Community Organisation Abuse Lawyers For Scouts, Youth Groups And Local Services
Community Organisation Abuse Lawyers For Scouts, Youth Groups And Local Services
Many children grow up in community organisations such as Scouts, Guides, youth groups, sporting clubs and charity run programs. These places should be safe. The Royal Commission’s case studies showed that some of them were not.
Donaldson Law acts for people who experienced abuse in:
- Scouts, Guides and other youth organisations
- YMCA and similar community centres
- junior sporting clubs and academies outside elite systems
- charity run homes and youth services
- cultural and community groups
Most of our clients are now adults. The abuse took place when they were children or teenagers. Many trusted the organisation that promised adventure, care or mentoring.
Abuse In Community Organisations and Your Legal Rights
Community organisations often rely on volunteers, part time staff and community fundraising. For a long time there were legal gaps about when organisations could be held liable for abuse committed by non employees such as volunteers or associates.
Recent developments include:
- the High Court decision in Bird which has made it more difficult under the common law to hold organisations vicariously liable for abuse by some non employees
- legislative reforms in a number of States and Territories that are designed to overcome that narrowing in child abuse cases by expanding or clarifying organisational liability
- Royal Commission recommendations about child safe standards and better complaint handling in community organisations
- case studies on Scouts, YMCA, children’s homes and sporting clubs that revealed systemic failures in safeguarding and responses to complaints
This means that whether a community organisation can be held responsible for abuse by a volunteer or associated adult now depends on the interaction between Bird and any local legislation in the State or Territory where the abuse occurred.
Depending on your situation possible pathways may include:
- civil claims against the organisation or its governing body
- applications to the National Redress Scheme if the organisation has joined
- participation in internal redress or apology processes
- engagement with state or territory oversight bodies for child safety
We will explain which laws and schemes apply to your organisation and how best to approach your matter.

Common Community Organisation Abuse Patterns We See
Survivors of abuse in community organisations often describe:
- grooming and abuse by leaders or volunteers who had significant control over activities
- abuse during camps, sleepovers or unsupervised activities
- cultures where children were discouraged from questioning adults
- organisational responses that prioritised reputation or continuity of programs over child safety
Royal Commission case studies on Scouts, YMCA and other organisations showed how volunteers and leaders were sometimes left unsupervised or moved to new groups instead of being reported.
These patterns inform the way we gather evidence and frame legal arguments in community organisation claims.
Types Of Community Organisations We Commonly Act Against
Our community organisation work includes:
- national youth movements such as Scouts and Guides
- local youth groups connected with churches or community centres
- sporting clubs, gymnastics centres and community academies that are not part of elite programs
- residential facilities or children’s homes run by charities or community organisations
The National Redress Scheme allows many non government institutions, including community organisations and charities, to participate so that survivors can seek recognition and compensation.
We will check whether the organisation connected with your experience is part of the scheme and what other options exist.
Why Survivors Of Community Organisation Abuse Choose Donaldson Law
Survivors choose Donaldson Law because:
Institutional abuse focus across sectors
Understanding of evolving liability laws
Trauma informed practice
Clear and realistic advice
How We Work with Survivors of Community Organisation Abuse
When you contact us you can start with:
- the name and type of organisation
- where activities took place such as halls, camps or centres
- roughly when the abuse happened and your age at the time
We then:
- Identify the relevant local, state and national structures for the organisation
- Check whether it participates in the National Redress Scheme or any other program
- Assess potential civil claims and any applicable limitation rules
- Explain your options in clear language
- Work with you to choose a strategy that reflects your safety and goals
You remain in control of whether to pursue redress, litigation, restorative processes or a combination.
Community Organisation Abuse FAQs
Speak With Our Community Organisation Abuse Team
If you experienced abuse in Scouts, Guides, a youth group, a community sporting club or another community organisation and you feel ready to talk you can contact us by phone, email or through our online form

Can a community organisation be liable for abuse by a volunteer?
Whether a particular organisation can be held liable for abuse by a volunteer in your matter will depend on when and where the abuse happened and on how those local laws interact with Bird. We will explain how that works in your situation in clear terms.

