Th’ abuse of greatness is when
it disjoins
Remorse from power.
Julius Caesar Act 2, Scene 1
The National Agreement on Closing the gap sets out 17
targets and four priority reforms. Target 13 relates to domestic and family
violence (link
here).
Target 13 is specified as follows:
By 2031, the rate of all forms
of family violence and abuse against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
women and children is reduced at least by 50%, as progress towards zero.
The following text is taken from the Productivity
Commission dashboard:
Nationally in 2018-19, 8.4% of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females aged 15 years and over
experienced domestic physical or face-to-face threatened physical harm (figure
CtG13.1). There is no new data since the baseline year of 2018-19.
The national data point of 8.4% incorporates varying
jurisdictional data points rangeing from 10% in NSW to 6.4% in Qld.
If we unpack the specification of the target, it becomes
clear just how meaningless it is. The benchmark data have not been updated for
six years. More problematically, the AIWH (link
here) cites research from 2011 that found that ‘around 90% of violence
against First Nations women and most cases of sexual abuse of First Nations
children are undisclosed’. [Willis M (2011) ‘Non-disclosure
of violence in Australian Indigenous communities’ Trends & issues in
crime and criminal justice no. 405, AIC]. Moreover, multiple instances of
family violence against an individual are recorded as equivalent to one instance
and thus embed the potential for systemic undercounting into the target
specification.
The PC Closing the Gap dashboard section on Target
specifications for Target 13 notes, inter alia:
Experiences of harm are likely
to be under‑reported.
Due to the sensitive nature of the questions, responses were not compulsory,
and a person may have chosen not to answer some or any of the questions.
The physical and threatened
physical harm data collected in the 2018–19 NATSIHS is not comparable to other
ABS data sources collecting similar data, including data from: the National
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey; the General Social Survey;
the Personal Safety Survey; or, Recorded Crime – Victims.
And also, in relation to Future Reporting:
Future reporting will seek to
include the following additional disaggregations: remoteness areas and other
small geographic areas (where available); disability status; gender; age; and Indigenous
status.
Yet there appears to be no progress whatsoever in measuring
the target trajectory, let alone updated disaggregation. Importantly, the PC
dashboard also notes that comparable data on non‑Indigenous
people is currently not available. Given
that the problems with the target specification mean that the benchmark data
points are essentially meaningless, this is perhaps not surprising.
The FDSV Summary on the AIHW website (updated July 2025) reports
(link
here) the following data on mainstream domestic and family violence:
Results from the 2021–22 PSS
showed that an estimated 3.8 million Australian adults (20% of the population)
reported experiencing physical and/or sexual family and domestic violence since
the age of 15. It is estimated that of all Australian adults:
·
11.3% (2.2 million) had experienced
violence from a partner (current or previous cohabiting)
·
5.9% (1.1 million) had experienced
violence from a boyfriend, girlfriend or date
·
7.0% (1.4 million) had experienced
violence from another family member (ABS 2023c).
Clearly this is substantial issue across all demographic
segments of Australian society. The AIHW notes (link
here) that:
Comparable national data are
not available to compare the prevalence of FDV among different population
groups.
This may be a deliberate policy by ABS and AIHW to avoid
the potential misuse of such data to typecast and/or demonise ethnic groups in
Australia. It does mean however that the fundamental conceptual basis of
‘closing the gap’, namely decreasing the variation in rates of domestic
violence between mainstream population and First Nations populations cannot be
applied to the issue of domestic violence.
There is a strong sense from the AIWH and ABS discussion of
family violence that the rate of Indigenous family violence is higher than the
rate in the mainstream. Yet there is no direct data available. One way to get a
better sense of this is to consider national homicide rates. Intuitively,
homicide rates are a function of numerous factors, but one of the obvious
factors would be rates of family violence. Thus, by looking at the extreme
outcomes of family violence, we can get a sense of the comparative significance
of family violence within Indigenous and non-Indigenous contexts.
The Australian Institute of Criminology report Homicide
in Australia 2023–24: Statistical Report 53 (link
here) reports 55 intimate partner homicides nationally of which 46 were
women (page 11) in 2023-24. The following extracts have been selected to shine more
light on the potential significance for comparative rates of family violence,
and bold text added for emphasis. The authors note (page 11):
The [national] female intimate
partner homicide rate in 2023–24 was 0.43 per 100,000
female population aged 18 years and over. This is a marked increase from the
rate of 0.32 per 100,000 recorded in 2022–23 and the second highest rate of
female intimate partner homicide in the last 10 years.
In terms of geographic location, they note (page 14):
Excluding Western Australia,
the homicide rate for incidents in regional and remote areas exceeded
the national incident rate for 2023–24 (1.08 and 3.51 per 100,000
respectively vs 0.98 per 100,000), while the rate of incidents in major cities
was lower than the national rate (0.77 per 100,000) [emphasis
added].
In terms of Indigenous status (page 20):
Of the 277 homicide victims in
2023–24, 44 (16%) were Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and 226
(82%) were non-Indigenous (see Table 13) ….. Between 1989–90 and 2023–24, 14
percent (n=1,407) of homicide victims were Indigenous and 85 percent (n=8,637)
were non-Indigenous
In relation to Indigenous victims (page
24):
The homicide victimisation
rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in 2023–24 was 4.31 per
100,000 relevant population (see Table 17), a decrease from the rate of
5.36 per 100,000 recorded in 2022–23.
On page 26:
Around two-thirds of
Indigenous female victims from cleared incidents were killed by an intimate
partner (64%, n=9; see Table 20), almost double the proportion of Indigenous
women killed by an intimate partner in 2022–23 (38%, n=5). Between
1989–90 and 2023–24, over two‑thirds of Indigenous women victims of homicide
were killed by a current or former intimate partner (69%, n=337). In 2023–24, Indigenous
women experienced an intimate partner homicide victimisation rate seven times
greater than the rate for all Australian women (2.84 per 100,000 relevant
population vs 0.43 per 100,000 respectively).
In relation to non-Indigenous victims (page 27), the
authors note:
The homicide victimisation
rate of non-Indigenous Australians was 0.88 per 100,000 (see Table 22), an
increase from the rate of 0.74 per 100,000 recorded in 2022–23.
In relation to offenders, the
authors note inter alia:
The Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander homicide offender rate in 2023–24 was 6.87 per 100,000 relevant
population). Males comprised 78 percent of Indigenous homicide offenders (n=43)
with an offender rate of 10.80 per 100,000. A fifth of Indigenous offenders
were female (22%, n=12) with an offender rate of 2.99 per 100,000 (page 37).
Two-thirds of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander [primary homicide offenders] … and
46 percent… of non‑Indigenous primary homicide offenders (excluding New South
Wales) had a known history of domestic and family violence (page 44).
The AIC evidence that Indigenous female homicides occur at
much higher rate than in the mainstream is consistent with the hypothesis that
there is a very strong correlation between prior domestic violence and later
homicides. While every homicide is a tragedy, my purpose here is to focus on
family violence and the strong suggestions that it occurs as much higher rates
within Indigenous households than mainstream households. The gap exists; we
just do not know its depth and width.
Given that the current Closing the Gap target 13 is
both only intermittently measurable, likely to be grossly under-reported, and deeply
flawed conceptually, there is an
overwhelming case for the parties to the National Agreement on Closing the Gap
to revise it into a form that both reflects the lived reality of Indigenous
people’s lives and which allows progress or regression to be measured so that the
results of government efforts to reduce the enormous adverse impact of family
violence on Indigenous women and children will be transparent.
Last week, the Australian Government’s Domestic, Family and
Sexual Violence Commission handed down its Yearly Report to Parliament (link here). The report
includes a number of recommendations relevant to First Nations (Recommendations
11, 12, 15, 1617 and 18). The report identifies the data shortcomings related
to Closing the Gap target 13 but doesn’t criticise its inherent limitations as
a policy target. It mentions some extraordinary statistics, for example, that
in 2023-24, Indigenous women were 27 times more likely to be hospitalised for
family violence than non-Indigenous women (page 33). Yet despite a detailed
account of the issues confronting Indigenous families (pages 78 to 89), its
recommendations were bound up in process: the establishment of more advisory
bodies, more funding, and commitments to work with organisations implementing
various action plans and the like. In short, more of the same.
While the DFSV Commission is clearly well-intentioned, there
was no cut through policy agenda proposed despite the discussion appearing in a
section headlined Priority Areas for Action. There was minimal
discussion of the role of alcohol and drugs in creating the preconditions for
family violence to occur, and no discussion of the desirability of constraining
access to alcohol across the community at large. To be clear, I am not
suggesting that alcohol use is the only cause of family violence, but it
clearly of such importance that reducing and /or constraining access to it is a
necessary if not sufficient policy action in addressing the epidemic of family violence
in remote Australia, and probably beyond. If the argument for doing so requires
further strengthening, then its complicity in contributing to Indigenous hyper-incarceration
(link
here) provides a rationale in its own right for taking action.
I discussed the systemic underpinnings of the domestic
violence crisis in remote Australia in an earlier post this year (link
here). That post argued that the domestic violence crisis in the NT is a
symptom of a wider crisis, and that alcohol is a key element of that. In an
even earlier post from 2023 discussing the withdrawal of alcohol controls following the lapse of the Commonwealth
Stronger Future legislation (link
here), I pointed to the clear statistical links between alcohol and
domestic violence:
To take just one
data point, alcohol related domestic violence assault offences spiked in Alice
Springs, Katherine, and outside major centres in the 12 months to March 2023 (link
here). The only location where there was a decline in these offences was in
Darwin. Across the NT, there were almost 1000 extra reported assault offences
over the year coinciding with the nine months of reduced [alcohol] restrictions.
With the majority of NT electorates in the Darwin region, it is not difficult
to develop a hypothesis for why the NT Government may have been intent on
removing alcohol restrictions in the bush. In the light of the issues outlined
above, the unqualified confidence of the Committee (set out in para. 3.66) in
the capacity and political willingness of the NTG to manage alcohol related
harm astounds me. [note: the hyperlink above is to a
web page that has been updated since 2023]
While alcohol is likely a key driver of the high rates of
domestic violence across remote Australia (and possible more broadly) it may
not be the only driver. Nevertheless, I suggest that in the absence of greater
controls, domestic violence and other social dysfunction will continue
unabated, and in turn this will open the flood gates for more punitive social
and economic policies.
The deeper problem of course is that governments are adept
at creating policy silos, commissions, action plans and advisory committees
that provide a defensive fig leaf against criticism when some egregious event
hits the headlines but are content to do nothing to address systemic issues
facing the most disadvantaged members of the Australian community. The fact
that we allow governments to pursue these fake strategies without holding them
to account makes all of us complicit in creating and sustaining the existence
of the conditions that engender violence against women and children.
Summing up, I see two specific policy
opportunities which would make a tangible and substantive
positive impact on the family violence crisis engulfing remote communities (and
likely on communities beyond remote Australia). First, revise and reframe
Target 13 in the Closing the Gap policy framework to replace the current unworkable
and deeply flawed target with a target that is measurable and reflects the real
world. Second, initiate a comprehensive policy shift based on the policy
approaches recommended by experts and the World Health Organisation (WHO) to
constrain and reduce unfettered access to alcohol in communities and regional
towns (and ideally major cities). The adverse health impacts of alcohol use are
well known, and the WHO now advises (link here):
There is no form of alcohol
consumption that is risk-free. Even low levels of alcohol consumption carry
some risks and can cause harm.
While the politics of controlling access to alcohol induced
harm, and the consequential impacts such as family violence, are challenging,
the objective case for doing so requires governments to take action even
without considering the wider individual and societal costs of dealing with the
fallout. These wider costs include the adverse impacts on the life opportunities
of children born into families affected by alcohol abuse, family violence and
whose parents are incarcerated, and the economic costs for taxpayers of
excessive hospitalisations, and avoidable incarceration. Finally, what does it
say about us as a nation when we can adopt without apparent remorse policies
that create so much pain and harm. That truly is an abuse of our democratic
power.
6 November 2025