Family Matters article Jun 2006
-
Lost in translation?
-
Media release Mar 2015
Many Australians live alone
A quarter of all Australian households are now lone person households, according to a new demographic trends paper released today by the Australian Institute of Family Studies.
-
Practice guide Mar 2005
Mapping health sector and interagency protocols on sexual assault
This paper looks at the range of formal health sector protocols that currently exist to guide service responses to victim/survivors of sexual assault.
-
Facts and figures Mar 2022
Marriages in Australia
Figures around marriages in Australia: marriage rate, age at first marriage, religious and civil weddings, and more.
-
Policy and practice paper May 2013
Meeting children's needs when the family environment isn't always "good enough": A systems approach
This paper provides a theoretical basis to working with vulnerable and high-risk families where parenting is not "good enough" or even unsafe
-
Family Matters article Apr 2001
Men's and women's reasons for not having children
Family Matters article on men's and women's reasons for not having children
-
Practice guide Sep 2013
Mentoring programs for Indigenous youth at risk
Reviews effective mentoring relationships, how they work, and what further research is needed.
-
Research report Sep 2011
Migration, labour demand, housing markets and the drought in regional Australia
This report examines whether drought affected areas have higher rates of residential mobility out of these areas
-
Media release Apr 2014
More support needed for sexual assault victims navigating the courts
Educating legal professionals about the dynamics of sexual assault and recent criminal justice reforms would help victim/survivors of sexual assault navigate the court system, according to a research study released today by the Australian Institute of Family Studies.
-
Media release May 2019
More young adults living at home with their parents
More young people especially those in capital cities are choosing to stay at home and live with their parents in their early adulthood, according to the Australian Institute of Family Studies.