Description
Australia's first domestic violence shelter Elsie opened in the 1970s, and researchers have been analysing the problem ever since.
In the last three decades more than 1,500 women have been killed by intimate partners in Australia and we're still no closer to finding out why.
Campaigner Rosie Batty has compared domestic violence to terrorism, and called for similar levels of funding.
Is that comparison extreme, or is it the best way to get us closer to fixing the problem?
*EDITOR'S NOTE: This episode incorrectly states that Luke Batty was 14 years old at the time of his death. He was 11 years old when he died.
Subscribe to If You're Listening on the ABC Listen app.
Check out our series on YouTube.
[Helplines]
Over the last four episodes we’ve told the story of Donald Trump’s denial of the 2020 election result. It’s a period of time many thought would disqualify him from another run for US president.
Now, exactly four years later Trump is preparing to head back to the White House after a significant...
Published 11/13/24
It’s Matt Bevan’s last 24 hours in Washington DC, and he’s leaving a very different place to the one he arrived in. Donald Trump is going to be president again, and in the United States, people from across the political spectrum are figuring out exactly what that looks like.
Matt sits down with...
Published 11/08/24