Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/18964
Record ID: 7b6d992f-840a-4607-8438-dd57534b3dd2
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dc.contributor.authorFisher, Colleenen
dc.date.accessioned2022-06-30T23:42:59Z-
dc.date.available2022-06-30T23:42:59Z-
dc.date.issued2009en
dc.identifier.isbn9780980547443en
dc.identifier.urihttps://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/18964-
dc.formatxxiv, 150 p. ; 30 cm.en
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherAssociation for Services to Torture and Trauma Survivors, Perthen
dc.subjectCALD (culturally and linguistically diverse)en
dc.subjectRefugee communitiesen
dc.subjectPreventionen
dc.subjectCommunity attitudesen
dc.subjectCommunity educationen
dc.titleThe exploration of the nature and understanding of family and domestic violence within Sudanese, Somalian, Ethiopian, Liberian and Sierra Leonean communities and its impact on individuals, family relations, the community and settlementen
dc.typeReporten
dc.identifier.catalogid3491en
dc.subject.keywordElectronic publicationen
dc.subject.keywordnew_recorden
dc.subject.keywordReporten
dc.subject.keywordWestern Australiaen
dc.subject.keywordAustraliaen
dc.subject.keywordWesternen
dc.description.notesGeneral Overview: This report discusses the findings of a Western Australian study which investigated five African communities’ experiences of and attitudes to domestic and family violence, post-settlement in Australia.<br/ ><br/ >Objectives: The study aimed to explore how violence is conceptualised by community members, their views on its impact and causes, and the legal and community responses to violence. It also sought to identify gaps in current service delivery and responses.<br/ ><br/ >Methods:The research involved interviews and focus groups with 78 individuals, including 52 community members (24 male, 28 female), two community leaders and 24 support agency staff. The researcher was assisted by a team of bi-lingual, bi-cultural community members who were trained to undertake interviews with members of their respective communities. The study was guided by a Steering Committee, consisting of one member from each community represented in the research and a member of the Family and Domestic Violence Unit in the Western Australian Department for Communities.<br/ ><br/ >A literature review, included in the report, covered the following topics:<br/ ><br/ > * the refugee experience, settlement and violence<br/ >Results: One key finding of the study is that domestic and family violence within the five communities occurs in the context of perceived tensions between community cultural and western values. The study highlights the effect of western social and legal systems on changing family and gender roles, in particular the complex dynamics in families around access to Centrelink payments. These tensions influence how domestic and family violence and its causes are understood within the five communities.<br/ ><br/ >Conclusion:The author uses an ecological model to explain domestic and family violence in the five communities. In addition to the ecological model’s four levels – the individual, relationships, mesosystem and community – the author proposes a fifth level, ‘western society’. The report does not make specific policy recommendations but emphasises the importance of community ownership of the issue and solutions in attempting to ‘move forward’. It also highlights the need for education and prevention.en
dc.date.entered2010-10-12en
dc.publisher.placeW.A.en
dc.description.physicaldescriptionxxiv, 150 p. ; 30 cm.en
Appears in Collections:Reports

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