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Abstract
Australia’s National Plan to Reduce Violence against Women and their Children, launched in 2010, has emphasised the need for integrated responses across government agencies, specialist domestic and family violence services and the justice system. This article presents an evaluation of an integrated, community-based domestic and family violence response service that uses a rare model of co-location in a police station, and assesses its suitability as a model service for the future. The evaluation reveals that there are many positive aspects of such co-location and the authors argue that this model should be more widely trialled in Australia.
Open Access Status
Australia
Australia-national-plan-to-reduce-violence
National-plan
Reduce-violence
ஆஸ்திரேலியா
ஆஸ்திரேலியா-தேசிய-திட்டம்-க்கு-குறைக்க-வன்முறை
தேசிய-திட்டம்
குறைக்க-வன்முறை
In the fight against sexual violence, what can Australians demand?
The fight against sexual violence in Australia seems at times insurmountable. But there are ways forward, and Australia must take them.
This is part five of #MeTooWhere? Crikey’s exploration of the past, present and future of the Me Too movement. Read the full series here.
This series has focused on how simply being aware and calling out harassment will never lead to change. Getting in the ear of politicians local MPs, policymakers and the government with specific demands is crucial to overhaul our pervasive culture of sexual violence and Australia’s worsening inequality.
Australia
Afghanistan
Philippines
Australians
Scott-morrison
Kate-jenkin
Marise-payne
United-nation-convention
Australia-national-plan-to-reduce-violence
Circuit-court
Office-for-women
United-nations
Date Time
Barriers prevent Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women from reporting family violence
The banner art features Resilience (2014), an ANROWS-commissioned art series by Christine Blakeney, a Wiradjuri/Yaegl woman from NSW.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women face barriers to reporting family violence, including the threat of child removal, homelessness and potential isolation from their family and community, new research shows.
An ANROWS report led by University of Melbourne Professor Marcia Langton and Dr Kristen Smith, with a team of University researchers and participating communities, identifies some of the factors preventing the disclosure of a large proportion of violence incidents perpetrated against Aboriginal women.
Australia
Melbourne
Victoria
Mildura
Australian
Marcia-langton
Heather-nancarrow
Kristen-smith
Christine-blakeney
Wiradjuri-yaegl
University-of-melbourne
Australia-national-plan-to-reduce-violence
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