New program launched to tackle family violence in diverse communities

family violence

The program is based on eight years of successful work by AMES Australia in building capacity within Victorian migrant and refugee communities to prevent family violence.

The new national program ‘Many Voices One Future: A Multicultural Approach to Preventing Family Violence’ comes after an independent review of AMES’ work by consultants Myriad Global found the program was a ‘significant community-driven model of primary prevention that can set a new benchmark for equity and inclusion in violence prevention’.

AMES is investing $350,000 a year in the new national program that will roll out across the country, beginning in South Australia.

The program will embed AMES’ existing model in the heart of settlement, education and community life for newly arrived migrants and refugees. It will expand AMES’ community-led model, combining evidence-based pedagogy with deep cultural insights. The model equips community leaders with the knowledge and resources to become advocates within their communities.

Participants of the program will engage in leadership courses tailored to their needs, ranging from 12-week intensive programs to targeted masterclasses aimed at fostering leadership development, critical discussion, self-reflection and a sense of community responsibility.

Launching the program, Assistant Minister for the Prevention of Family Violence Ged Kearney said it was a step forward in filling the gap in violence prevention.

“The program is very much part of what’s needed to tackle the problem of family violence. It is grassroots, community-based, and it encourages people to be change agents,” Kearney said.

Cath Scarth, who recently concluded her role as AMES CEO, said the ‘Many Voices One Future’ program was an important preventative measure.

“It is like building a fence at the top of a cliff to prevent an ambulance from being required at the bottom of the cliff,” Scarth said. “While tertiary services are important, it makes sense to promote preventative programs so that violence doesn’t happen in the first place.”

Scarth said the program would be delivered in trusted environments such as English classes and community spaces. It would be co-designed by participants and create grassroots leadership and community ownership. It would be adaptable to diverse local contexts and responsive to intersectional needs, such as language, faith, migration stress, gender roles or experience of discrimination.

The program also aims to build national workforce capacity by building pathways for participants from diverse communities into the family and sexual violence sector. It includes in-language delivery in mixed-gender cohort settings and is characterised by peer-led storytelling and trauma-informed facilitation.

Maria Dimopoulos, Myriad Global consultant and newly appointed Settlement Council of Australia chair, said the newly launched program was ‘a moment that really matters’.

“It is a nationally significant, community-driven model that reaches people in the early stages of settlement,” Dimopoulos said. “It’s a model that has equity and inclusion at its very core, and it’s proven to work. This program creates champions who go to transform conversations, challenge harmful norms and lead change in places that mainstream campaigns simply don’t reach.”

Manal Shebab, AMES family violence program graduate, said the program had equipped her to start her own not-for-profit organisation working in family violence in her community.

“The training gave me a deep understanding of the complexities and nuances surrounding family violence, particularly in the intersection of culture and faith. It also gave me the confidence to start my own not-for-profit organisation, Sisters4Sisters, in 2018,” Shebab said.

Since Sisters4Sisters’ inception, Shebab has been an unapologetic advocate for change, challenging rigid ideologies, running awareness and prevention campaigns, and creatively partnering with libraries, neighbourhood houses and Islamic societies.

“We saw a gap in resources addressing how to work with faith leaders, across all faiths, so we created a toolkit on preventing and addressing family violence,” Shebab explained. “The AMES program has really enriched my world and practice, where I can go out and advocate and see a rippling effect because of the program.”

Shebbab added that it was important to tailor programs specifically for diverse communities because every community has different beliefs and practices as well as varying experiences and understandings of gender roles and family structures. Some of those can be harmful and lead to family violence.

Fellow graduate Arun Thomas said the program had challenged him in the best way possible.

“I learned that violence doesn’t begin with physical harm. It begins with gender inequality, disrespect, silence and unchecked power,” Thomas said. “Leadership is not just about what you say; it’s what you’re willing to question and do. As a nurse and migrant, I’ve worked in homes, hospitals and humanitarian settings. I thought I understood care. But this experience taught me that care without courage is incomplete.”

Thomas was deeply moved by the stories shared: stories of resilience, strength and systems that still fail too many women. His commitment moving forward is that he will stop assuming intent is enough.

“I will start using every space I’m in – clinical, board, corporate, community – to question inequality and amplify underrepresented voices,” he said.

Recent research by the University of Wollongong found that around a third of refugee women in Australia had experienced domestic and family violence, and many face multiple barriers in seeking help. These barriers include fear of retribution, concerns about the consequences of disclosure, not wanting to break up the family and economic insecurity.

Refugee and migrant women face additional challenges, such as language barriers, lack of knowledge about Australian laws and services, visa insecurity and complex relationships with communities, the research found.

Read also: New program aims to paint a national picture of domestic violence support needs

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Geraldine is currently the Content Producer for Third Sector, an Akolade channel. Throughout her career, she has written for various industries and international audiences. Her love for writing extends beyond the corporate world, as she also works as a volunteer writer at her local church. Aside from writing, she is also fond of joining fun runs and watching musicals.

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