Chapter 1 Referral and Conduct of the Inquiry
1.1
While often seen as the perpetrators of public violence, the reality is
that young people are also overwhelmingly the victims. Young Australians have
clearly identified violence as one of the top issues impacting on their daily
lives. Not only do they worry about their own personal safety, but also about
the impact that violence is having on their friends, families and on their
communities.
1.2
Underlying these concerns, there is a general perception that the
incidence and severity of violence among Australia’s young people is
increasing. But what evidence exists to support this and what role should the
Australian Government play to help minimise the problem?
1.3
The Inquiry into the Impact of Violence on Young Australians (the
inquiry) was referred to the House of Representatives Standing Committee on
Family, Community, Housing and Youth on 16 June 2009. An advertisement calling
for written submissions was placed in The Australian on 19 August 2009.
Information on the inquiry, including its terms of reference and on how to make
a submission, was available on the Parliament of Australia website.[1]
The inquiry was also advertised through an extensive mail out to interested
parties, including peak bodies and organisations, and state and territory
governments.
1.4
The inquiry received 79 submissions and four supplementary submissions.
The list of submissions is at Appendix A. Fifteen exhibits for the inquiry were
also received and a detailed list is provided at Appendix B. The Committee
held nine public hearings and four community roundtables across Australia
between February and May 2010. Details of the public hearings for the inquiry
are listed at Appendix C. Informal discussions were also held with police officers,
representatives from community based organisations and with young people in
Queensland, Tasmania and Western Australia. Committee inspections included site
visits to the Gold Coast Closed Circuit TV Monitoring Centre and to the Ashley
Youth Detention Centre in Tasmania.
1.5
At the outset of the inquiry, the Committee Chair, Ms Annette Ellis MP
(Member for Canberra) indicated that it was essential that as many young people
were consulted as possible. As the Committee recognised that young people were
unlikely to provide formal written submissions to the inquiry, the Committee
agreed to develop an online survey to help measure young people’s perceptions
and experiences of violence.
1.6
While this is not the first time an online survey has been conducted by
a parliamentary committee, its method of promotion was novel. Facebook and
Google advertising were used, as well as existing email distribution lists.
Members of Parliament and Senators were also contacted to request they place a
link to the survey on their own websites. The Liaison and Projects Office
within the Department of the House of Representatives developed a short video
using interviews conducted with young people. This was placed on the Committee
website, and promoted through the About the House TV program on Sky News
and Australia’s Public Affairs Channel on 22 November 2009. The survey was open
from 22 October 2009 to 16 February 2010. During that time there were 1379
respondents. A summary of the outcomes of the survey is at Appendix D.
Comments made by survey respondents are interspersed throughout the body of the
report.
1.7
Also, preceding the formal public hearings on 15 February 2010, the
Committee held a Youth Forum in Melbourne that allowed around 40 young people
to have informal group discussions with Committee members about their
perceptions and experiences of violence and its impact on their lives. Following
informal discussions, participants of the Youth Forum were invited to give
formal feedback on the Hansard record. Some young participants of the
Youth Forum were interviewed for a segment on the About the House TV
program aired on Sky News and on Australia’s Public Affairs Channel on 14 May
2010.
Context of the Inquiry
1.8
Media reports highlight and perhaps sensationalise the involvement of young
people as both victims and perpetrators of violence. But what is the actual
extent of this problem, and how does the Australian Government need to act on
it? It was in this context that the Committee undertook to investigate the
impact of violence on young Australians.
1.9
The inquiry was conducted at a time when there was no national youth
violence prevention framework. While there are national policies and strategies
which aim to address various aspects of social and economic disadvantage, and which
are therefore likely to impact on youth violence to varying degrees, these
target broader issues.[2] In addition, there are a
large number of strategies and programs operating in Australia which directly
target youth violence. However, being administered by various portfolios in federal,
state and territory governments, and delivered by a range of government and
non-government agencies, these strategies and programs cannot be said to
constitute a nationally cohesive youth violence prevention framework.
1.10
Also at the time of the inquiry, the Australian Government was in the
process of conducting a series of broad ranging consultations with young people
to consider the strategic direction for youth policy. These consultations were
initiated with the establishment in 2008 of the Australian Youth Forum (AYF). On
20 February 2009, the Minister for Youth, The Hon Kate Ellis MP, hosted the
inaugural AYF youTHINK forum. The forum allowed hundreds of young Australians
from various locations in Australia to speak out on issues of importance to
them and to share their views about practical solutions. As concern about
personal safety had been a recurrent issue raised in earlier discussion, violence
and safety was a theme for discussion at the youTHINK forum. As summarised by
the AYF:
In the discussion about ‘Violence and Safety’, participants
spoke about the need for better understanding between young people and
authority figures, like the police, through training. They also talked about
the need for awareness raising campaigns about violence, and the links with
alcohol abuse. Participants also said that because young people are more
exposed to the media than ever before, they are also more exposed to violence
and its impact.[3]
1.11
Consultations with young people through the AYF and through youTHINK
resulted in referral of the Inquiry into the Impact of Violence on Young
Australians to the Committee in June 2009. The inquiry’s terms of reference
were formally adopted by the Committee on 24 June 2009.
1.12
Following referral of the inquiry, on 3 September 2009, the Prime
Minister, The Hon Kevin Rudd MP, announced the Australian Government’s
intention to develop a National Strategy for Young Australians (the
National Strategy). The purpose of the National Strategy was to provide an
overarching framework identifying issues of concern for young people, and
priorities for action. To support the development of the National Strategy,
additional consultations with young people and the broader community, the so
called National Conversation, ran from 22 October to 19 November 2009.
1.13
On 14 April 2010, the National Strategy for Young Australians was
launched. It identifies the following eight priorities for action, all of which
are directly relevant to addressing the issue of youth violence, and therefore to
the inquiry. The eight priorities are:
n improving the health
wellbeing of all young people;
n equipping young
Australians to shape their own futures through education;
n supporting young
Australians within their families;
n empowering young
Australians to take part and be active in their communities;
n equipping young
Australians with the skills and personal networks they need to gain, and be
successful in, employment;
n enabling young
Australians to participate confidentially and safely online;
n strengthening early
intervention with young Australians to help prevent any problems getting worse
and to help young people get their lives back on track; and
n establishing clear
cut legal consequences for behaviours that endanger the safety of others.[4]
Structure of the Report
1.14
Chapter 2 establishes the scope of the inquiry. The Chapters considers
definitions of the terms ‘violence’, ‘bullying’ and ‘young Australian’. It also
presents an overview of the data and statistics on youth violence in Australia,
and considers issues associated with perceptions of youth violence and the
influence of perceptions on feelings of personal safety.
1.15
Chapter 3 presents an overview of risk and protective factors occurring
at individual, family, community or societal levels that are associated with
youth violence. The Chapter also examines the association of alcohol and other
drugs with violence. The Chapter concludes by considering specific populations
of young people that are at increased risk of experiencing violence.
1.16
Chapter 4 examines options for targeted interventions to address youth violence
principally by decreasing risk factors and increasing protective factors that
occur at individual, family and community levels. The Chapter includes
consideration of strategies to reduce alcohol-related violence and to improve personal
safety through the implementation of best practice policing. While the focus is
on prevention and early intervention, consideration is also given to
interventions to support young victims of violence and to reduce recidivism
among young offenders.
1.17
Chapter 5 examines the need for a strategic and coordinated response to
youth violence and considers the role of the Australian Government in supporting
this approach. The Chapter also examines societal level influences on
behaviour. The role of the Australian Government in supporting national policies
to address broader issues of social and economic disadvantage is considered.
The Chapter concludes by considering options for population based initiatives
to reinforce social norms and foster widespread positive cultural and
attitudinal change.
On 22 October
2009, the Prime Minister, the Hon Kevin Rudd MP and the Hon Kate Ellis MP,
launched the National Conversation to consult with young people and the broader
community on the development of the Australian Government’s National Strategy
for Young Australians