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Issues facing women experiencing harm and hardship Good Shepherd New Zealand

Contributor(s): Good Shepherd New Zealand.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Good Shepherd New Zealand, 2025Description: electronic document (39 pages) ; PDF file.Subject(s): ABUSED WOMEN | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | ECONOMIC ABUSE | EMPLOYMENT | FINANCIAL ABUSE | GENDER EQUALITY | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | KOREMAHI | TŪKINOTANGA Ā-WHĀNAU | UNEMPLOYMENT | VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | WĀHINE | WHIWINGA | WOMEN | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: https://goodshepherd.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/PubsandInsights-Issues-paper_2025.05.09.pdf Download report, PDF | Access the website Summary: Good Shepherd NZ has three strategic focus areas to shape their work addressing hardship and harm: dignified income, financial wellbeing, and family violence economic harm. These focus areas span from structural or systemic factors that are drivers of issues, through to impacts. For example, problems within the dignified income focus area, such as the gender pay gap, can be drivers of poverty and financial hardship for women as it hinders their earning potential. They have gathered research and data under these three focus areas to better understand the issues facing women in the current economic environment. Literature is drawn from Government statistics and releases, academic research based in New Zealand, information releases by private businesses and organisations, and Good Shepherd NZ research. This paper pulls together this research and serves as a point in time view of how different factors come together to disadvantage women in New Zealand. (From the Introduction). Record #9290
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Good Shepherd NZ has three strategic focus areas to shape their work addressing hardship and harm: dignified income, financial wellbeing, and family violence economic harm. These focus areas span from structural or systemic factors that are drivers of issues, through to impacts. For example, problems within the dignified income focus area, such as the gender pay gap, can be drivers of poverty and financial hardship for women as it hinders their earning potential. They have gathered research and data under these three focus areas to better understand the issues facing women in the current economic environment. Literature is drawn from Government statistics and releases, academic research based in New Zealand, information releases by
private businesses and organisations, and Good Shepherd NZ research. This paper pulls together this research and serves as a point in time view of how different factors come together to disadvantage women in New Zealand. (From the Introduction). Record #9290

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