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AIC: New research estimates the prevalence of family and domestic violence offending

Link to: Prevalence of recorded family and domestic violence offending: A birth cohort study

The Australian Institute of Criminology has released a new Trends & issues paper that uses criminal history data for three birth cohorts in New South Wales to estimate the prevalence of recorded family and domestic violence offending. This research was undertaken in collaboration with the Griffith Criminology Institute.

  • Using an accelerated longitudinal design, it was estimated that 6.3 percent of people born in New South Wales had been proceeded against by police for a family and domestic violence offence by age 37. The rate was significantly higher for men: 9.6 percent of men—one in 10—had been proceeded against for a family and domestic violence offence, compared with 3.0 percent of women (one in 33).
  • Overall, 1.2 percent of people born in New South Wales were responsible for more than 50 percent of recorded family and domestic violence offences. Further, family and domestic violence offenders accounted for nearly half of all recorded offences by people in the birth cohort.
  • This is the first estimate of the prevalence of recorded family and domestic violence offending in a population sample in Australia. This is an important step towards increasing the visibility of family and domestic violence perpetrators.


Read the AIC media release.

Copyright © 2024 Australian Institute of Criminology, All rights reserved.


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