Are You Safe At Home? Day 2023
Join us on 10 May – Are You Safe at Home? Day, for a conversation exploring the crucial role colleagues and workplaces play in recognising
Join us on 10 May – Are You Safe at Home? Day, for a conversation exploring the crucial role colleagues and workplaces play in recognising
On Wednesday 3rd May 2023, people across Australia will light a candle to remember those who have been killed by domestic and family violence. By
Support and Service Directory Survey
Calling for participants for focus group discussion! Are you LGBTIQA+, aged 18+, and have experienced intimate partner violence (IPV), or supported as LGBTIQA+ person who has? Curtin researchers
Support and Service Directory Survey In 2021, the Centre for Women’s Safety and Wellbeing (CWSW) received a grant from the Department of Communities to develop
A discussion paper for the Safe Places Emergency Accommodation Program Inclusion Round (the Inclusion Round) is now open for comment. The Department of Social Services
The Law Reform Commission of Western Australia (LRCWA) is currently reviewing issues related to sexual offences within the Criminal Code Compilation Act 1913. The LRCWA
The genesis of “Safe at Home” principles, policies and programs came out of a recognition that it is fundamentally inequitable and an injustice for women
Consultation for Australia’s first Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Action Plan to End Violence against Women and Children is now open. The Action Plan will
From the data on violence against women, we know how many women and children are being killed. We know that women and children are living
The Centre for Women’s Safety and Wellbeing acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians and first peoples of Australia. We recognise the impacts of colonisation and dispossession and the contemporary disadvantage experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The Centre for Women’s Safety and Wellbeing is committed to working alongside Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and men to end violence against their women and children in Western Australia.
The Centre for Women’s Safety and Wellbeing acknowledges the strength and resilience of adults, children and young people who have experienced family and domestic violence. We pay respects to those who did not survive and acknowledge the families, friends and communities who have lost loved ones to this preventable and widespread issue. We are committed to ensuring responses to family and domestic violence are informed by lived experience.
The Centre for Women’s Safety and Wellbeing recognises, welcomes and respects people of diverse gender, sex and sexuality. We are committed to greater inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer people (LGBTIQ).
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