NAVIGATION

NAVIGATION

AUST | NJP | RAISING | Awareness, Support and Funds for National Justice Project | February 2026

[Edited extract from public address]

UN World Day of Social Justice Friday 20 February 2026 reminds us that injustice doesn’t happen in a moment, and neither does justice. 

For thousands of people, harm unfolds over years. Discrimination goes unchallenged, systems fail repeatedly, and voices are ignored. Making change takes people willing to stand alongside families affected, day after day.

For more than a decade, the National Justice Project has worked alongside people facing discrimination, using the law as a tool for truth-telling, accountability and systemic change.

Together, we challenge discrimination, expose systemic harm and ensure Australia lives up to its promise of equality and fairness for all.

We do not accept government funding, nor do we charge our clients, so regular support matters. Today we’re asking you to stand with people seeking justice in a powerful way. Join the Justice Allies and become a regular donor.


When you become a regular donor, you help us:
  • Show up consistently with clients on the frontline
  • Respond to impactful and strategic cases that can take years of support
  • Support courageous families seeking truth and accountability
  • Challenge discrimination and work to change the systems that allow injustice.

Your impact quadrupled
To mark World Day of Social Justice, any donations until 21 March 2026 will be matched. You can quadruple your impact by inviting a friend to donate too - when both of you give, your combined support goes even further.

Justice is more powerful when we stand together. All donations until 21 March will be matched thanks to our generous matched giver

MORE:

National Justice Project (NJP)
Address: PO Box 123, Broadway NSW 2007
Tel: +61 2 9514 4440

We acknowledge that we live and work on the lands of First Nations Peoples, and we pay our respects to their Elders past and present. Our Sydney office is located on the lands of the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation, whose sovereignty was never ceded. This land always was, and always will be, Aboriginal land.