Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/11551
Record ID: 803e02c9-82b2-4e55-9904-17b5deddb8b2
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dc.contributor.authorDepartment of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, Office of the Status of Womenen
dc.date.accessioned2022-06-30T22:48:29Z-
dc.date.available2022-06-30T22:48:29Z-
dc.date.issued2004en
dc.identifier.isbn9781877042959en
dc.identifier.urihttps://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/11551-
dc.format142 p.en
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherCommonwealth of Australia : Canberraen
dc.subjectSexual assaulten
dc.subjectIndigenous issuesen
dc.subjectMental healthen
dc.subjectStatisticsen
dc.subjectRegional rural and remote areasen
dc.subjectHomicideen
dc.subjectCALD (culturally and linguistically diverse)en
dc.subjectHealthen
dc.subjectOverviewen
dc.titleWomen in Australia 2004en
dc.typeNon-Fictionen
dc.identifier.catalogid78en
dc.subject.keywordBooken
dc.subject.keywordStatisticsen
dc.subject.keywordNationalen
dc.subject.keywordnew_recorden
dc.subject.readinglistAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communitiesen
dc.description.notesThis publication consists of 9 chapters, drawing together statistical information on women in Australia such as their population characteristics, family and living arrangements, health, working life, economic resources, education and training, management and decision making, crime and safety and selected population groups (women from countries where English is not the main language, people in rural areas, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples). Chapter 8 looks in particular at crime and safety. In 2001, female victims of homicide (45%) were more likely than male homicide victims (15%) to have been killed by a family member. The ABS (Australian Bureau of Statistics) conducted the Women’s Safety Survey in 1996 and found that: 23% of women who were currently or had been in a previous relationship had experienced physical and/or sexual violence from a partner; over two-thirds (68%) of those women who experienced violence from a previous partner had children in their care during the relationship, with almost all of these women indicating that the children had witnessed the violence. The Survey also found that when comparing women’s general health against women who had not experienced violence, abused women had: worse general physical and mental health; higher rates of depression, anxiety, self harm and suicidal ideation; higher rates of problematic or disordered eating; higher rates of smoking and heavy alcohol use; and higher rates of sleeping difficulty.en
dc.date.entered2005-06-15en
dc.description.contentsChapter 1: Population Characteristics<br/ >Chapter 2: Family and Living Arrangements<br/ >Chapter 3: Health<br/ >Chapter 4: Working Life<br/ >Chapter 5: Economic Resources<br/ >Chapter 6: Education and Training<br/ >Chapter 7: Management and Decision Making<br/ >Chapter 8: Crime and Safety (with sections on Women in Prison, Recorded Victims of Crime, Women and Family Violence and the Women's Safety Survey, 1996, Victims of Sexual and all Assault, Violence and Young Women, Violence and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women, and Violence and the Cost to Health)<br/ >Chapter 9: Selected Population Groups.en
dc.subject.anrapopulationAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoplesen
dc.publisher.placeACTen
dc.description.physicaldescription142 p.en
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