Family Matters article Jun 2015
Showing 153 results
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Family Matters article Jun 2015
A public health approach to enhancing safe and supportive family environments for children
Building on the growing consensus that communities are best served by a public health approach to child protection, this article demonstrates that it is possible to identify family environments at a population level that could be the subject of public health interventions.
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Family Matters article Apr 2017
Conference Keynote. Research to recommendations
Commissioner and Justice Jennifer Coate describes the aims and work of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
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Family Matters article May 2018
A population approach to the prevention of child maltreatment
This article sets out how the prevention of child maltreatment can be enhanced by a multi-level population-based approach in providing evidence- based parenting and family support.
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Webinar Jul 2020
Findings from the Families in Australia Survey: Life during Covid-19
A Families in Focus webinar
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Submission May 2015
Examination of children affected by family and domestic violence
Submission to National Children’s Commissioner based on research conducted by AIFS and ANROWS
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Submission Sep 2018
Inquiry into Intergenerational Welfare Dependence
Submission of findings relevant to the Inquiry into Intergenerational Welfare Dependence
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Submission Dec 2020
Submission to the NDS and NDIS Outcomes Frameworks Public Consultation
Feedback on NDS and NDIS Outcomes Frameworks Introductory Paper in December 2020 public consultation.
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Media release Dec 2020
The good, the bad and the lonely: how coronavirus changed Australian family life
Using findings from the first wave of the Families in Australia Survey, this article looks at support in families and social networks during COVID.
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Media release Jul 2021
One-fifth of Australian women say COVID-19 impacted their plans of having children
New research by the Australian Institute of Family Studies shows one in five Australian women changed their plans of having children because of COVID-19, and one in seven women indicated that COVID-19 likely impacted on when they would have children, with the majority of this cohort (92%) choosing to delay having children.