Missing, murdered and incarcerated Indigenous women in Australia: A literature review

Description

This document presents a review of the Australian literature (“the review”) on missing, murdered and incarcerated Indigenous women in Australia.

This review was written at the invitation of, and in partnership with, Associate Professor Hannah McGlade, Member of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. In 2024, Associate Professor Hannah McGlade will be submitting a series of communiques, named Seven Sisters, to the UN Committee for the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW).

The Seven Sisters communiques draw on seven cases of Indigenous women who have disappeared, been murdered or wrongfully incarcerated over the past 3 decades. The literature review is supplied alongside of, and in support of, this work.

Key messages emerging from the review include:
•Research is lacking. Only seven sources of robust research met inclusion criteria for this review. While a comprehensive dataset on actual figures does not exist, information from various sources indicates missing, murdered and wrongfully incarcerated women number in the hundreds, if not thousands, across Australia.
•The work of credible and authoritative Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors is often neglected and ignored. As a result, authors often have to also invest and engage in advocacy work to be heard.
•Services are failing First Nations women. Service system responses across all sources were described as inadequate, unjust, non-compliant and perpetuating the racist stereotypes of Indigenous women as addicts and violent.

The literature review recommends:
•urgent investment in dedicated resourcing and institutional support for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander-led research on missing, murdered and incarcerated Indigenous women in Australia
•the adoption of an intersectional approach and framework of human rights violations and genocide (similar to a Canadian model) to provide new insights and strengthen the evidence base.

Indigenous Acknowledgement

ANROWS acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land across Australia on which we work and live. We pay our respects to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Elders past and present, and we value Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories, cultures and knowledge.

Copyright Information

This material was produced with funding from the Australian Government and the Australian state and territory governments. Australia’s National Research Organisation for Women’s Safety (ANROWS) gratefully acknowledges the financial and other support it has received from these governments, without which this work would not have been possible. The findings and views reported in this paper are those of the authors and cannot be attributed to the Australian Government, or any Australian state or territory government.