Published Jul 20 2018

What is parricide and how common is it in Australia?

The recent killing of a young mother and two of her children in Western Australia, allegedly by the woman’s 19-year-old son, has attracted significant attention. This form of homicide is referred to as parricide – the killing of a parent by their child. It includes the killing of a father (patricide) or mother (matricide) by their biological, adopted or stepchild.

There is high public interest in parricide cases – not only do such incidents include homicide, but they are disturbing as they challenge assumptions about the family as a safe space, and upset conventional ideas about the sanctity and intimacy of the child-parent relationship.


Read more: Long ignored, adolescent family violence needs our attention


Although cases of parricide attract substantial media and public attention, it is a relatively rare type of homicide. Drawing on national data from the Australian Institute of Criminology, here we present what is known about incidents of parricide occurring in Australia over the 10-year period between 2002-03 and 2011-12.

The prevalence and nature of parricide in Australia

During this 10-year period, there were 128 parricide incidents, accounting for 12 per cent of all family homicides. Most domestic homicides in Australia involve a single victim and offender. But in a small number of these parricides there were multiple victims and/or multiple perpetrators (12 per cent).

During the period, parricide incidents involved 134 victims (constituting 12 per cent of all domestic homicide victims during the same period) and 132 offenders. This included 10 cases in which both parents of the offender were killed.

During the 10-year period, males committed 54 per cent of parricides in Australia. This is distinct from other forms of domestic homicide where males tend to predominate – for example, intimate partner homicides in which, during the same period, males accounted for 77 per cent of offenders.

In contrast to intimate partner homicides, which typically involve a female victim, victims of parricide are more likely to be the perpetrator’s father (54 per cent) than the mother (46 per cent).

The majority of parricide cases involve the killing of a parent over 50 years old (74 per cent of cases). The ages of parricide offenders are more varied, ranging from under 17 years old (11 per cent of cases), to 18-34 years old (50 per cent of cases), to over 35 years old (37 per cent of cases). In one parricide case in Australia during this period the offender was over 65 years old.

International research suggests that parricides committed by child offenders have distinct characteristics and may differ in motivation from those committed by adults. Younger offenders are more likely to kill in retaliation against histories of violence, whereas older parricide perpetrators are more likely to have a history of mental illness.

Known risks and points of intervention

While Australian state and territory governments have devoted significant resources to addressing family violence in recent years, this has been primarily directed towards intimate partner violence, which is the most prevalent form of family violence and specifically of fatal family violence.

Recent reviews such as the Victorian Royal Commission into Family Violence, Queensland’s Not Now, Not Ever Report, and the 2016 COAG Advisory Panel Report into Violence against Women and their Children do not refer specifically to parricide as a form of family violence. Little is understood in Australia or internationally about the known risks and opportunities for intervention prior to an act of parricide.

The Australian Institute of Criminology data does show that in 18 per cent of parricides, there was a known history of family violence before the killing. Given the high levels of under-reporting of family violence, this is likely to underestimate the extent to which families in which parricides occur have a history of other forms of family violence.

The need for evidence-driven prevention and responses

Three years ago, the killing of Adelaide Crows football coach Phil Walsh by his son brought substantial media attention to the issue of parricide. Again, in the past week this form of family violence has been a dominant story in the Australian media.


Victorian researchers, as well as academics working in other Australian states and territories, have begun to direct more attention to understanding the use of violence by adolescents within the home, and there is increasing attention to elder abuse in the context of family violence. But there is still little understanding of the patterns and characteristics of parricide.

Further research is needed in Australia to address the gaps in our understanding of parricide offences. Greater insight into the known risks prior to an act of parricide, and the circumstances immediately surrounding the use of lethal violence, can be harnessed to inform prevention and intervention strategies and services.

This article originally appeared on The Conversation.

About the Authors

  • Kate fitz-gibbon

    Professor (Practice), Corporate Education, Faculty of Business and Economics, Monash University

    Kate is an international research leader in the area of domestic and family violence, femicide, responses to all forms of violence against women and children, perpetrator interventions, and the impacts of policy and practice reform in Australia and internationally. She has significant experience with qualitative and survey-based research methods, and a strong record of conducting research that ethically and safely engages with family violence victim-survivors, people who use violence, and practitioners.

  • Janemaree maher

    Professor of Sociology in the Centre for Women's Studies and Gender Research, School of Social Sciences

    JaneMaree is a feminist social scientist whose research is focused in two key areas of gendered social science: women’s work and family, and gendered violence. She critically examines the interactions of families and societies, with an emphasis on how neo-liberal discourses of health and consumption impact on family relationships.

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