Report 3: Understanding economic and financial abuse in across cultural contexts Gendered Violence Research Network, UNSW
Contributor(s): Gendered Violence Research Network, UNSW.
Material type: BookPublisher: Sydney, NSW : UNSW; Commonwealth Bank, 2021Description: electronic document (51 pages); PDF file.Subject(s): DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | ECONOMIC ABUSE | ETHNIC COMMUNITIES | FINANCIAL ABUSE | IMMIGRATION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | MIGRANTS | INTERNATIONAL | AUSTRALIAOnline resources: Download report, PDF | Financial Abuse Resource Centre (Commonwealth Bank of Australia) Summary: This s the 3rd report in a series planned under the Next Chapter partnership between CBA and GVRN. The choice to focus on diverse population groups and different contexts of lived experience is deliberate. Rather than subsume differences in lived experiences of economic and financial abuse within one over-arching report, a decision was taken to separately examine select identified population groups. Each report examines the same research questions and outlines the available evidence as it relates to specific groups and communities. To develop this report, GVRN conducted a comprehensive review of academic and relevant policy literature to identify and analyse existing research on economic and financial abuse and provide key findings. (From the Executive summary). Record #7841Published June 2021
This s the 3rd report in a series planned under the Next Chapter partnership between CBA and GVRN.
The choice to focus on diverse population groups and different contexts of lived experience is deliberate. Rather than subsume differences in lived experiences of economic and financial abuse within one over-arching report, a decision was taken to separately examine select identified population groups. Each report examines the same research questions and outlines the available evidence as it relates to specific groups and communities.
To develop this report, GVRN conducted a comprehensive review of academic and relevant policy literature to identify and analyse existing research on economic and financial abuse and provide key findings. (From the Executive summary). Record #7841