logo
One in three Australian men say they have committed intimate partner violence, world-first research finds

One in three Australian men say they have committed intimate partner violence, world-first research finds

The Guardian02-06-2025
One in three Australian men has reported committing domestic violence, world-first research has found – and the same research has identified new ways to tackle it.
The Australian Institute of Family Studies found fostering affectionate relationships between sons and fathers (or father figures) was associated with reducing the risk of intimate partner violence (IPV) by as much as 48%.
The AIFS Ten To Men Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health is the largest of its kind. It started tracking about 16,000 boys and men in 2013-14, and in 2023-24 added another 10,000 men to the database.
Having good social supports is another protective factor, according to the AIFS report based on the study's robust data up to 2022. Men who reported high levels of social support all the time in 2013-14 were 26% less likely to report committing IPV by 2022.
Mental health issues such as depression can increase the incidence of violence. Men with moderate or severe depressive symptoms in 2013-14 were 62% more likely to report committing IPV by 2022, while those with mild depressive symptoms were 32% more likely. Those who had experienced suicidal thoughts, plans or attempts were 47% more likely.
The report said it was 'essential to acknowledge that only a minority of men experiencing depressive symptoms will later use [IPV]'.
Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email
Ten to Men respondents were surveyed about 'their use of, and experience of' IPV, and invited to provide yes/no answers to questions including:
Have you ever behaved in a manner that has made a partner feel frightened or anxious? (emotional-type abuse)
Have you ever hit, slapped, kicked or otherwise physically hurt a partner when you were angry? (physical violence)
Among respondents by 2022, 32% reported committing emotional abuse, while about 9% reported physically abusing their partner.
By 2022, about 25% of men had committed and experienced IPV, compared with 10% reporting only committing it.
The study focused on mental health and social and familial support as factors in IPV, and did not look at other known factors – for example, masculine norms and alcohol and drug use were noted as 'important' but not within the study's scope. While the report noted Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men have been identified as a priority group within the National Men's Health Strategy 2020–2030, they were not analysed as a separate group in the report, because of small sample sizes.
Ten to Men program lead Dr Sean Martin said focusing on men's mental health was good in itself, but he said the research also suggested a broader benefit for their families and communities.
He said, overall, a 'really complex mix of factors' influenced the chances someone would become a perpetrator. 'It really is this Gordian knot of individual relationships, society, cultural, and attitudinal factors,' he said.
He said the study aimed for 'a detailed look at some key factors', as well as providing estimates.
'For us, that was things like mental health and suicide.
'It was also protective factors: we were particularly looking at social connection and paternal affection, because a lot of previous work has been on parental affection but that usually meant maternal.'
Micaela Cronin, Australia's domestic, family and sexual violence commissioner, said the findings should help inform evidence-based policies.
'If we are going to end gender-based violence we need to understand more about pathways in to violence, what are protective factors, and what are pathways out,' she said.
Cronin said it was 'powerful' to see the results about 'affectionate, close relationships with fathers and father figures' and young boys.
'But we need to unpack that and understand it more,' she said.
'What are the elements of it that really lead to strong role models?'
In 2013-14, about one in four men aged 18 to 57 (24%) in the study had reported committing a form of IPV, according to the report. By 2022, that had risen to one in three. When that data is extrapolated to Australia's population, it suggests each year, on average, about 120,000 men are committing IPV for the first time.
AIFS director, Liz Neville, said that showed clearly the 'devastating consequences' of delays in effective interventions.
'Each act of violence harms individuals, families and communities. We hope these disturbing numbers provide the impetus for further action by governments at all levels, underpinned by evidence,' she said.
The federal government pledged in 2022 to end family and domestic violence in one generation.
Australia's National Plan to End Violence against Women and Children 2022–2032 has been criticised by some people for its emphasis on gender equality as a primary prevention method, over intervention on specific risk factors.
After an uptick in alleged intimate partner homicide, the government convened a panel of experts last year to do a 'rapid review' of prevention approaches. In response to that, and a review of legal assistance, Anthony Albanese announced a $4.7bn, five-year plan to deal with what he has called the 'national crisis' in domestic violence.
The new social services minister, Tanya Plibersek, said the AIFS findings were 'concerning, but sadly not surprising'.
'It's critical that we look at the factors that might lead to violence so we can make sure we're funding programs that stop it at the start,' Plibersek said.
'To end domestic and family violence we need to invest in the frontline services that help people and keep them safe, but we also need to stop the behaviours that lead to it.'
The study's findings will be used in briefings to governments and policymakers.
'I will be raising it in every forum I can to ensure attention is paid to it,' Cronin said.
Martin said there were 'a lot of things we can do now', but he said also that 'the broader cultural shifts will take time'.
In Australia, support is available at Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, Lifeline on 13 11 14, and at MensLine on 1300 789 978. The national family violence counselling service is on 1800 737 732.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Denise Richards files to vacate Aaron Phypers and family from Calabasas home ahead of eviction
Denise Richards files to vacate Aaron Phypers and family from Calabasas home ahead of eviction

Daily Mail​

time25 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Denise Richards files to vacate Aaron Phypers and family from Calabasas home ahead of eviction

Denise Richards filed to vacate her estranged second husband Aaron Phypers and his family from their leased Calabasas home after she nearly violated her own 100-yard, temporary domestic violence restraining order with an unannounced visit to the property on August 3. In her legal filing Tuesday, the 54-year-old former Bond Girl asked the judge to order the unemployed 52-year-old, his 83-year-old mother, father, and brother out of the home for eight hours so she can retrieve her dogs and belongings. 'I left many of my personal items and my late mother's items at the house based on Aaron telling me that his family would be moving back to Canada and we would be moving back into the [property],' Denise alleged in docs obtained by People. 'If I am not able to [retrieve] my dogs and belongings, I believe my dogs will be harmed and my property destroyed or discarded during the eviction process.' Richards' urgency was partly due to Aaron euthanizing one of their dogs because she had cancer. The RHOBH alum was 'shocked at the condition of the home' having moved out of the 'severely damaged' abode over two years ago, and she stopped paying rent last December. The landlord - who's made several attempts to contact Phypers (born Cameron) over unpaid rent - informed Denise on July 24 that eviction proceedings would begin on August 23. The Canadian-American ex-CEO was home on August 3 when Richards attempted to gain access to the side and back doors of the house and allegedly 'screamed' at his family, and when she attempted to leave they called the Lost Hills Sheriff's Department who did not find 'any evidence that a crime occurred.' In the March 4th premiere of Denise Richards and Her Wild Things, the Illinois-born beauty said of the property: 'I don't live in our house. Aaron's mom and dad and his were gonna stay for a few months [but] it's been over three years.' Denise moved to a townhouse inside a Calabasas living community where rent typically costs between $5,700 to $6,700/month - according to The US Sun. 'And then I rented another one and another one, so I have three of them,' Richards explained on her Bravo reality show. 'One's an office, one's a studio, one's for [my daughters] Lola and Eloise and for us to sleep in, and then when Aaron and I want privacy, then we sleep in the studio, so we're all over the f***ing place.' The next hearing for the temporary restraining order is scheduled for September 8 at the Superior Court of California, and Aaron has denied all her allegations of domestic abuse and laptop stealing. Phypers - who has 'no income' - filed for divorce from Richards on July 7 after six years of marriage and requested spousal support of around $105K/month. The Return to Wickensburg actress wants the USC grad to pay her legal expenses and any expenses related to the alleged abuse, and she requested that he attend a 52-week batterer intervention program. Phypers was home on August 3 when Richards attempted to gain access to the side and back doors of the house and allegedly 'screamed' at his family, and when she attempted to leave they called the Lost Hills Sheriff's Department who did not find 'any evidence that a crime occurred' (pictured May 17) The ex-couple originally began dating in December 2017 before Aaron's divorce from Desperate Housewives alum Nicollette Sheridan was finalized in 2018. Acting-wise, Denise will next portray Emily Sims in Juan Pablo Arias Munoz's teen horror flick What She Doesn't Know, which has its world premiere this Friday during FrightFest London. Richards is scheduled to attend a Starship Troopers reunion with co-stars Patrick Muldoon, Casper Van Dien, Dina Meyer, Michael Ironside and Jake Busey on September 27-28 at LA Comic Con, which will be held inside the LA Convention Center. And on August 2, the Riff Raff executive producer filmed scenes for The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills at Madre in West Hollywood with Sutton Stracke and Erika Jayne.

Australian banking regulator warns geopolitical tensions could lead to more cyber attacks
Australian banking regulator warns geopolitical tensions could lead to more cyber attacks

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Australian banking regulator warns geopolitical tensions could lead to more cyber attacks

SYDNEY, Aug 21 (Reuters) - Australia's prudential regulator has cautioned that the country's banking system is facing increasing risk of cyberattacks as a result of escalating geopolitical tensions. Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) chair John Lonsdale said the regulator would increase its work with the country's banks in the year ahead to combat the potential for more cyberattacks. APRA, in an annual report, did not identify countries it believed could be behind the cyberattacks. "Operational systems in financial institutions are increasingly vulnerable to technology outages and malicious cyber-attacks," Lonsdale said in the report. "The risk environment for cyberattacks could worsen further in the context of escalating geopolitical tensions." APRA said the growing use of artificial intelligence was also an emerging risk the banking sector faced. A report released by National Australia Bank last year found more than two-thirds of Australians had been affected by a cyberattack or data breach. APRA established its first geopolitical risk team in 2024 to identify potential threats to the country's banking system.

Tragic development after a body of a newborn baby was found in a stormwater drain in Alexander Heights, Perth
Tragic development after a body of a newborn baby was found in a stormwater drain in Alexander Heights, Perth

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tragic development after a body of a newborn baby was found in a stormwater drain in Alexander Heights, Perth

A woman has come forward two days after a baby boy was found dead in a stormwater drain. Tradesmen made the grim discovery while cleaning a drain on La Salle Road in the Perth suburb of Alexander Heights on Monday afternoon. Detectives believe the newborn, wrapped in a sheet, had been placed in the drain several days earlier, sparking an urgent search for the baby's mother amid 'serious concerns' for her welfare. Police confirmed on Wednesday night that a woman aged in her 30s was assisting with inquiries. 'The Western Australia Police Force would like to thank the community for their concern, support and assistance,' the statement read. 'Given the sensitivities, we will be making no further comment at this time.' The woman is receiving appropriate care and support. 'The care of the mother should be all of our priorities at the moment,' WA Police Commissioner Col Blanch told ABC Radio earlier in the day. 'There's probably a range of reasons (she hadn't come forward), including legal, but health reasons, mental health reasons, all sorts of reasons why that mother needs the best care we can give them, and I think that's got to be everyone's priority right now.' The tradesmen were clearing the drains of debris and assessing for blockages when they came across the the grim discovery. 'It was by coincidence that they were there,' Detective Senior Sergeant Cleal said. 'There was no information that sent workers to that drain. This was a chance discovery. 'Not that you can prepare for a discovery like this, but they were very unprepared.' The tragedy has shocked locals, who have placed tributes near the scene and will hold a candlelight vigil at Highview Park on Saturday night. 'Having to physically be in the area where a poor innocent infant is just heartbreaking,' one woman told Seven News. WA Premier Roger Cook added: 'This is a horrifying, horrifying scenario, from the mother of this child through to the discovery of this child's body by those drain workers. 'I cannot think of a more harrowing set of circumstances for people to be confronted with. 'This goes to the heart of everyone's sense of humanity, a small child whose life has passed under tragic circumstances.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store