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200 pages, Paperback
Published March 5, 2019
"It is a fact that the biggest risk [factor] for becoming a victim of sexual assault or domestic or family violence is being a woman." (p.14-15)
"Both sexes are more likely to experience violence from men, and by 'more likely' I mean 95 per cent - that's the percentage of men and women in a 2016 ABCS report who identified the perpetrator of violence against them as male." (p.21)
"We can choose a future where women live free from violence. We can eliminate violence against women and children. But to do so requires a conscious and critical conversation about gender relationships, power, and what builds and changes culture. This is 'primary prevention': stopping violence before it starts." (p.24)The publication of On Violence pre-dates the most recent wave of anti-violence activism, surrounding the appointment of Grace Tame as Australian of the Year in 2020, an historic rape complaint against a sitting federal Attorney-General and the highly-publicised trial of a man accused of raping a colleague within Australia's Parliament House. However, the book's central message remains as relevant as ever, and issues to which Stott Despoja alludes, including the prevalence of victim-blaming, the vilification of women who speak out publicly about domestic and sexual violence and the sense that the reputation and "potential" of accused perpetrators is valued above the expectation that victim-survivors may have for justice, are only reinforced by subsequent events.