Fr. 168.00

Decolonising Family Violence Legal Intervention Orders in African-Australian Communities

English · Hardback

Will be released 01.08.2025

Description

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This book presents an intersectional, decolonial analysis of family violence intervention/prevention within the African-Australians Communities in Victoria, Australia. It explores the experiences of Family Violence Intervention Orders (FVIOs), assessing their effectiveness as interventions and safeguards against family violence in the African-Australian Communities. It investigates the influence of African-Australians cultural practices on the understanding and application of FVIOs, as well as participants' proposed strategies for enhancing or aligning these legal interventions with existing African practices for preventing and managing family violence. The application of this intersectional approach plays a pivotal role in illuminating complexities of social history, culture, and identity that intersect with, and extend beyond, gender. This includes experiences of social conflict, migration, exclusion, and hardship. These factors complicated their experiences of family violence and added layers of intricacy when navigating the Australian legal system to seek legal protection through family violence intervention orders. The book documents these complexities in intersecting experiences of family violence, the cultural specificities of the Australian legal system's interventions in family matters, intervention orders, and the involvement of various services. It shows how the implementation of the FVIOs with little consideration for social and cultural context diminishes their effectiveness as tools to combat family violence and enhance safety within the African-Australian communities. This book speaks to family violence scholars and practitioners and to those interested in multicultural and migration studies and intersectional and decolonial methods more broadly.

List of contents

Chapter 1: Introduction.-  Chapter 2: A decolonial approach for people with experiences of colonisation and colonial violence history.- Chapter 3: Family violence legal interventions at the intersection of african cultural practices, intervention and prevention.- Chapter 4: African australian community understandings of family violence.- Chapter 5: African customary law and family violence.- Chapter 6: Australian family law and family violence protection.- Chapter 7: African australian victim s experiences of family violence: fear of police.- Chapter 8: Experiences of African austrlian applicants and respondents of family violence intervention orders.- Chapter 9: We need more than a piece of paper : participants proposed strategies for family violence intervention/prevention.- chapter 10: conclusion.

About the author

Akuch Kuol Anyieth is a scholar in crime, justice, and legal studies. With over a decade of expertise spanning social and criminal justice, academia, policy, and advocacy, Dr Anyieth has made significant contributions to these fields. She holds a Bachelor of Legal Studies from La Trobe University, a Master of Justice and Criminology from RMIT University, a second master's degree in family violence research, and a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Law and Society from La Trobe University. Additionally, she is a qualified Trauma-Informed Coach and has completed year-long governance and political training at The University of Melbourne. Akuch's impactful work has earned her several accolades in Australia and South Sudan. Notably, her book Unknown: A Refugee’s Story was shortlisted for the Australian National Biography Award in 2023.

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