Programs to improve interpersonal safety in Indigenous communities: evidence and issues
Citation
AIHW
Andrew Day, Ashlen Francisco and Robin Jones (2013) Programs to improve interpersonal safety in Indigenous communities: evidence and issues, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 04 October 2024.
APA
Andrew Day, Ashlen Francisco and Robin Jones. (2013). Programs to improve interpersonal safety in Indigenous communities: evidence and issues. Canberra: AIHW.
MLA
Andrew Day, Ashlen Francisco and Robin Jones. Programs to improve interpersonal safety in Indigenous communities: evidence and issues. AIHW, 2013.
Vancouver
Andrew Day, Ashlen Francisco and Robin Jones. Programs to improve interpersonal safety in Indigenous communities: evidence and issues. Canberra: AIHW; 2013.
Harvard
Andrew Day, Ashlen Francisco and Robin Jones 2013, Programs to improve interpersonal safety in Indigenous communities: evidence and issues, AIHW, Canberra.
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The issue of safety in Indigenous communities has generated great interest over recent years. Under the Northern Territory Emergency Response (NTER) of 2007, for example, a wide range of services and programs have been implemented that aim to reduce rates of violence, substance abuse, and child abuse and neglect and, more broadly, to promote communities in which people feel safer and in which violence will not be tolerated. This issue paper reviews the effectiveness of such programs that address community safety in either Indigenous or non-Indigenous settings. It outlines what works, what doesn't, and what further research is needed.
- ISBN: 978-1-74249-448-7
- Cat. no: IHW 98
- Pages: 29