Indigenous LGBTIQSB + People’s Experiences of Family Violence in Australia

Author:

Soldatic KarenORCID,Sullivan Corrinne T.ORCID,Briskman LindaORCID,Leha John,Trewlynn William,Spurway KimORCID

Abstract

Abstract Purpose This article uses an Indigenous concept of family violence as a frame to interrogate interviews held with Indigenous LGBTIQSB + people in Australia. The article reorients family violence away from Western heteronormative framings and aims to contribute towards a new conversation about family violence. Methods A qualitative thematic analysis was used to analyse 16 interviews with Indigenous LGBTIQSB + people in the state of New South Wales, Australia. This is one of a series of articles that provide preliminary findings from a research project into the social and emotional wellbeing of Indigenous LGBTIQSB + young people living in New South Wales. Results The interviews highlight the complex impact family violence on Indigenous LGBTIQSB + youth. The article shows differences in reactions between family and community in urban settings with those experienced in rural settings highlighting intergenerational differences, with older family members such as grandparents, more likely to exhibit negative reactions and behaviours. These experiences are interconnected as many young people were living in urban areas while extended family often lived in rural or remote communities. Conclusions The findings of this study demonstrate the intersectional nature of family violence highlighting the fact that Indigenous LGBTIQSB + young people are integral parts of extended kinship networks, families and communities and are deeply impacted by any acts of family violence. The study’s findings also support current research into family and community violence for LGBTIQ + people that shows the differential behaviours and actions of rural and urban families as well as the different reactions between generations within families.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Western Sydney University

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology

Reference47 articles.

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3. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (AIHW). (2015). The health and welfare of Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples 2015. Canberra, Australia: AIHW.

4. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (AIHW). (2019). Family, domestic, and sexual violence in Australia: Continuing the national story 2019. Canberra, Australia: AIHW.

5. Bayliss, T. A. (2015). Introduction: Looking into the mirror. In Hodge, D. (Ed.) (2015). Colouring the rainbow: Blak, Queer and Trans perspectives, Stories and essays by First Nations People of Australia (pp. 1–15.). Mile End, Australia: Wakefield Press.

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