Key Messages Guidance – Supporting Young People to Understand Affirmative Consent Program

Key Messages Guidance

Supporting Young People to Understand Affirmative Consent Program

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This ‘Key Messages Guide’ explores the key definitions, legislative changes and key messages around affirmative consent in the Victorian legal context.

This information sheet has been prepared by the Affirmative Consent Leadership Consortium (SAS Vic, in collaboration with YAC Vic, Safe and Equal and Victorian Legal Aid) to support and guide project partners of the Supporting Young People to Understand Affirmative Consent Program, funded by the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing (DFFH).

This Key Messages Guide is intended to be used by organisations educating and supporting young people to understand affirmative consent in the Victorian legal context. The guide has been informed by the Justice Legislation Amendment (Sexual Offences and Other Matters) Act 2022 that came into effect in Victoria on 30 July 2023.

This guide covers:

  • How to use this document to develop key messages
  • What are the new affirmative consent laws?
  • Definitions
  • Guidance for key message and resource development:
    • Affirmative consent
    • Circumstances where there is no consent
    • Reasonable belief
    • Image-based abuse
  • How to access support in Victoria

Disclaimer: This document is intended as general overview only. The contents do not constitute legal advice, are not intended to be a substitute for legal advice and should not be relied upon as such.

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Resource type: Key messaging guide

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Support for children and young people

Support for children and young people

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This guide is designed to help practitioners better support children and young people with experiences of family violence. It was co-produced with Berry Street’s Y-Change Lived Experience Consultants.

Family violence has significant consequences for infants, children and young people.

Children and young people can be both directly and indirectly affected by family violence. It’s important to recognise children and young people not just as extensions of their parents or caregivers, or ‘secondary victims’ of family violence, but as victim survivors in their own right.

Perpetrators may subject a child to threatening, coercive and controlling behaviours including physical, sexual or emotional abuse. Children may also be used by perpetrators in tactics of control directed at their parent, carer or family member.

Filicides (where a parent or step-parent kills a child) are the second most common form of family violence homicide, following intimate partner homicide (AIHW, 2019).

Family violence also occurs when a child or young person hears, witnesses or is exposed to the effects of the violence.[i] For example, if a child senses their parent’s fear or lives with the impacts of violence on a family member’s health.

Ways family violence affects children and young people

While children can be incredibly resilient, the impacts of family violence can potentially have long-term consequences for their friendships and relationships, as well as participation in social and civic life.[1] Evidence demonstrates that family violence can have a lasting and significant impact on infants (including in utero), children, and young people. They can be impacted whether they are directly targeted with abuse, they witness abuse or violence towards their parent or carer, or they are exposed to the effects of family violence in their environment (DHHS, 2014).

Direct and indirect exposure to family violence can have serious, long-term impacts on the physical, spiritual, psychological, developmental, emotional safety and wellbeing of children and young people.[ii]

Family violence negatively and cumulatively impacts children’s:

  • physical, neurological and emotional development
  • sense of security and attachment in relationships
  • mental health and cognitive and behavioural functioning
  • ability to cope and adapt to different situations and contexts (Family Safety Victoria (2019c, Appendix 1);

Children growing up in environments where family violence occurs may also be more likely to require additional support to meet milestones, regulate their emotions and behaviours, engage in education and sustain positive relationships with others.[2] Related to this is the significant impact of family violence on the development of positive attachment and bonds between children and their parents or carers.[3]

Signs a child may be experiencing family violence

The signs below may prompt you to assess a child or young person’s level of family violence risk.[iii] Keep in mind these signs will vary depending on the child’s age and stage of development.

Have you observed the child or young person: 

  • Presents physical injuries, such as cuts, fractures or bruises.
  • Is overly clingy with or eager to please certain adults, including their parent/carer.
  • Has delayed speech or social development.
  • Seems to be getting ill frequently.
  • Has started suddenly wetting the bed.
  • Is showing signs of depression, anxiety or suicidal ideation.
  • Has started “acting out” and engaging in risky behaviours
  • Has started showing aggression, violence or cruelty towards others, including pets.
  • Has lost interest in social activities and isn’t spending time with their peers.
  • Has stopped going to school or is suddenly disengaged or not performing well academically.
  • Has a sexual knowledge that’s beyond their years.

See the MARAM Practice Guides for more information.

 Practice considerations

  • Children and young people must be viewed as victim survivors in their own right, with their own unique experiences, risks, protective factors and strengths. Each child you support requires their own risk assessment, safety plan and case plan goals.[iv]
  • Your response to a child or young person, including the language you use to communicate or the activities you do together to build rapport, should always be trauma-informed and tailored to their age and stage of development.
  • Centre the child or young person’s experiences by engaging with them directly, wherever appropriate. If not possible, interact with the parent/carer who is not using violence or professionals in the child’s life (e.g. teachers) to collect information about their experiences.[v]
  • Promote children’s participation in planning, goal setting and decisions that affect their lives, wherever safe and reasonable to do so.
  • Ensure your service environment is welcoming, safe, inclusive to children of all abilities and stages of development.
  • Recognise that family violence is a form of structural oppression. Children and young people from refugee/migrant communities, who are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islanders, living with disability, or who are LGBTIQA+ may face additional risks and barriers to safety.
  • Collaborate with other services, as appropriate, to support the child’s needs. These may include Child FIRST, family services, child protection, maternal and child health services, schools, child-care services, youth services, and therapeutic services for children and young people.[vi] Apply the information sharing schemes to proactively share and request relevant information with services.

“Family violence is rarely seen or understood through the eyes of children and young people. Way too often, we are the ones you left behind.”

The voices of children and young people impacted by family violence are often missed. This guide for family violence practitioners has been co-designed with Berry Street’s Y-Change Lived Experience Consultants aged between 18-30 with lived experiences of socioeconomic and systemic disadvantage.

For anyone working to support children and young people, the guide explores key considerations for supporting children and young people with lived experiences of family violence. It also features a number of practical activities you can do with children or young people accessing your service.

References

[1] Campo, M. (2015); Taylor, A. (2019); Kaspiew, R. et al. (2017).

[2] Australian Childhood Foundation (2013); Campo, M. (2015); Holt, S., Buckley, H., & Whelan, S. (2008); Taylor, A. (2019).

[3] Campo, M. (2015); Kaspiew, R. et al. (2017); Katz, E. (2019).

[i] Family Violence Protection Act 2008 (Vic)

[ii] Family Safety Victoria (2019). MARAM Practice Guides: Foundation Knowledge Guide. Melbourne, Vic: State of Victoria, page 8.

[iii] Family Safety Victoria (2019). MARAM Practice Guides: Appendix 1: Observable signs of trauma. Melbourne, Vic: State of Victoria.

[iv] Family Safety Victoria (2019). MARAM Practice Guides: Foundation Knowledge Guide. Melbourne, Vic: State of Victoria, page 44.

[v] Family Safety Victoria (2019). MARAM Practice Guides: Foundation Knowledge Guide. Melbourne, Vic: State of Victoria, page 44.

[vi] Domestic Violence Victoria (2020). Code of Practice: Principles and Standards for Specialist Family Violence Services for Victim-Survivors. 2nd Edition. Melbourne: DV Vic.

See the MARAM Practice Guides and the Code of Practice for Specialist Family Violence Services [link] for further guidance.

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Resource type: Booklet
Download file type: 7-page PDF
Best print size: A4

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Observing and documenting

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Observing and documenting

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These tip sheets are designed to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work.
Observing and documenting how children express and understand gender is critical to the intentional teaching of respectful and gender equitable relationships. It can help you to ensure that the physical environment is set up to promote equality.

Supporting children to have respectful and equitable relationships when they are young can help them grow into resilient, caring and well-functioning young people and adults, and is a key step towards preventing family violence and all forms of violence against women. This involves nurturing children and helping them learn the skills to acknowledge and accept difference, resolve conflict and solve problems. It is also about challenging gender stereotypes, so children of all genders grow up feeling heard, valued and respected.

 

Partners in Prevention and City of Melbourne have co-designed a series of tip sheets to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work. The series covers seven topics:

  1. Whole of service approach
  2. Support children’s sense of identity
  3. Intentional teaching
  4. Teaching for care
  5. The importance of language
  6. Observing and documenting
  7. Working with families

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Resource type: Tipsheet
Download file type: 2 page PDF
Best print size: A4

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – The importance of language

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – The importance of language

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These tip sheets are designed to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work.
Words we use with children carry important messages about gender, power and respectful relationships. Language can be used to let children and adults know what we assume is and isn’t normal for different genders. These messages can limit how children engage with a particular setting or service and with each other.
Supporting children to have respectful and equitable relationships when they are young can help them grow into resilient, caring and well-functioning young people and adults, and is a key step towards preventing family violence and all forms of violence against women. This involves nurturing children and helping them learn the skills to acknowledge and accept difference, resolve conflict and solve problems. It is also about challenging gender stereotypes, so children of all genders grow up feeling heard, valued and respected.

Partners in Prevention and City of Melbourne have co-designed a series of tip sheets to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work. The series covers seven topics:

  1. Whole of service approach
  2. Support children’s sense of identity
  3. Intentional teaching
  4. Teaching for care
  5. The importance of language
  6. Observing and documenting
  7. Working with families

Topic

Type

Resource details

Resource type: Tipsheet
Download file type: 2 page PDF
Best print size: A4

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Whole of service approach

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Whole of service approach

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These tip sheets are designed to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work.
In the school environment, evidence shows that taking a whole school approach is the most effective way to promote respectful relationships and gender equity. This tip sheet contains some ideas on how professionals working with young children and their families can adapt and apply these principles to their work.
Supporting children to have respectful and equitable relationships when they are young can help them grow into resilient, caring and well-functioning young people and adults, and is a key step towards preventing family violence and all forms of violence against women. This involves nurturing children and helping them learn the skills to acknowledge and accept difference, resolve conflict and solve problems. It is also about challenging gender stereotypes, so children of all genders grow up feeling heard, valued and respected.

Partners in Prevention and City of Melbourne have co-designed a series of tip sheets to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work. The series covers seven topics:

  1. Whole of service approach
  2. Support children’s sense of identity
  3. Intentional teaching
  4. Teaching for care
  5. The importance of language
  6. Observing and documenting
  7. Working with families

Topic

Type

Resource details

Resource type: Tipsheet
Download file type: 2 page PDF
Best print size: A4

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Working with families

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Working with families

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These tip sheets are designed to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work.
When we work with children, we also work with their families. Communicating regularly with a child’s family helps you to share knowledge and establish a partnership approach to supporting their development.

Supporting children to have respectful and equitable relationships when they are young can help them grow into resilient, caring and well-functioning young people and adults, and is a key step towards preventing family violence and all forms of violence against women. This involves nurturing children and helping them learn the skills to acknowledge and accept difference, resolve conflict and solve problems. It is also about challenging gender stereotypes, so children of all genders grow up feeling heard, valued and respected.

Partners in Prevention and City of Melbourne have co-designed a series of tip sheets to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work. The series covers seven topics:

  1. Whole of service approach
  2. Support children’s sense of identity
  3. Intentional teaching
  4. Teaching for care
  5. The importance of language
  6. Observing and documenting
  7. Working with families

Topic

Type

Resource details

Resource type: Tipsheet
Download file type: 2 page PDF
Best print size: A4

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Teaching for care

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Teaching for care

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These tip sheets are designed to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work.
Caring means being sensitive to, aware of and responsive to other people’s needs. As well as having their physical needs met, children also need to feel valued, respected and heard.

Supporting children to have respectful and equitable relationships when they are young can help them grow into resilient, caring and well-functioning young people and adults, and is a key step towards preventing family violence and all forms of violence against women. This involves nurturing children and helping them learn the skills to acknowledge and accept difference, resolve conflict and solve problems. It is also about challenging gender stereotypes, so children of all genders grow up feeling heard, valued and respected.

Partners in Prevention and City of Melbourne have co-designed a series of tip sheets to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work. The series covers seven topics:

  1. Whole of service approach
  2. Support children’s sense of identity
  3. Intentional teaching
  4. Teaching for care
  5. The importance of language
  6. Observing and documenting
  7. Working with families

Topic

Type

Resource details

Resource type: Tipsheet
Download file type: 2 page PDF
Best print size: A4

Just Say Goodbye

Just Say Goodbye

Parents who kill their children in the context of separation
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This Discussion Paper, ‘Just Say Goodbye’, examines the motives and background to ‘filicide’— the killing of children by a parent.

While these deaths are often described in the media as ‘inexplicable’, this new research identifies a link between the killing of children and violence against women.

The paper considers international research, Australian Institute of Criminology data and case examples of both fathers and mothers who kill their children.

This Discussion Paper is essential reading for people working in family violence and child protection, including lawyers and other professionals, and those working to prevent further deaths of children.

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Resource details

Resource type: Discussion Paper
Download file type: 108 page PDF
Best print size: A4

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Intentional teaching

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children Series – Intentional teaching

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These tip sheets are designed to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work.
The Australian Early Years Learning Framework defines intentional teaching as ‘educators being deliberate, purposeful and thoughtful in their decisions and actions’. Being intentional means taking the time to think about and plan what you want to teach and implementing a range of carefully considered strategies.

Supporting children to have respectful and equitable relationships when they are young can help them grow into resilient, caring and well-functioning young people and adults, and is a key step towards preventing family violence and all forms of violence against women. This involves nurturing children and helping them learn the skills to acknowledge and accept difference, resolve conflict and solve problems. It is also about challenging gender stereotypes, so children of all genders grow up feeling heard, valued and respected.

Partners in Prevention and City of Melbourne have co-designed a series of tip sheets to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work. The series covers seven topics:

  1. Whole of service approach
  2. Support children’s sense of identity
  3. Intentional teaching
  4. Teaching for care
  5. The importance of language
  6. Observing and documenting
  7. Working with families

Topic

Type

Resource details

Resource type: Tip Sheet
Download file type: 2 page PDF
Best print size: A4

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children – Full series

Building Respect and Equity Among Young Children – Full series

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These tip sheets are designed to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work.

Supporting children to have respectful and equitable relationships when they are young can help them grow into resilient, caring and well-functioning young people and adults, and is a key step towards preventing family violence and all forms of violence against women. This involves nurturing children and helping them learn the skills to acknowledge and accept difference, resolve conflict and solve problems. It is also about challenging gender stereotypes, so children of all genders grow up feeling heard, valued and respected.

Partners in Prevention and City of Melbourne have co-designed a series of tip sheets to help all professionals who work with young children to promote respect and gender equity in their work. The series covers seven topics:

  1. Whole of service approach
  2. Support children’s sense of identity
  3. Intentional teaching
  4. Teaching for care
  5. The importance of language
  6. Observing and documenting
  7. Working with families

Topic

Type

Resource details

Resource type: Tip Sheet
Download file type: 14 page PDF
Best print size: A4

ACBDEquality poster

ACBDEquality poster

Students act to prevent violence against women

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This resource offers a different prevention action for every letter of the alphabet that is relevant and relatable for young people.

Australian data shows that the majority of young Australians think violence and sexual harassment is unacceptable. However there are low levels of knowledge among young people about how to prevent violence against women.

Drawing on the wisdom, passion and ideas of an inspirational group of students, this resource has been developed to support young people to be active bystanders and promote equality and respect among their peers.

This resource is an adaption of the original Know your A-Z poster and offers a different prevention action for every letter of the alphabet that is relevant and relatable for young people.

Download the poster or individual A-Z cards to share the prevention message with your friends, family, colleagues and networks.

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Resource type: Poster
Best print size: A3

More information

You can also order ABCDEquality stickers from our store.

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Addressing Family Violence Programs

Addressing Family Violence Programs

Groupwork interventions for infants, children and their parents

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This book captures work of the Royal Children’s Hospital Mental Health Program’s AFVP over its first decade (1996-2006) and in particular their group work programs PARKAS, Just for Kids and The Peek-a-Boo Club™.

This booklet takes the reader through the theory, principles and practice of the Addressing Family Violence Program work as well as their endeavours to measure its effectiveness.

This resource offers 167 pages packed full of articles, stories from the children and a variety of interventions used in their addressing family violence work.

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Resource type: Booklet
Download file type: PDF
Pages: 167

More information

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ABCDEquality cards

ABCDEquality cards

Students act to prevent violence against women

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This resource offers a different prevention action for every letter of the alphabet that is relevant and relatable for young people.

Australian data shows that the majority of young Australians think violence and sexual harassment is unacceptable. However there are low levels of knowledge among young people about how to prevent violence against women.

Drawing on the wisdom, passion and ideas of an inspirational group of students, this resource has been developed to support young people to be active bystanders and promote equality and respect among their peers.

This resource offers a different prevention action for every letter of the alphabet that is relevant and relatable for young people.

Topic

Type

Resource details

Resource type: Cards
Download file type: PDF (whole set) and PNG (individual cards)
Size: 1200×1200 pixels (10cm x 10cm printed)

More information

You can also purchase these as sticker sheets.

Order online

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A Whole School Approach to Respectful Relationships Education in Schools

A Whole School Approach to Respectful Relationships Education in Schools

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This tool aids schools in implementing respectful relationships education (RRE).

Respectful relationships education is a comprehensive approach to the primary prevention of gender-based violence in schools. Schools are both education institutions and workplaces that can generate universal change to address the drivers of violence against women.

A whole school approach is about embedding systemic change across the entire school through policy, practice, procedures, staffing, environment, leadership and culture, and within the classroom.

Many schools do not have the time and resources to develop an effective whole school approach without support. Local and community organisations – including family violence and sexual assault services, local government and community and women’s health services – already have expertise in preventing violence against women in schools and responding to disclosures from both victims and perpetrators. These organisations are well placed to partner with schools to support them to plan, develop, implement and evaluate a whole school approach to Respectful Relationships Education, tailored to the needs of the school and their local community.

Topic

Type

Resource details

Resource type: Poster
Download file type: PDF
Best print size: A4 (double-sided)