Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/22525
Record ID: cdc758ff-332a-41e9-b587-890ee6768d9f
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dc.contributor.authorMolnar, Lenaen
dc.contributor.authorHendry, Natalie Annen
dc.coverage.spatialNationalen
dc.date.accessioned2023-03-06T04:13:57Z-
dc.date.available2023-03-06T04:13:57Z-
dc.date.issued2022en
dc.identifier.urihttps://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/22525-
dc.description.abstractAbstract<br/ >Issue addressed<br/ >Primary prevention of violence against women (PVAW) strategies and campaigns aim to address and challenge violence-supportive behaviour and normative social structures to intervene before violence happens. Towards this aim, from 2014 to 2019, The Line was a public Australian Commonwealth-supported PVAW campaign on social media that targeted young people. This study explores how young people discussed PVAW-related themes on the campaign's Facebook page.<br/ ><br/ >Methods<br/ >Social media scraping tools were used to collect 346 941 comments on The Line's Facebook page from 2014 to 2017. In this study, 3663 comments included three high frequency, PVAW-related key terms, ‘violence’ (1430 comments), ‘gender’ (1602 comments) and ‘consent’ (631 comments). These were identified and were thematically coded.<br/ ><br/ >Results<br/ >Young people's comments indicated high support for violence prevention but varied in how they understood gendered violence and factors that contribute to it, and instead, some argued that the campaign should not ignore men. Some young people who engaged with The Line on a long-term basis and spoke to its aims, proposed interpretations from their experiences, and challenged the campaign to progress.<br/ ><br/ >Conclusions<br/ >This study demonstrates that young people influence each other by adopting and disrupting PVAW knowledge in a publicly funded social media campaign.<br/ ><br/ >So what?<br/ >Public PVAW social media campaigns can encourage young people to discuss gendered violence online. However, successful campaigns need ongoing support to develop conversations with target populations that allow diverse audiences to build their knowledge.en
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherWiley Online Libraryen
dc.relation.ispartofHealth Promotion Journal of Australiaen
dc.subject.otherPreventionen
dc.subject.otherANROWS Completed Register of Active Research projectsen
dc.titleContent analysis of responses to The Line, an Australian primary prevention of violence against women campaign on Facebooken
dc.typeJournal Articleen
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1002/hpja.589en
dc.identifier.catalogid17358en
dc.subject.keywordnew_recorden
dc.subject.readinglistRural and remote communitiesen
dc.subject.readinglistPreventionen
dc.subject.readinglistChildren and young peopleen
dc.subject.readinglistChildren and young people populationen
dc.subject.readinglistData developmenten
dc.subject.readinglistPrimary preventionen
dc.subject.readinglistAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communitiesen
dc.subject.readinglistCulturally and linguistically diverse communitiesen
dc.subject.readinglistLGBTQ communitiesen
dc.subject.readinglistNationalen
dc.subject.readinglistANROWS Completed Register of Active Research projectsen
dc.subject.readinglistANROWS Notepad 2022 April 28en
dc.description.notes<p style="margin-bottom:11px">The research has concluded and the output has been added to the ANROWS library. Please visit <a href="https://www.anrows.org.au/register-of-active-and-recent/">https://www.anrows.org.au/register-of-active-research/</a> for more information on the RAR.</p><p>BACKGROUND</p><p>While forming the important parts of identity and relationships, young people in Australian are digitally embedded in their social practices, with the eSafety Commission reporting in 2018 that 76 percent stay in touch with loved ones through social media. Indeed, young people are not alone in seeking peer advice and support online about how to prevent violence in their relationships. However, despite recommendations from the fields of feminist criminology, young people&#39;s engagement with social technology for primary prevention has yet to be given voice. The current research speaks in parallel with these concerns as they reflect the efforts practised by young people in Australia who use social technology as part of their practices of primary prevention.</p><p>AIM</p><p>Broadly, this doctoral thesis seeks to examine the nature of young people&rsquo;s engagement with primary prevention of violence against women (PPVAW) content through social technologies.</p><p>METHODS</p><p>Stage 1 is a systematic social media content analysis of a digital PPVAW campaign targeted towards young Australians aged between 12 and 21 called &ldquo;The Line&rdquo;. This stage involved a systematic content analysis of discussions to identify how participants of this digital environment over the period 2014 to 2017 used PPVAW language online.</p><p>Stage 2 of the research design involves a series of focus group discussions with young people who interact with PPVAW campaigns and programs with local service providers and social technology. Young people who participate in these focus groups contribute campaign content that they have used or created to share PPVAW knowledge.</p><p>SIGNIFICANCE</p><p>Currently, PPVAW literature features a number and depth of evaluations of training tools and education programs in schools and university settings as these cohorts are easily accessible; however, these evaluations rarely feature qualitative reflections of the participants. Their recommendations for further research and environments for PPVAW practice encourage the exploration of young people&#39;s use of social technologies. Similarly, a significant amount of research from feminist media studies has been able to describe a rich use of social technologies by young people for political activism, empowerment and violence prevention.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>FUNDING BODY</p><p><br />RMIT Global Urban and Social Sciences/Our Watch Industry Partnership</p><p><br />PROJECT START DATE</p><p><br />September 2017</p><p><br />EXPECTED COMPLETION DATE</p><p><br />November 2021</p>en
dc.date.entered2022-07-26en
dc.subject.listANROWS Notepad 2022 April 28en
dc.subject.anratopicPrimary preventionen
dc.subject.anratopicChildren and young peopleen
dc.subject.anratopicData and statisticsen
dc.subject.anrapopulationLGBTQ communitiesen
dc.subject.anrapopulationAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoplesen
dc.subject.anrapopulationCulturally and linguistically diverse communitiesen
dc.subject.anrapopulationChildren and young peopleen
dc.subject.anrapopulationRural and remote communitiesen
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