2. Tom Dusevic, ‘In hot blood’, SBS (online), 22 November 2016.
3. Tony Abbott, ‘National awareness campaign to reduce violence against women and children’, media release from the Office of the Prime Minister, 4 March 2015.
4. Judith Ireland, ‘Homelessness funding extended for two years under National Partnership Agreement’,
5. Richard Denniss, ‘Money. Power. Freedom.’ Speech to the Breakthrough conference, Victoria Women’s Trust, 2016.
6. Ross Homel, Peta McKay & John Henstridge,
7. Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs,
8. ‘Gender-based abuse: the global epidemic’,
9. Lynn Marie Houston & William V. Lombardi,
10. KPMG,
11. White Ribbon Australia, ‘What is primary prevention?’ fact sheet.
12.
13. ‘Defending gender Part 2: The best place to be a woman’,
14. Smoking in enclosed public places – the Tobacco Products Control Act 2006, Government of Western Australia, Department of Health.
15. Merran Hitchick, ‘Australian smokers to pay more than $45 for a packet of cigarettes from 2020’,
16. M. M. Scollo & M. H. Winstanley, ‘Tobacco in Australia: Facts and issues’, Melbourne: Cancer Council Victoria, 2018.
17. World Health Organization, ‘Smoking prevalence, total (ages 15+)’, Global Health Observatory Data Repository, 2016.
18. Intergovernmental Committee on Drugs (IGCD) Standing Committee on Tobacco,
19. ‘High Point 10–79’, Big Mountain Data, documentary, in production.
20.
21. Daniel Duane, ‘Straight Outta Boston’,
22. John Tucker, ‘Can police prevent domestic violence simply by telling offenders to stop?’
23. ‘Using a focused deterrence strategy with intimate partner violence’,
24.
25. White House Office of the Press Secretary,
26. Rachel Olding & Nick Ralston, ‘Bourke tops list: more dangerous than any other country in the world’,
27. Alison Vivian & Eloise Schnierer,
28.
29. Council of State Governments Justice Center,
30. Greg Moore,
31.
32. New evidence from Bourke, Just Reinvest NSW.
33. Maranguka Justice Reinvestment Project,
34.
35. Caitlyn Byrd, ‘In the fifth most deadly state for domestic violence deaths, a new South Carolina program sees first flicker of success’,
Об авторе