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HomeNewsThe Relations Study: Women Who Use Drugs and Their Children Within The Health and Welfare System
The Relations Study: Women who use drugs and their children within the health and welfare system
Parent artwork representing Good Care and Bad Care (The Relations Study - Governing parental opioid use: a relational ethnography)
Tuesday 22 October 2024

CURRENT PROJECT

About

There is a deeply entrenched gender bias that permeates health and welfare systems around women who use drugs, especially when it comes to parenting capacity. While Australian health and social service guidelines state that a woman’s drug use should not be conflated with poor or dangerous parenting, the use of drugs is commonly used a reason to monitor women and/or to remove children. 

To date, there is no in-depth study on the socio-legal experiences of women who use drugs in Australia, or how laws and guidelines are enacted in relation to this population. Building on our work in an innovative UK-based study covering the same topic, this proposal aims to build a new team of Australian researchers to develop a funding application to explore this urgent and under-researched issue.


Project Team

ANU researchers: Anna Olsen (lead), Cathy Banwell, Helen Keane, Isabel Mudford

External Collaborators

Louise Hughes, Canberra Alliance for Harm Minimisation and Advocacy
Anne Whittaker, University of Stirling
Polly Radcliffe, Kings College London