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Every day, thousands of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples across Australia wake up behind the bars of the country s prisons. Children live out their childhood in juvenile detention centres, hundreds of kilometres away from their family. Families continue to fight for justice and accountability for the deaths of their once imprisoned relatives, while the calls for solutions which empower Indigenous Australians to drive the change needed get louder. Told by First Nations people; experts, academics and those impacted by the justice system, documentary Incarceration Nation lays bare the story of the continued systemic injustice and inequality experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples on their own land. ....
This New Short Film Details The Horrors Of Indigenous Displacement pedestrian.tv - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pedestrian.tv Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
– WHO Magazine “Powerfully peels back the insidious nature of domestic violence. A timely look at an issue ravaging the nation.” – The West Australian “An eye-opening series on the horrors of domestic abuse and coercive control. See What You Made Me Do should be compulsory viewing if we are to have any chance of eradicating this insidious and pervasive disease hiding in plain sight.” – The Daily Telegraph On average, one woman a week is killed by a current or former partner in Australia and most Australians who experience domestic abuse will never report it and their abusers will never be called to account . ....
May 5th, 2021 By David Knox Make a commentFiled under: Programming, NITV will screen a discussion on family violence, We Say No More, next week. A panel of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander experts in family violence seek to educate the broader community on the current situation faced by First Nations peoples. The panel helps address behaviour and how to actively become a part of the solution. Filmed at the Brisbane Powerhouse Museum with five panellists and a studio audience, journalist, artistic director and Bundjalung woman, Rhoda Roberts, will host the discussion. Directly after the second episode of See What You Made Me Do, NITV will air this standalone response program where panellists unpack how domestic abuse impacts Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women. ....
May is Domestic and Family Violence Prevention Month, and SBS is supporting this initiative with a range of programs and content to help raise awareness and find solutions to the domestic abuse epidemic. Here is what to watch and when, as well as what learning resources you can find at SBS Learn. ‘See What You Made Me Do’ confronts our domestic abuse crisis Investigative journalist Jess Hill hosts this landmark three-part series, during Domestic and Family Violence Prevention Month. Premieres Wednesday 5 May on SBS, NITV and SBS On Demand. Monday 3 and 10 May – Living Black (NITV) NITV’s Living Black, hosted by Karla Grant, will broadcast an in-conversation with Linda Burney MP at 8:30pm on Monday 3 May. As a survivor of domestic abuse, she will talk about her own experience, and her views on the need for legislation on coercive control. Then on the following Monday, 10 May, at 8:30pm, ....