Article Title,Year,Volume,Issue,Page Range,Author What Works in Reducing Domestic Violence: A Comprehensive Guide for Professionals,2005,58,1,104-106 N2-, Working with Women Associated with Bikie Gangs: Practice Dilemmas,2006,59,3,301-313,Bowden Contested Concepts in Violence Against Women: ‘Intimate’ ‘Domestic’ or ‘Torture’?,2006,59,3,314-327,Bowden Children and Domestic Violence: A System of Safety in Clinical Practice,2006,59,4,462-473,Cooley Homeless Careers: A Framework for Intervention,2006,59,2,198-212,Chamberlain Domestic Violence and Children with Disabilities: Working Towards Enhancing Social Work Practice,2006,59,2,185-197,Breckenridge The Reverse Role Play–An Innovative Way of Confronting Men,2010,63,4,460-465,Tonkin Domestic Violence and Child Protection: Partnerships and Collaboration,2009,62,3,369-387,Day Violent acts: why do they do it?,2003,56,3,247-257,Bessant Supporting community solutions to family violence,2004,57,1,71-83,Taylor Neo‐liberalism and the pathologising of public issues: The displacement of feminist service models in domestic violence support services,2005,58,3,275-284,McDonald It's no picnic: personal and family safety for rural social workers,2003,56,2,94-106,Gregory Beyond gender: Class poverty and domestic violence,2005,58,1,36-43,Evans Neo-liberalism and the pathologising of public issues: The displacement of feminist service models in domestic violence support services. Comment,2006,59,1,100-103,Mason Neo-liberalism and the pathologising of public issues: The displacement of feminist service models in domestic violence support services. Comment,2006,59,1,99-100,Tyler Neo-liberalism and the pathologising of public issues: The displacement of feminist service models in domestic violence support services. Reply,2006,59,1,104-105,McDonald An empowering approach to women's domestic violence groups,1995,48,1,51-59,Jackson Groupwork with survivors of domestic violence,1992,45,4,41-48,Poels The effects of witnessing domestic violence on young children's psycho-social adjustment,1996,49,4,3-10,Berthelsen Children and domestic violence: The need for supervised contact services when contact with the violent father is ordered/desired,1998,51,3,41-48,Wyndham Competing demands competing solutions differing constructions of the problem of recruitment and retention of frontline rural child protection staff,2002,55,3,193-203,Hodgkin The historical and political context of mandatory reporting and its impact on child protection practice in victoria,1996,49,4,25-32,Mendes Violence against women in a rural context,1997,50,1,15-22,Alston Across the divide: using research to enhance collaboration between mental health and domestic violence services,2012,65,1,120-135,Irwin Young People Transitioning from Out-of-home Care in Victoria: Strengthening Support Services for Dual Clients of Child Protection and Youth Justice,2014,67,1,6-23,Snow Secrecy surrounding the physical abuse of child athletes in Australia,2017,70,1,42-53,Morris Sexual and family violence: overcoming barriers to service access for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander clients,2017,70,2,241-252,Prentice The role of social work in suicide prevention intervention and postvention: a scoping review,2017,70,3,289-301,Cerel Asking the question: childhood sexual abuse in adults with mental illness,2017,70,3,363-371,Meehan Development of a case closure index in Korean Elder Protective Service Agencies,2017,70,4,392-404,Lee Intervening with children living with domestic violence: is the system safe?,2018,71,2,135-147,Laing Facilitating the collaborative interface between child protection and specialist domestic violence services: a scoping review,2018,71,2,148-161,Healey Children living with domestic violence: a differential response through multi-agency collaboration,2018,71,2,162-174,Healey Interagency working in child protection and domestic violence,2018,71,2,175-188,O'Leary The intersection of domestic violence and child protection in Australia: program participant accounts,2018,71,2,189-201,Broady Inclusivity in interagency responses to domestic violence and child protection,2018,71,2,202-214,O'Leary Practitioner perspectives on collaboration across domestic violence child protection and family law: who's minding the gap?,2018,71,2,215-227,Laing A collaborative practice framework for child protection and specialist domestic and family violence services: bridging the research and practice divide,2018,71,2,228-237,Healey Nexus between domestic violence and child protection: multidimensional forms of oppression impacting on migrant and refugee women in Australia,2018,71,2,238-248,Kaur Critical reflection on the ethics of mindfulness,2018,71,1,120-128,Thompson Social work in the emergency department--implementation of a domestic and family violence screening program,2011,64,4,537-554,Power Violence against homeless women: safety and social policy,2011,64,3,346-360,Murray Developing trauma training for an indigenous community: hopefully not seagulls,2011,64,2,215-227,Green Rethinking the "best interests" of the child: voices from Aboriginal child and family welfare practitioners,2011,64,1,96-112,Long Safety planning for youth with suicide risk: a clinical audit,2021,ePub,ePub,ePub,Jacups The prevailing contexts of domestic and family violence and child protection,2023,76,2,141-144,Gair Interprofessional collaboration to develop and deliver domestic violence curriculum to dental students,2023,ePub,ePub,ePub,Carrington