4.3 Review

Counting Dead Women in Australia: An In-Depth Case Review of Femicide

Journal

JOURNAL OF FAMILY VIOLENCE
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 1-8

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10896-018-9963-6

Keywords

Femicide; Family violence; Intimate partner violence; Gender-based violence; Homicide; Women

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Gender-based fatal violence (femicide) is a preventable cause of premature death. The Counting Dead Women Australia (CDWA) campaign is a femicide census counting violent deaths of women in Australia from 2014. We conducted a cross-sectional in-depth review of CDWA cases Jan-Dec 2014 to establish evidence of antecedent factors and describe femicide in Australia. Victim (n=81) and perpetrator (n=83) data were extracted from the CDWA register, law databases and coronial reports. Mixed methods triangulation of socio-demographic and incident characteristics. Women ranged in age from 20 to 82years of age (44 +/- 15.4). There were 83 perpetrators, of which 13 were unknown (not yet apprehended). Known perpetrators (n=70) ranged in age from 16 to 72years of age (40 +/- 12.7) and 89% were male (62/70). The location of the crime was most frequently the victim's home (49/70). In cases where the relationship between the victim and perpetrator was known (n=59), over half of femicides were committed by intimate-partners (33/59). Intimate-partner perpetrators were more likely to have a history of violence and commit murder-suicide than other perpetrators. Femicide is overwhelmingly perpetrated by males, with women most vulnerable in their own home and with their intimate partners. Furthermore, intimate-partner femicide is associated with modifiable risk factors, including previous violence and mental health issues, which represents opportunities for early intervention within healthcare settings as practitioners are well-placed to identify risk and provide support. In line with recommendations for multi-sectoral approach, future research should target identification of risk and protective factors, and improved coordination of data collection.

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