We’ve rounded up all the latest stories from Australia and around the world – so you don’t have to go searching.
1. Family violence is the main catalyst for youth homelessness.
By ABC NEWS
A national study into youth homelessness is recommending interventions to help school-aged young people, who are couch surfing or have run away from home, avoid a life of adult homelessness.
The Cost of Youth Homelessness study is a joint project by Swinburne, Western Australia and Charles Sturt universities and will soon reveal the federal cost of youth homelessness.
The study’s initial snapshot report looked at the cost to homeless youths themselves, both social and psychological.
Related content: One of the hardest parts of being a homeless woman is barely ever discussed.
“What would society be willing to pay in order to move people from a low quality of life, a life in which they have high psychological distress, and get them into housing and education and a full life ahead of them?” Paul Flatau from the University of Western Australia said.
The report found at least 44,000 Australians aged younger than 25 were homeless and most of them were couch surfing.
The main catalyst for youth homelessness is family conflict. An example of this situation is Lily.
She got sick of the partying, drinking and violence in her home when she was trying to study for year 12, so she moved out, only to land in a refuge.
Top Comments
I suspect the work of Gillian Triggs was "ravaged" not "ravished" by the Coalition!