I can be in a safe place,” she told me as we drank sweet-potato lattes at a campus café. The most important thing, in her view, is the absence of men. “Always, when I use the word ‘safe place,’ it means the place for women.”
Financial abuse left me homeless and sleeping in my car
I had a successful career as a chef and never had trouble finding a job or a place to live. Stepping over homeless people to and from work, a hatted restaurant in Sydney, was my first introduction to homelessness but there’s so much more to it than meets the eye…
Three Women Share The Horrifying Reality of Living Homeless In Australia
“No-one chooses to be homeless, I can tell you that.” – by Michael Crooks (published by Marie Claire). Today, there are 49,000 women who are homeless across the nation, with no means or assistance to have a home of their own. Michael Crooks speaks to three...The continuing problem of mis-identification for family violence victim-survivors
The continuing problem of mis-identification for family violence victim-survivors (An excerpt from Monash University) The misidentification of family violence victim-survivors as perpetrators – or “predominant aggressors” – has been a topical issue over the past two...Thank you Allianz
Australians unaware that perpetrators of family and domestic violence can use insurance policies to cause further harm
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