Australian researchers urge prioritising evidence-based solutions and incorporating Indigenous experiences to tackle rising gender-based violence cases.
While the actions outlined in the plans are admirable, achieving the set targets will require a significant increase in urgency and funding.
New research shows Indigenous women experiencing intimate partner violence had engaged with police to help them. However, many didn’t receive the support that potentially could have saved their lives.
New research reveals that more than half of all Australians have experienced technology-facilitated abuse.
Female prisoner numbers have skyrocketed over the past decade, and an overwhelming majority of them have experienced domestic violence.
Short-term measures don't address the fundamental systemic issues that lead these vulnerable women into danger.
A key part of the budget's focus on women was a funding boost to help stop domestic violence, but is it enough?
While stories of human rights violations, and dire warnings about pandemics and an uncertain economic future seem unconnected, research reveals common roots in systemic inequality and discrimination in Australia.
While Australians demand change, the silence from Canberra on violence against women and gender inequality is a national shame.
Australia’s first female Indigenous ambassador, Julie-Ann Guivarra, is now focusing her diplomatic lens on gender equality.
We’re tackling a new topic on this episode of Monash podcast, What Happens Next?, looking at masculinity, and how its negative forms can be as damaging to men as women.
Why we must look past ‘generational analyses’ of the novel coronavirus impact.
Sharman Stone has worked to advance the rights of women for more than 20 years, in Parliament and as Ambassador for Women and Girls, but her work isn't finished yet.
Australia once identified itself as the “lucky country”, a place where the “Aussie battler” was given a fair go, but can it still lay claim to this?
A genuine partnership needs to be established between the government and Aboriginal people to get Closing the Gap targets back on track.
We need to think about the problems that men and women face not as competing priorities but as part of the same toxic social problem.
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