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- W2626804921 abstract "IntroductionSocial work has historically played a key role in responding to domestic and family violence in Australia. This role includes direct service practices such as responding to the social, emotional and immediate safety needs of victims/survivors; participating in education and consciousness raising campaigns to raise awareness about the devastating impact of domestic and family violence; and engaging in movements to reform social policies that contribute to gender inequality. Social work practice in this field also includes influencing social policy to be more responsive to the needs of those experiencing and perpetrating the violence, and campaigning for social and cultural change. Feminism has strongly influenced the practice of social work in the field of domestic violence, since feminists identified their personal experiences of violence being embedded in social and political structures (Fawcett and Waugh 2008; Morley 2014: 32). The hard-fought consciousness raising feminist campaigns in the 1970s and 1980s resulted in the establishment of women's refuges, and placed policing and criminal sanctions as a response to domestic violence firmly on the social and political agenda (Murray 2002). This led to the introduction of the first standalone domestic violence legislation in Queensland, the Domestic Violence (Family Protection) Act 1989, which challenged the traditionally held views that women were the property of their husbands and established the need for governments to act in order to more effectively protect victims from further abuse (Page 2015).Since that time, neo-conservative governments have sought to de-gender and de-politicise domestic and family violence, resulting in the de-funding of feminist services and the reducing of domestic violence to a relationship problem rather than a gendered human rights abuse (Phillips 2006: 192). 'Best practice' responses are therefore widely contested and highly political and partly because of this, the helping professions, including social work, cannot necessarily claim a proud history of supporting women and children's safety and autonomy (Laing and Humphreys 2013: 2). However, critical and progressive forms of social work have always advocated a research-informed and critically reflective approach to practice that champions women's and children's rights, whilst simultaneously holding perpetrators accountable.Recent media coverage and renewed government interest in family violence prevention with related injections of funding have placed this issue at the forefront of discussion and debate, and have served to reinvigorate community responses which seek to change the societal structures implicated in producing the violence. This paper will highlight the importance of structural analytical approaches to understanding domestic and family violence, in order to review existing responses and strengthen their effectiveness. It is argued that critical reflection, which unearths and challenges dominant assumptions about gender, power and violence can foster shifts in individual and community awareness, ultimately contributing to social change.Patriarchy In Neoliberal ContextsNeoliberal contexts emphasise individual responsibility and valorise economic solutions over all other reasoning (Wallace and Pease 2011: 132). Within these contexts, structural/feminist understandings of domestic violence that explicitly link gender and power, have been displaced by understandings that cast domestic violence as a private trouble. This apportions responsibility (and blame) to individual families, and privileges individualised (and psychologised) practice responses to domestic violence (Featherstone 2004: 7; Morley and Macfarlane 2008: 31). Indeed, 'feminist backlash,' which suggests that feminist analysis has become redundant in responding to domestic violence, has been prevalent in popular culture and social media over the last two decades (Phillips 2006: 194). …" @default.
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- W2626804921 date "2016-10-01" @default.
- W2626804921 modified "2023-09-28" @default.
- W2626804921 title "Putting Gender Back on the Agenda in Domestic and Family Violence Policy and Service Responses: Using Critical Reflection to Create Cultural Change" @default.
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