10 results on '"Katz, Ilan"'
Search Results
2. The national evaluation of the Communities for children initiative.
- Author
-
MUIR, Kirsty, EDWARDS, Ben, GRAY, Matthew, WISE, Sarah, HAYES, Alan, and Katz, Ilan
- Published
- 2010
3. Enhancing service systems for protecting children : promoting child wellbeing and child protection reform in Australia.
- Author
-
HIGGINS, Daryl and Katz, Ilan
- Published
- 2008
4. Evaluation of the Cape York Welfare Reform trial.
- Author
-
Katz, Ilan and RAVEN, Margaret
- Published
- 2013
5. Preventing child sexual abuse (CSA) in ethnic minority communities: A literature review and suggestions for practice in Australia.
- Author
-
Sawrikar, Pooja and Katz, Ilan
- Subjects
- *
PREVENTION of child sexual abuse , *CHILD sexual abuse , *ETHNIC groups , *MINORITIES , *SCHOOL health services , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
A systematic literature review was conducted to address the immense national gap in knowledge on child sexual abuse (CSA) and ethnic minority communities in Australia, which necessarily borrowed from overseas. One theme explored within the review was that of prevention, and it was found that school-based programs are the most common type of prevention effort. The literature also calls for ‘culturally tailored’ programs to avoid homogenising victims' needs, however in Western multicultural countries like Australia there is a risk that such school-based programs heighten racism for ethnic minority children. Thus, program elements that are culturally sensitive could be incorporated into universal programs instead. Universal programs are also beneficial because they help reach many children regardless of their cultural background, help send the message that all children are equally valued and protected, help create unity and support among diverse victims, and can be further justified by three relatively stable cross-cultural findings: (i) that the prevalence of CSA is high worldwide, (ii) all children require protection irrespective of gender, and (iii) perpetrators are usually known to the victim. To help mobilise their role, service providers could co-deliver school-based programs especially to address institutional CSA within schools. They could also provide training to other health professionals to improve their identification of CSA and confidence to probe; a form of early intervention and therefore ‘secondary prevention’. Overall, this review argues that the importance of family reputation in collectivist cultures needs to be taken into account when designing and evaluating prevention programs so that delays in disclosure and help-seeking due to cultural pressure are not mistaken as evidence for their ineffectiveness. The findings are significant because they help progress the ‘prevention’ field in Australia where literature is essentially absent, particularly in the school and service system arenas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Waiting for redress: Child sexual abuse survivors' experiences of Australia's National Redress Scheme.
- Author
-
Cortis, Natasha and Katz, Ilan
- Subjects
- *
CHILD sexual abuse , *ADULT child abuse victims , *CHILD abuse , *PROCEDURAL justice - Abstract
Governments in multiple countries have established redress schemes to acknowledge institutional responsibility for child maltreatment; to provide survivors with access to compensation, counselling and apologies; and to prompt better practice to prevent child maltreatment. Establishing a National Redress Scheme was recommended by Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. The Scheme commenced in 2018 and will run for a decade. This study sought to understand the ways survivors have experienced applying for redress under the National Redress Scheme, and how Scheme processes could be improved for survivors. Participants were 322 survivors of child sexual abuse who had applied for redress or considered doing so during the first two years of the Scheme's operation. Two thirds (68%) were aged 55 or over and over half (55%) were men. To provide feedback about their experiences and perceptions of the National Redress Scheme, participants completed closed and open-ended survey questions. Only a minority rated the Scheme as either good (16%) or very good (11%). Survey comments provide insight into the ways waiting has contributed to survivors' negative experiences of the Scheme. Survivors waited for the Scheme to be established, for institutions to opt-in, for decisions, and for direct personal responses. Waiting compounded uncertainty and was retraumatising for survivors. Some avoided seeking redress due to likely delays and risks of retraumatisation. Australia's National Redress Scheme is an ambivalent policy innovation which can both facilitate support and exacerbate harm. The design of redress schemes should pre-emptively address their potential to generate harm, including by recognising that rapid responses are essential to procedural justice, and particularly important for older survivors of child sexual abuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. How has the relationship between parental education and child outcomes changed in Australia since the 1980s?
- Author
-
Redmond, Gerry, Katz, Ilan, Smart, Diana, and Gubhaju, Bina
- Subjects
- *
OUTCOME assessment (Education) , *PARENTING , *EDUCATION , *CHILD development , *SOCIAL skills , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
This paper examines how the relationship between parents' educational achievement (a marker of their socio-economic status) and children's early developmental outcomes has evolved in Australia since the early 1980s. The specific focus of this paper is whether the gradient in children's early developmental outcomes by parents' education has changed since the 1980s. A comparative analysis of two surveys is undertaken that follows Australian cohorts of children through their early years -- the Australian Temperament Project (following children born in Victoria in the early 1980s) and the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (following a representative sample of children born in Australia in 1999). The analysis shows that the relationship between parental education and children's early developmental outcomes does not in general appear to have changed greatly over the years. The gradient associated with behaviour difficulties, persistence in behaviour difficulties over time, and in reading skills has either remained the same or strengthened somewhat, while the gradient associated with social skills has weakened. The paper concludes with a discussion of issues that might explain these trends. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Findings from the Kids in Communities Study (KiCS): a mixed methods study examining community-level influences on early childhood development
- Author
-
Robert Tanton, Sally Brinkman, Sharon Goldfeld, Billie Giles-Corti, Ilan Katz, Geoffrey Woolcock, Karen Villanueva, Goldfeld, Sharon, Villanueva, Karen, Tanton, Robert, Katz, Ilan, Brinkman, Sally, Giles-Corti, Billie, and Woolcock, Geoffrey
- Subjects
Early childhood education ,Gerontology ,Male ,Parents ,Social Sciences ,Pediatrics ,Social Geography ,Families ,0302 clinical medicine ,Child Development ,Sociology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Public and Occupational Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Early childhood ,Human Families ,Child ,Children ,Built environment ,Qualitative Research ,Multidisciplinary ,Schools ,Geography ,4. Education ,Child Health ,Focus Groups ,early childhood development ,Policy ,Research Design ,Child, Preschool ,Medicine ,Neighborhoods ,community ,Female ,Psychology ,Kids in Communities Study ,Research Article ,Census ,KiCS ,Science ,Qualitative property ,Socially Disadvantaged People ,Human Geography ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Vulnerable Populations ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Stakeholder Participation ,030225 pediatrics ,Humans ,Social Stratification ,Social determinants of health ,Socioeconomic status ,Survey Research ,Australia ,Community Participation ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Focus group ,Disadvantaged ,Social Class ,Age Groups ,People and Places ,Earth Sciences ,Housing ,Population Groupings - Abstract
There is increasing international interest in place-based approaches to improve early childhood development (ECD) outcomes. The available data and evidence are limited and precludes well informed policy and practice change. Developing the evidence-base for community-level effects on ECD is one way to facilitate more informed and targeted community action. This paper presents overall final findings from the Kids in Communities Study (KiCS), an Australian mixed methods investigation into community-level effects on ECD in five domains of influence–physical, social, governance, service, and sociodemographic. Twenty five local communities (suburbs) across Australia were selected based on ‘diagonality type’ i.e. whether they performed better (off-diagonal positive), worse (off-diagonal negative), or ‘as expected’ (on-diagonal) on the Australian Early Development Census (AEDC) relative to their socioeconomic profile. The approach was designed to determine replicable and modifiable factors that were separate to socioeconomic status. Between 2015–2017, stakeholder interviews (n = 146), parent and service provider focus groups (n = 51), and existing socio-economic and early childhood education and care administrative data were collected. Qualitative and quantitative data analyses were undertaken to understand differences between 14 paired disadvantaged local communities (i.e. on versus off-diagonal). Further analysis of qualitative data elicited important factors for all 25 local communities. From this, we developed a draft set of ‘Foundational Community Factors’ (FCFs); these are the factors that lay the foundations of a good community for young children. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2021
9. Local Housing Characteristics Associated with Early Childhood Development Outcomes in Australian Disadvantaged Communities
- Author
-
Sally Brinkman, Hannah Badland, Billie Giles-Corti, Ilan Katz, Karen Villanueva, Robert Tanton, Ju-Lin Lee, Sharon Goldfeld, Geoffrey Woolcock, Villanueva, Karen, Badland, Hannah, Tanton, Robert, Katz, Ilan, Brinkman, Sally, Lee, Ju-Lin, Woolcock, Geoffrey, Giles-Corti, Billie, and Goldfeld, Sharon
- Subjects
family ,mixed methods ,Public housing ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,lcsh:Medicine ,Vulnerable Populations ,Article ,urban planning ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Child Development ,Housing tenure ,Residence Characteristics ,11. Sustainability ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Social determinants of health ,Early childhood ,Socioeconomics ,Child ,Neighbourhood (mathematics) ,housing ,Poverty ,4. Education ,lcsh:R ,05 social sciences ,1. No poverty ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Australia ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Focus Groups ,Focus group ,Disadvantaged ,early childhood development ,inequity ,Child, Preschool ,community ,neighbourhood ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Disadvantaged communities tend to have poorer early childhood development outcomes. Access to safe, secure, and stable housing is a well-known social determinant of health but there is a need to examine key features of neighbourhood housing that reduce early childhood development inequities. The 2012 Australian Early Development Census (AEDC), a population-wide measure of early childhood development, and the Australian Bureau of Statistics Socio-economic Index for Areas Index of Relative Socio-economic Disadvantage were used to select fourteen disadvantaged local communities in five Australian states and territories based on those performing better (off-diagonal), or as expected (on-diagonal) on the AEDC relative to their socio-economic profile. Between 2015&ndash, 2017, qualitative and quantitative housing data were collected in the local communities. In total, 87 interviews with stakeholders, 30 focus groups with local service providers and parents, and Australian Census dwelling information were analysed. A comparative case study approach was used to examine differences in housing characteristics (e.g., public housing, density, affordability, and tenure) between disadvantaged local communities performing &lsquo, better than expected&rsquo, and &lsquo, as expected&rsquo, on early childhood development. Perceived better housing affordability, objectively measured housing tenure (ownership) and perceived and objectively measured lower-density public housing were housing characteristics that emerged as points of difference for disadvantaged local communities where children had relatively better early childhood development outcomes. These characteristics are potential modifiable and policy sensitive housing levers for reducing early childhood development inequities.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Kids in Communities Study (KiCS) study protocol: a cross-sectional mixed-methods approach to measuring community-level factors influencing early child development in Australia
- Author
-
Robert Tanton, Karen Villanueva, Sharon Goldfeld, Ilan Katz, Geoffrey Woolcock, Sally Brinkman, Billie Giles-Corti, Goldfeld, Sharon, Villanueva, Karen, Tanton, Robert, Katz, Ilan, Brinkman, Sally, Woolcock, Geoffrey, and Giles-Corti, Billie
- Subjects
Research design ,Early childhood education ,Male ,Parents ,Mixed methods ,Child Health Services ,Community ,Social Environment ,0302 clinical medicine ,Child Development ,Residence Characteristics ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Protocol ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Early childhood ,Child ,Child Health ,General Medicine ,Focus Groups ,3. Good health ,Policy ,Research Design ,Child, Preschool ,community ,Female ,Public Health ,Adult ,mixed methods ,Qualitative property ,Environment ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,030225 pediatrics ,Humans ,Indicators ,Socioeconomic status ,neighborhood ,child development ,Medical education ,business.industry ,Neighborhood ,Australia ,Child development ,Focus group ,indicators ,Local community ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Social Class ,Environment Design ,business - Abstract
Introduction: Healthy childhood development in the early years is critical for later adult health and well-being. Early childhood development (ECD) research has focused primarily on individual, family and school factors, but largely ignored community factors. The Kids in Communities Study (KiCS) will test and investigate community-level influences on child development across Australia. Methods and analysis: Cross-sectional mixed-methods study exploring community-level effects in 25 Australian local communities; selection based on community socioeconomic status (SES) and ECD using the Australian Early Development Census (AEDC), a population measure of child development, to create a local community ‘diagonality type’, that is, those performing better or worse (off-diagonal), or as expected (on-diagonal) on the AEDC relative to their SES. Data collection includes stakeholder interviews, parent and service provider focus groups, and surveys with general community residents and service providers, mapping of neighbourhood design and local amenities and services, analysis of policy documents, and the use of existing sociodemographic and early childhood education and care data. Quantitative data will be used to test associations between local community diagonality type, and ECD based on AEDC scores. Qualitative data will provide complementary and deeper exploration of these same associations. Ethics and dissemination: The Royal Children's Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee approved the study protocol (#30016). Further ethics approvals were obtained from State Education and Health departments and Catholic archdioceses where required. ECD community-level indicators will eventually be derived and made publically available. Findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals, community reports, websites and policy briefs to disseminate results to researchers, and key stakeholders including policymakers, practitioners and (most importantly) the communities involved. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2017
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.