Select Page

Our Core Purpose

TRACA exists to amplify the voice, strength, and sovereignty of Tasmanian Aboriginal communities through advocacy, collaboration, and culturally grounded leadership. As a peak body, TRACA will provide unified representation, facilitate member organisation development, and champion the priorities of Aboriginal communities.

Our Vision

A strong, united, and self-determined network of Tasmanian Aboriginal community organisations working together to create lasting change for our people.

Community-led

Guided by our member organisations and grounded in Aboriginal self-determination

Respectful

Upholding cultural protocols, diversity, and shared knowledge and experience

Accountable

Transparent, ethical, and responsible

Stronger Together

Collective strength through shared purpose and advocacy

Supporting Aboriginal-Led Solutions Across Tasmania

The Tasmanian Regional Aboriginal Communities Alliance (TRACA) works to support and strengthen Aboriginal-led initiatives that improve outcomes for Tasmanian Aboriginal people and communities.

As a collaborative alliance representing seven Aboriginal community-controlled organisations across the state, TRACA brings together diverse regional perspectives to advocate for solutions grounded in cultural strength, equity and self-determination. Central to this work is ensuring that communities are trusted, properly resourced and able to lead initiatives that deliver lasting and measurable impact.

TRACA’s work focuses on three key priorities.

Equitable and accountable investment in Aboriginal regional communities

TRACA advocates for funding models that recognise the reach and impact of Aboriginal community-controlled organisations. This includes ensuring that funding is allocated fairly, supports strong governance and accountability, and enables communities to deliver meaningful outcomes. Support for initiatives such as Truth Telling and Healing is also seen as an important step toward broader agreement-making and reconciliation.

Long-term investment in Closing the Gap initiatives

TRACA promotes sustained investment in programs that demonstrate strong outcomes for Aboriginal people and communities. Evidence-based initiatives — including programs that support justice outcomes, strengthen families, and respond to family, domestic and sexual violence — play a critical role in progressing the commitments under the National Agreement on Closing the Gap.

Place-based partnerships that reflect cultural diversity

Aboriginal Tasmania is diverse, with multiple languages, cultural practices and regional identities. TRACA advocates for place-based partnerships that recognise this diversity and ensure Aboriginal communities are represented in decision-making processes. Supporting multiple regional voices strengthens policy, programs and services across the state.

Through collaboration, advocacy and community leadership, TRACA seeks to help create the conditions for Aboriginal communities across Tasmania to lead initiatives that support cultural strength, community wellbeing and long-term positive change.

Our Member Organisations

Circular Head Aboriginal Corporation

Embracing our culture to inspire and empower Aboriginal people.

Six Rivers Aboriginal Corporation

Continuing culture, caring for country, empowering community.

Flinders Island Aboriginal Association Inc.

Working with and for the community to achieve a self sufficient, healthy Aboriginal Community, promoting social, economic and cultural pride.

South East Tasmanian Aboriginal Corporation

Improving the health, wellbeing and connectedness of our Aboriginal and wider community.

Melaythenner Teeackana Warrana Aboriginal Corporation

Melaythenner Teeackana Warrana operates on the premise of acknowledging that our Land is sacred, our Culture is precious, and we are a unique People. 

Parrdarrama Pungenna Aboriginal Corporation

Paredarerme elders sharing news.

Weetapoona Aboriginal Corporation

Embracing our culture to inspire and empower Aboriginal people.

Contact us

2 + 2 =

Aboriginal Tasmania is not one place or one voice — it’s many. Decision-making must reflect that. Place-based partnerships ensure communities are truly heard, and that can’t happen unless there are opportunities at the highest level for multiple perspectives to be reflected.

Nick Cameron

TRACA Chair

From Our Community

TRACA

4 days 16 hours ago

Designed to Better Share Our Story Stay tuned for our new website which will highlight TRACA’s role, values and advocacy as a peak body for

TRACA

1 week 16 hours ago

TRACA welcomes the federal government’s announcement of a parliamentary inquiry into racism, hatred and violence directed at Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples. We are