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Our watch - Facts and figures
Violence against women is now recognised to be a serious and widespread problem
in Australia, with enormous individual and community impacts and social costs.
However this significant social problem
is also ultimately preventable.
But to prevent violence against women we first need to understand it.
Get informed with these key statistics, facts and definitions.
KEY FACTS
The following basic statistics help demonstrate the prevalence and severity of
violence against women:
·
On
average, one woman a week is
murdered by her current or former partner, according to the most
recent analysis of homicide statistics in Australia.1
·
One
in three Australian women has experienced physical violence, since the age
of 15.2
·
One
in five Australian women has experienced sexual violence.2
·
One
in four Australian women has experienced physical or sexual violence by an
intimate partner.2
·
One
in four Australian women has experienced emotional abuse by a current or
former partner.3
·
Women
are at least three times more likely than men to experience violence from an
intimate partner.4
·
Women
are five times more likely than men to require medical attention or
hospitalisation as a result of intimate partner violence, and five times
more likely to report fearing for their lives.5
·
Of
those women who experience violence, more than half have children in their
care.6
·
Violence against women is not limited to the home or intimate relationships.
Every year in Australia, over 300,000 women experience violence – often
sexual violence – from someone other than a partner.7
·
Eight
out of ten women aged 18 to 24 were harassed on the street in the past year.8
·
Young
women (18 – 24 years) experience significantly higher rates of physical and
sexual violence than women in older age groups.9
·
There
is growing evidence that women with disabilities are more likely to
experience violence.10
·
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women experience violence at higher
rates than non-Indigenous women.11
WHAT DO WE MEAN BY VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN?
Put simply, and using an internationally recognised definition, violence against
women is any act of gender based violence that causes or could cause physical,
sexual or psychological harm or suffering to women, including threats of harm or
coercion, in public or in private life.12
As this definition makes clear, violence against
women is not only or always physical. It includes psychological, economic,
emotional and sexual violence and abuse, and a wide range of controlling,
coercive and intimidating behaviours.
In Australia, violence against women is called
many different things, including domestic violence, family violence, intimate
partner violence, sexual harassment and sexual assault.
Here are some definitions of different kinds of
violence, which demonstrate the different forms that violence against women can
take:
Domestic violence
Domestic
violence – refers to acts of violence that occur in domestic settings between
two people who are, or were, in an intimate relationship. It includes physical,
sexual, emotional, psychological and financial abuse.
Emotional/psychological violence
Emotional/psychological violence – can include a range of controlling behaviours
such as control of finances, isolation from family and friends, continual
humiliation, threats against children or being threatened with injury or death.
Family violence
Family
violence – is a broader term than domestic violence, as it refers not only to
violence between intimate partners but also to violence between family members.
This includes, for example, elder abuse and adolescent violence against
parents. Family
violence includes violent or threatening behaviour, or any other form of
behaviour that coerces or controls a family member or causes that family member
to be fearful. In Indigenous communities, family violence is often the preferred
term as it encapsulates the broader issue of violence within extended families,
kinship networks and community relationships, as well as intergenerational
issues.
Gender based violence
Gender
based violence – violence that is specifically ‘directed against a woman because
she is a woman or that affects women disproportionately’.
Intimate partner violence
Intimate
partner violence – any behaviour by a man or a woman within an intimate
relationship (including current or past marriages, domestic partnerships,
familial relations, or people who share accommodation) that causes physical,
sexual or psychological harm to those in the relationship. This is the most
common form of violence against women.
Non-partner sexual assault
Non-partner sexual assault – sexual violence perpetrated by people such as
strangers, acquaintances, friends, colleagues, peers, teachers, neighbours and
family members.
These definitions are taken from Change
the story: A shared framework for the primary prevention of violence against
women and their children in Australia.
You can find the full glossary of terms on page 61-62.
THE IMPACT OF VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
Violence against women and their children takes a profound and long-term toll on
women and children’s health and wellbeing, on families and communities, and on
society as a whole.
Intimate partner violence contributes to more
death, disability and illness in women aged 15 to 44 than any other preventable
risk factor.13
Domestic or family violence against women is the
single largest driver of homelessness for women,14 a
common factor in child protection notifications,15 and
results in a police call-out on average once every two minutes across the
country.16
The combined health, administration and social
welfare costs of violence against women have been estimated to be $21.7 billion
a year, with projections suggesting that if no further action is taken to
prevent violence against women, costs will accumulate to $323.4 billion over a
thirty year period from 2014-15 to 2044-45.17
Children and young people are also affected by
violence against women. Exposure to violence against their mothers or other
caregivers causes profound harm to children, with potential impacts on attitudes
to relationships and violence, as well as behavioural, cognitive and emotional
functioning, social development, and – through a process of ‘negative chain
effects’ – education and later employment prospects.18
Above all, violence against women is a
fundamental violation of human rights, and one that Australia has an obligation
to prevent under international law.19
WHAT ABOUT VIOLENCE AGAINST MEN?
All violence is wrong, regardless of the sex of the victim or perpetrator. But
there are distinct gendered patterns in the perpetration and impact of
violence.
For example, both women and men are more likely
to experience violence at the hands of men, with around 95% of all victims of
violence in Australia reporting a male perpetrator.20
While men are more likely to experience violence
by other men in public places, women are more likely to experience violence from
men they know, often in the home.21
The overwhelming majority of acts of domestic
violence and sexual assault are perpetrated by men against women, and this
violence is likely to have more severe impacts on female than male victims.22
Recognising the gendered patterns of violence
doesn’t negate the experiences of male victims. But it does point to the need
for an approach that looks honestly at what the research is telling us, and
addresses the gendered dynamics of violence – this is what Our Watch seeks to
do.
Our specific mandate is to prevent violence
against women and their children, but promoting gender equality and respectful
and non-violent relationships benefits the whole community, including men.
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN KEY STATISTICS
The
National Community Attitudes Survey (NCAS) 2013 key findings
NCAS, conducted by the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (VicHealth), is a
unique Australia-wide study designed to track how the population view issues
related to violence against women.
Click
to view NCAS 2013 – DOCX, 71KB
References:
1. Australian
Institute of Criminology (AIC) 2017. The 2017 National Homicide
Monitoring Program report by the AIC showed that over a 2-year period from
2012/13 to 2013/14, there were 99 female victims of intimate partner homicide.
Women continue to be over-represented as victims of intimate partner homicide,
accounting for 79% of all intimate partner homicides.
2. Cox, P. (2015) Violence
against women: Additional analysis of the Australian Bureau of Statistics’
Personal Safety Survey 2012, Horizons Research Report, Issue 1,
Australia’s National Research Organisation for Women’s Safety (ANROWS), Sydney;
and Woodlock, D., Healey, L., Howe, K., McGuire, M., Geddes, V. and Granek, S.
(2014).
3. Australian
Bureau of Statistics (ABS), 2012.
4. In 2012, 17% of all women and 5% of men had experienced violence by a partner
since the age of 15. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2013), Australian
Bureau of Statistics (2013) Personal Safety, Australia 2012, Cat. No. 4906.0,
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), Canberra.
5. Mouzos, J. (1999) Femicide:
An overview of major findings, No. 124, Australian Institute of
Criminology, Canberra, pp. 1-6.
6. National Crime Prevention (2001) Young people and domestic violence: National
research on young people’s attitudes and experiences of domestic violence, Crime
Prevention Branch, Commonwealth Attorney-General’s Department, Canberra; and Cox
(2015), see note 2.
7. ABS (2013), see note 4. Survey extrapolated to population figures on the
basis of 3.8% of all women surveyed reporting having experienced physical or
sexual violence from a non-partner in the past 12 months (and approximately 9
million women over the age of 18 in Australia).
8. Johnson, M. and Bennett, E. (2015) Everyday
sexism: Australian women’s experiences of street harassment, The
Australia Institute, Canberra.
9. ABS (2013) see note 4. In the 2012 Personal Safety Survey, 13% of women in
this age group reported having experienced violence by a man in the last 12
months. This was the highest proportion of any age group.
10. Cox, P. (2015), see note 2; and Woodlock, D., Healey, L., Howe, K., McGuire,
M., Geddes, V. and Granek, S. (2014), see note 2.
11. There is no single data source that provides a direct comparison for all
forms of violence. However various data sources consistently show Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander women experiencing higher (and often much higher) rates
of violence than non-Indigenous women, with the size of the difference varying
according to the type of violence, data source and jurisdiction. In 2014-15,
hospitalisation rates for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander family
violence-related assaults were 530 females per 100 000 female population. After
adjusting for differences in population age structures, this was 32 times the
rate for non-Indigenous females. Source: Steering Committee for the Review of
Government Service Provision (2016) Overcoming
Indigenous disadvantage: Key indicators 2016, Productivity
Commission, Canberra, p.4.98, and table (table 4A.12.13).
12. United Nations (1993) Declaration
on the Elimination of Violence against Women.
13. Based on Victorian figures from VicHealth (2004) The
health costs of violence: Measuring the burden of disease caused by intimate
partner violence, Victorian Health Promotion Foundation, Melbourne. A
comparable national study is pending.
14. 55% of women with children presenting to specialist homelessness services
nominated escaping violence as their main reason for seeking help. Australian
Institute of Health and Welfare (2012) Specialist homeless services data
collection 2011-12, Cat. No. HOU 267, Australian Institute of Health and
Welfare, Canberra.
15. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2015) Child
Protection Australia 2013-14, Child Welfare Series No. 61, Cat. No. CWS 52,
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Canberra. Children exposed to family
violence are classified as experiencing ‘emotional abuse’, which, while a
broader category, is the most commonly substantiated type of harm (39%) in child
protection notifications across Australia.
16. Police across Australia dealt with 239,846 domestic violence incidents in
2015, an estimated 657 domestic violence matters on average every day of the
year (or one every two minutes) – calculated for police data sourced across all
states and territories, collated at ABC
News.
17. Price Waterhouse Coopers (2015) ‘A
high price to pay: the economic case for preventing violence against women’,
report prepared for Our Watch and the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (VicHealth).
18. Frederick, J. and Goddard, C. (2007) Exploring the relationship between
poverty, childhood adversity and child abuse from the perspective of adulthood,
Child Abuse Review, 16, pp. 323–341; and Humphreys, C. and Houghton, C. (2008)
The research evidence on children and young people experiencing domestic abuse,
in Humphreys, C., Houghton, C. and Ellis, J., Literature review: Better outcomes
for children and young people affected by domestic abuse – Directions for good
practice, Scottish Government, Edinburgh. Several jurisdictions now recognise
this harm as a form of family violence in and of itself.
19. The elimination of violence against women is also a specific target of the
new United
Nations Sustainable Development Goals, to which Australia is
committed: United Nations (2015) Sustainable Development Goals.
20. ABS (2013), see note 4.
21. Ibid.
22. Around 95% of all victims of violence (both male and female) reported
experiencing acts of violence - physical or sexual assault, or threats – from a
male perpetrator. ABS, (2013), see note 4. Survey extrapolated to population
figures on the basis of 3.8% of all women surveyed reporting having experienced
physical or sexual violence from a non-partner in the past 12 months (and
approximately 9 million women over the age of 18 in Australia).
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