This post deals with family violence and might be triggering for some readers.
“I’m trying to work out what to do before I end up in a body bag but that seems unavoidable right now.”
This was one of the first replies this month to my research questionnaire on domestic violence. The participant is a young lawyer in regional Australia who has escaped a coercively controlling relationship, during which she received several murder threats and survived two murder attempts.
WATCH: Women and violence: the hidden numbers. Post continues below.
In the next six months, as coronavirus lockdown regulations bite, she is more terrified of her ex than of COVID-19. This is because she is required to hand over their child weekly to him in order to comply with Family Court orders.
There is no longitudinal research on what happens when families are required by government regulation to stay at home for six months, because it has not happened in living memory.
Victims and their children who live with the perpetrator will be at constant risk.