100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Jane Stephens: words matter when it comes to how people react to domestic abuse

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

‘Snapped’: man to stand trial for cold case murder

A man accused of murdering his partner and leaving her body at the base of a cliff snapped before her death, a court has More

Police investigate fatal crash

The Forensic Crash Unit is investigating after a fatal traffic crash on the Sunshine Coast. Police and emergency services attended Diamond Valley Road at Diamond More

Property demolitions underway for road upgrade

The first of several properties are being removed in the heart of the Sunshine Coast, to make way for a revamped thoroughfare. Two homes are More

Italian offering from successful Indian restaurant owner

A local restaurateur known for building three successful Indian eateries has taken a fresh turn into Italian cuisine with his newest venture. The newly-opened Flavino More

Community battery project underway

Installation is underway on a battery that will store excess rooftop solar power during the day and feed it back into the local grid More

‘Scared for years’: child of cold-case murder accused

A man accused of murdering his girlfriend decades ago pressured his child to tell police he stayed at home on the night she died, More

The spotlight this month has been on domestic and family violence: how to better help victims, how to prevent it and how to intervene earlier.

It is a complex, multi-faceted problem as old as society itself that – the statistics and reports tell us – is getting worse.

What if a simple way of helping raise awareness was to change our way of talking about it?

When I hear ‘domestic and family violence’, I think physical altercation between those who share an abode or who are kin.

But substitute the word ‘abuse’ for ‘violence’ and it means another thing altogether: behaviour that intimidates, humiliates, controls and monitors, as well as physically hurts.

The adoption of the word ‘violence’ restricts the way people view abusive relationships.

If they are not being hit and hurt, they may consider that the support and advice proffered this month doesn’t apply to them.

Do you have an opinion to share? Submit a Letter to the Editor at Sunshine Coast News via news@sunshinecoastnews.com.au. You must include your name and suburb.

Words matter.

They impact understanding and select an audience.

And ‘violence’ is no longer correct for discussions around these undesirable interactions and behaviours in households and relationships.

We know more now.

Our understanding of impacts on humans is better.

And we know that domestic abuse is so much more than physical violence.

Domestic abuse can include intimidation, humiliation, control and/or physical violence. Picture: Shutterstock.

Abuse can inflict internal bruises and ripple out to affect people in ways deep and wide.

The term ‘domestic violence’ also has real impacts on how professionals recognise and respond to abuse.

People perceive that without physical violence, their situation is not ‘that bad’, that it is somehow ‘low-level’.

The cultural message is that physical pain trumps fear and worry, and that is simply not always the case.

The focus on physical violence also puts the spotlight squarely on one person: the victim of the beating.

But evidence shows the effects on children and a wider family can also be severe.

Queensland’s courts made 58,314 DV orders last financial year.

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare figures show one-in-10 adults nationwide has experienced violence from a partner, and one-in-20 adults from a boyfriend, girlfriend or date.

They are sure to be the tip of the iceberg if we start using the correct word for this scourge: ‘abuse’.

DV Connect 1800 811811; Lifeline 131114.

Dr Jane Stephens is a UniSC journalism lecturer, media commentator and writer.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share