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    Wangkiny Yirra “Speaking Up” project: First Nations women and children with disability and their experiences of family and domestic violence

    93669 - Easy Read.pdf (6.292Mb)
    93669.pdf (2.149Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Jones, Jocelyn
    Roarty, Lynn
    Gilroy, John
    Brook, Juliet
    Wilson, Mandy
    Garlett, Cathy
    McGlade, Hannah
    Williams, Robyn
    Leonard, Helen
    Date
    2023
    Type
    Report
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Additional URLs
    https://disability.royalcommission.gov.au/publications/wangkiny-yirra-speaking-project-first-nations-women-and-children-disability-and-their-experiences-family-and-domestic-violence
    Faculty
    Faculty of Health Sciences
    School
    EnAble Institute
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93864
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    First Nations women and children with disability are at greater risk of family and domestic violence (FDV) and its consequences than their non-Indigenous peers. A recent report (Ringland et al., 2022) found that First Nations women with disability had the highest rates of victimisation of any group, with 34.4% recorded as being victims of crime. Despite this, the voices of First Nations people are largely missing from disability research in Australia (Dew et al., 2019).

    The purpose of this research was to engage with First Nations women and children and key stakeholders in Western Australia to: gain an understanding of their experiences of FDV, identify factors they believe open them up to the risk of harm, document their observations and experiences of barriers and/or enablers to seeking assistance and support, obtain their views on what works in currently available programs, and make recommendations for future culturally safe prevention and protection programs.

    Key findings:

    Research focus on experiences of FDV of First Nations women and children with disability appears to be growing, but is still limited within the broader body of research focused on First Nations women and children and FDV.

    First Nations people, wherever located, are significantly more likely than non-Indigenous people to be confronted with a range of barriers to service access, diagnosis and service delivery.

    Current strategies for prevention and support for First Nations women and children involved with the justice and child protection systems are demonstrably inadequate and harmful and must be reformed.

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