Naturist Integrity & Cultural Protection Act 2025 (NICP Act)
A Bill to legally define and protect naturism and nudism as non-sexual lifestyles and cultural expressions; to prohibit sexual misrepresentation and discrimination against naturists; and to establish enforcement mechanisms.
🔹 PART I – PRELIMINARY
1. Short Title
This Act may be cited as the Naturist Integrity & Cultural Protection Act 2025.
2. Inicio
This Act comes into force six (6) months from the date of Royal Assent.
3. Purpose
The purpose of this Act is to:
Legally define naturism and nudism as non-sexual lifestyle and cultural practices
Prohibit the misrepresentation, sexualisation, and exploitation of naturist/nudist terminology
Provide legal recourse against discrimination, platform bias, and financial exclusion of lawful naturist activity
Establish a regulatory authority to enforce standards and uphold naturist integrity
🔹 PART II – LEGAL DEFINITIONS
4. Definitions
(a) Naturism / Nudism
A lawful, non-sexual lifestyle or cultural practice involving voluntary nudity in private or social settings for reasons including health, body acceptance, ecological alignment, philosophical belief, or personal freedom. It excludes conduct motivated by sexual gratification or erotic display.
(b) Sexualisation
“Sexualisation” means:
The act of portraying, describing, representing, or associating a person, group, activity, event, or cultural practice in a manner that explicitly or implicitly implies sexual arousal, erotic intent, fetishism, or sexual conduct — whether through language, imagery, branding, framing, or thematic context — regardless of actual nudity or physical contact.
Includes, but is not limited to:
Sexualised event names (e.g. “sexy nudist night”, “erotic naturist gathering”)
Fetish content or swinger marketing presented under naturist terms
Orientation-targeted nudity events using naturist identity
Non-sexual nudity in lifestyle, artistic, educational, or philosophical contexts is not sexualisation.
🔹 PART III – MISREPRESENTATION & TERMINOLOGY CONTROL
5. Protected Terminology
The following terms are protected and regulated under this Act:
Naturist / Naturism
Nudist / Nudism
Clothing-Optional (when presented as a cultural or lifestyle label)
6. Prohibited Use of Terminology
No individual or organisation shall use the above terms to promote or describe:
Sexual, fetish, or erotic events
Orientation-specific nude gatherings (e.g. “gay nudist party”)
Commercial dating platforms, swinger communities, or adult entertainment
Any activity or content that violates the non-sexual definition of naturism
Violators are subject to penalties defined under this Act.
🔹 PART IV – DIGITAL AND MEDIA RESPONSIBILITIES
7. Obligations of Platforms and Publishers
All digital platforms, hosting providers, and media organisations operating in Australia must:
Refrain from classifying non-sexual naturist content as “explicit” or “adult”
Provide a documented appeal process for wrongful censorship
Ensure moderation policies recognise naturism as a protected non-sexual lifestyle
Platforms consistently misclassifying content may face regulatory and financial penalties.
🔹 PART V – DISCRIMINATION AND OBSTRUCTION
8. Prohibition of Discrimination and Commercial Obstruction
(a) General Prohibition
It is unlawful to obstruct, restrict, deny, penalise, or refuse access to services, platforms, payments, venues, or benefits based on a person’s lawful naturist or nudist identity.
(b) Specific Prohibited Acts Include:
Refusing to process payments for legitimate naturist entities
Removing accounts or ads for lawful naturist events
Blocking naturist venues from listing or promotional tools
Algorithmically suppressing verified non-sexual naturist content
Denying employment, venue access, or partnerships solely due to naturist affiliation
9. Penalties
(a) For Individuals:
First offence: Up to A$25,000
Repeat offences: Up to A$75,000 + mandatory public correction/apology
(b) For Organisations, Corporations, or Platforms:
First offence: Up to A$750,000
Repeat or systemic discrimination: Up to A$2.5 million
Additional:
Listing on the Public Register of Naturist Rights Violators
Referral to the ACCC or relevant regulator
Legal injunctions to restore access or halt discriminatory practices
10. Legitimate Grounds for Refusal Not Affected
Service refusal is permitted where:
Content violates criminal law
Terms of service are applied equally and neutrally
Conduct involves hate speech, incitement, or sexual exploitation
🔹 PART VI – ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY
11. Naturist Cultural Protection Authority (NCPA)
A statutory body, the NCPA shall:
Certify compliant events, venues, and content hosts
Investigate public complaints
Enforce corrections, fines, and disciplinary action
Maintain a national Registry of Certified Naturist Entities
Publish an annual report on naturist rights and violations
🔹 PART VII – INTERNATIONAL ADOPTION & CALL TO ACTION
12. International Recommendation
Although this Act applies within Australia, NaturismRE formally invites:
International naturist organisations
Nudist venues, federations, and individuals worldwide
…to adopt, adapt, and present this legislation to their own national or regional governments.
Failure to do so, especially by organisations that claim to represent naturism, will raise public questions regarding their relevance, effectiveness, and commitment to protecting the lifestyle they stand for.
The misrepresentation of naturism is a global issue. Its protection must be global too.
🔹 PART VIII – IMPLEMENTATION SCHEDULE
Phase / Action/ /Timeline
Phase I / Formation of NCPA / Within 3 months of assent
Phase II / Industry notification and compliance window / Months 4–6
Phase III / Enforcement begins / Month 7 onward
END OF ACT