement
  • Secondary completion pathways
  • Tertiary support (Indigenous support units at universities)
  • Vocational training pathways
  • Mentoring for students

Employment and economic development

  • Indigenous employment programmes
  • Indigenous business development
  • Land and water economy
  • Tourism businesses
  • Arts and cultural economy
  • Social enterprise

Justice

  • Diversion from custody
  • Justice reinvestment
  • Legal services (ATSILS — Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services)
  • Prisoner re-entry programmes
  • Community patrols

Culture and language

  • Language revitalisation
  • Cultural practice
  • Traditional ecological knowledge documentation
  • Arts and performance
  • Cultural education in schools
  • Ceremony and cultural practice support

Land and Country

  • Ranger programmes (Caring for Country)
  • Indigenous Protected Areas
  • Sea Country management
  • Cultural burning
  • Environmental monitoring

Housing

  • Remote housing
  • Urban Aboriginal housing providers
  • Homelessness services for Aboriginal people

Child and family wellbeing

  • Child protection and family support
  • Reducing Indigenous children in out-of-home care
  • Family strengthening
  • Healing from trauma

Grant application considerations for First Nations programmes

Community leadership — non-negotiable

Applications that position external organisations as delivering to First Nations communities will fail with sophisticated funders. Show genuine community governance, First Nations leadership, and community ownership. The question is not "do you work with Aboriginal communities?" but "are Aboriginal communities leading this?"

Free, prior, and informed consent

Projects affecting First Nations communities require free, prior, and informed consent from communities. Show how you have obtained consent and engaged in genuine consultation.

Avoiding saviour narratives

Do not position your organisation as saving or helping a disadvantaged group. The narrative should be community strengths, community self-determination, and what your organisation's support enables for community-led work.

Long-term relationships

First Nations communities have often been burned by short-term programmes that start and stop. Show long-term relationship and commitment — not a one-off project.

Cultural authority

Show that you have cultural authority and respect for the specific communities you work with — protocols, Elders' guidance, and cultural knowledge specific to that community's Country and language group.


Tahua's grants management platform supports First Nations funders and Aboriginal community-controlled organisations — with programme outcome tracking, community reach data, self-determination framework support, and the reporting tools that help First Nations funders demonstrate their investment in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander self-determination and community wellbeing.

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