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Indigenous women are most affected by domestic violence but have struggled to be heard. It’s time we listened


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Indigenous women are most affected by domestic ********* but have struggled to be heard. It’s time we listened

Credit: Pixabay from Pexels

(This article contains information on deaths in custody and the ********* experienced by First Nations people in encounters with the *********** carceral system. It also contains references to and the names of people who are now deceased.)

As the country reels from women being ******* due to *********, government has responded by calling urgent meetings and roundtables to address this national crisis. This must properly include Indigenous women, who experience shocking levels of family and domestic *********, and ******* ********.

It must be recognized women are not a homogenous, collective group. The issues experienced by non-Indigenous women are not always the same as those experienced by Indigenous women. As such, it is imperative the voices of Indigenous survivors, researchers and advocates in addressing ********* are fully heard and respected in the current debate.

According to recent research led by Kyllie Cripps, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women are

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more likely to be hospitalized for injury associated with ********* than non-Indigenous women. They are eight times more likely to be a victim of *********. This figure is higher in some areas, such as Western Australia, which recorded Aboriginal mothers as
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to be a victim of *********.

Recently, the Domestic Family and ******* ********* Commission convened an emergency roundtable. However, we are still concerned the

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of the roundtable do not respond to the serious and ongoing structural and systemic barriers Indigenous women face.

There are also concerns a significant investment

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in Western Australia will not support Indigenous women. They’re based largely on an expansion of existing services, police, child protection and corrections, and non-Indigenous service responses. These decisions were made contrary to the states own Aboriginal family ********* policy and in the absence of research or evidence base.

Potentially harmful reforms

Indigenous women’s sustained advocacy, as well as

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, and
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into missing and murdered Indigenous women, have all shone a light on how Indigenous women and children experience ********* at alarming rates, even after formal inquiries and royal commissions over the past two decades.

However, as was identified in the

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into the Queensland Police Service’s responses to domestic and family *********, reforms are often reactive and short lived. Key recommendations have been ignored, while
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mainstream.

White feminists have pursued a

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that has been proven not only to be ineffectual, but potentially even harmful to Indigenous women. For example, coercive control laws risk misidentifying Indigenous women as the perpetrators of ********* for not presenting as “ideal victims.”

As Aboriginal women with lived experience of *********, we continue to point out the urgency of addressing the

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through the inclusion of our voices at
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. For years, Indigenous researchers, survivors, advocates and allies have
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. This
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, and expertise, is often overlooked.

Failures of policing

Governments promise to address the issue. Emergency services promise to do better. Yet in coronial inquests, inquiries and

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, we continue to see the services with the mandate to protect the community failing Indigenous women. Indigenous women are
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to call the police for many reasons, including ongoing racism and prejudice.

Indigenous women know police may not take their reporting of ********* seriously. This is common knowledge in Indigenous communities. Calls are often downgraded in urgency or not responded to at all, even after a victim has repeatedly calling triple zero for support. In many cases, Aboriginal women are

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as perpetrators, situations that have also resulted in their being
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.

The Northern Territory coroner is currently examining the role systemic racism played in the murders of four Aboriginal women. The Queensland Commission of Inquiry also found racism, misogyny and sexism

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of victim-survivors. Cripps further found in her
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coroners have previously identified systemic racism as being significant in the deaths of Indigenous women.

And while Aboriginal women are at an elevated risk of ********* and *********, culturally safe family and domestic ********* services are critically underfunded or non-existent. This is neglectful. The

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has funding tied to federal government cycles and is unable to meet demand. It’s currently awaiting the government’s response to a
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into the National Legal Assistance Program. This was finalized in March and called for an increase in recurrent funding to enable their services to provide crucial support to Indigenous women and children nationally.

One size doesn’t fit all

Indigenous women have long argued for systemic reforms that address the underlying drivers of *********, support victim-survivors, ensure justice and demand accountability for offenders. This means not every support service can be for all women. They need to be tailored to meet the specific needs of Indigenous women.

The presumption that one size fits all omits the unique factors in different communities across the nation. For example, some regional and remote communities face significant difficulties in accessing telecommunication services. At the same time, the connectedness of cities doesn’t automatically make support easily accessible.

The lives of Indigenous women are at further risk with delays due to distance and access to funds to escape unsafe situations. This was demonstrated through

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supplied to the Queensland Commission of Inquiry. It found a
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of ****** in some remote areas. Centralized call centers can be thousands of kilometers away, delaying access to help.

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jointly led by Marlene Longbottom found accessible services need to ensure Indigenous women are not retraumatised as they share their stories. We should also remember the first responders in these situations are ultimately families. As a result of helping a woman fleeing a violent situation, families also become targets for perpetrators and their networks.

A key deterrent to reporting ********* is that police are mandatory reporters of child ******.

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if they report ********* against them, police and child protection working together can decide children are at risk and remove them into state care. There is a real risk of
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as a consequence for Indigenous women who report *********, causing immense harm and trauma to mothers and their children.

While there have been changes that include

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and high-risk teams, the implementation of these services can often let Indigenous women down because they are not based on their needs.

As Indigenous women

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to seek support,
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. Not only must Indigenous women consider the safety of themselves and their children, they also have to navigate multiple services. These service systems are often challenging and overwhelming, and can also offer contradictory advice. This makes decision-making difficult.

When it comes to ******* ********, there are virtually no culturally appropriate services available to Indigenous women and ******, who are at high risk of such *********. According to the

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, one in three Indigenous women globally will be a victim of ***** in their lives. This is certainly true of First Nations women and ******
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.

Increasingly, our ********* research is finding links between ******* ********* perpetration and subsequent domestic and family ********* deaths. It is crucial more research is done in this space to ensure we are identifying casual links and preventive opportunities.

Growing the knowledge base

A

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by Hannah McGlade with the *********** National Research Organization on Women (ANROWS), highlights the ********* as systemic and structural, also constituting Indigenous femicide. Research on murdered and missing Indigenous women and ****** by Indigenous researchers has been neglected by the state, yet is critical to understanding and responding effectively.

Greater investment is required in research by Indigenous researchers. We are part of a new

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that aims to address this knowledge gap.

Given the lack of government action over many years,

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, including the former
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, have led national policy change. Indigenous women’s calls for a separate
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, also supported by ******* Nations treaty bodies and experts, were finally heard.

This plan must be underpinned by Indigenous-led efforts in each state and territory, and including the establishment where needed of Aboriginal family and domestic ********* state peak bodies. We say again “nothing about us, without us” and call for

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with the state and sector. There’s a lot of work to do to save the lives of First Nations women and it must start now.

Provided by
The Conversation


This article is republished from

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under a Creative Commons license. Read the
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.

Citation:
Indigenous women are most affected by domestic ********* but have struggled to be heard. It’s time we listened (2024, May 13)
retrieved 13 May 2024
from

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