Professor Anne Summers’ research into the impacts of domestic violence aims to support and inform the development of policies and strategies to significantly improve the lives of women and break the cycle of systemic disadvantage for future generations of Australian families.
Professor Summers’ research is supported by the Paul Ramsay Foundation, initially as an inaugural Paul Ramsay Foundation Fellow and from 2023 as part of a long-term partnership for change.
Our research
Domestic and family violence is a complex, multidimensional issue with far-reaching impacts for generations of families. There is an urgent need to develop effective policies and financial provisions for the thousands of Australians who experience domestic violence, and ensure they are supported in rebuilding their lives.
Professor Anne Summers AO
Our research lead
Professor Anne Summers AO is a renowned Australian author, journalist and researcher, with a long and highly accomplished global career in the fields of politics, the media, business and the non-government sector.
Anne has a longstanding commitment to addressing inequality and social injustice, and through her work has contributed to significant improvements in the lives of women, and society more broadly.
Based at UTS Business School, Anne’s research focuses on the pervasive impact of domestic and family violence in Australia, its broader economic implications and inequalities, and what government, policymakers and business can do to address this major societal issue.
In 2021, Anne was appointed a Paul Ramsay Foundation Fellow, located at UTS, and commissioned to undertake original data-based research to cast a new light on the incidence and nature of domestic violence in Australia.
Our research projects
Following the publication of the groundbreaking report The Choice: Violence or Poverty in 2022, the next stage of our research focuses on two key projects:
- Our data-based investigation of the impact of domestic violence on women’s employment focuses initially on why the labour force participation rate of women exposed to such violence is so much lower than for Australian women generally. The study will also seek to explore the extent to which employment may reduce or even prevent women’s exposure to domestic violence.
- Our development of a new longitudinal study will seek to obtain key data on relevant social issues related to domestic violence to measure the extent of violence in all its forms and which will focus in particular on the characteristics of the perpetrators of such violence. It is intended to present to government a fully-designed longitudinal study ready to be adopted and implemented, thus setting in train the collection of an invaluable and unprecedented set of long-term data to inform policy-making to reduce and eventually eliminate such violence from our society.
Learn more about Professor Summers’ research
- 275,000 Australian women had suffered physical and/or sexual violence from a current partner. While 90,000 of them wanted to leave, they felt unable to do so, with a quarter of them saying the main reason was lack of money or financial support.
- A further 82,000 temporarily separated but returned, again with 15 per cent of them saying they had no money or nowhere to go.
- 185,700 women with children aged under 18 were living as single mothers after leaving violent relationships. They represent 60 per cent of all single mothers, a far higher rate of violence than for any other group of Australian women
- 67 per cent of these now single mothers had children in their care at the time of the violence and 88,000 women said their children saw or heard the violence.
Research for the report was supported by a Paul Ramsay Foundation Fellowship and based on never-before-published customised data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).
Download the ABS data tables (XLXS)
Our events
In the news
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Research recognised in FT academic research awards
16 January 2024
The Financial Times has highly commended Professor Summers for The Choice report, recognising its impact in their 2024 awards.
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Single-parenting payment raised
20 September 2023
The single-parent payment policy shift outlined in the May budget comes into effect today
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Changing the single-parenting payment
8 May 2023
The Prime Minister announces raising the cut-off age for single-parenting payments.
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Extending the financial safety net for single parents
8 May 2023
The federal government commits to helping single parents in the upcoming federal budget.
Key resources
Professor Anne Summers recommends national surveys, reports and key domestic and family violence publications.
UTS is grateful for the significant investment from Paul Ramsay Foundation in support of this research, and for the opportunity to be a part of the cohort of Paul Ramsay Foundation-funded organisations, seeking to improve the safety of women and children experiencing domestic and family violence.
Contact us
Get in touch about our research, collaborative research opportunities, news and events.