An affordable housing shortage is killing Indigenous women, a new report has found

Indigenous women are more likely to die or suffer injuries from family violence than non-indigenous women due to a lack of safe housing, a new study shows.

Remote Indigenous housing in the Northern Territory.

Remote Indigenous housing in the Northern Territory. Source: AAP

Indigenous Australian women suffering from family violence are at greater risk of being killed and injured due to a and are also more likely to lose custody of their children.

A new study from the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute examined the .

The research found a shortage of emergency and long-term housing in remote areas meant Indigenous women often had .
A women's shelter in Alice Springs.
A women's shelter in Alice Springs. Source: AAP
Lead researcher Kyllie Cripps said women who fail to find long-term, stable housing within a year risk losing their children permanently.

Echoes of the stolen generation make Indigenous women particularly anxious about the consequences.

"This is exacerbated by the hopelessness they feel in being unable to secure long-term housing ... through no fault of their own," Dr Cripps said.
The shortage also affects perpetrators of violence, making them more likely to return to the family home or be made homeless.

Dr Cripps said family violence among Indigenous communities required a holistic response.

"Providing services to women and children in isolation to the men is, at best, a bandaid solution of limited long-term effectiveness," she said.
The report, to be presented at a National Housing Conference in Darwin on Thursday, urges the federal and state governments to include more Indigenous voices in housing policies.

It also recommends including housing under family violence targets within the annual Closing the Gap campaign.


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