From the Margins to the Mainstream by Jacqui Theobald Suellen Murray Judith Smart
Author:Jacqui Theobald, Suellen Murray, Judith Smart [Jacqui Theobald, Suellen Murray, Judith Smart]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Educational Theory, Aims & Objectives, Teaching, Teaching Methods
ISBN: 9781475808940
Publisher: R&L Education
Published: 2014-02-27T05:00:00+00:00
Partnering with the state
In 2002 DHS allocated funding for a VWRADVS policy coordinator, but it came with strings attached. Although couched in terms of the governmentâs âcommitment to working collaborativelyâ,77 funding came with conditions intended to alter VWRADVS methods of operating and negotiating.78 DHS funded VWRADVS in order to foster broader critical âdebate about practiceâ and âa diversity of approachesâ.79 By extension, DHS saw reform of VWRADVS as a means to increase servicesâ accountability, a goal most domestic violence service providers now supported. They still, however, demanded that the government recognise its own lack of responsibility and accountability in failing to fund the services adequately.80 Over time, funding to DVVic has continued, but, as policy and program manager Alison Macdonald notes, since this first period of funding, the peak had endured âperiods of great vulnerability and great insecurityâ.81
The adoption of hierarchical decision-making processes was mirrored in an endeavour to bridge the âhistorical differences between refuge, outreach and statewide servicesâ.82 With this aim, VWRADVS voted to adopt the title of Domestic Violence Victoria (DVVic) at its annual general meeting in 2003. This change was also driven by the governmentâs desire for just one formal body.83 It was in part therefore an attempt to generate efficiency and establish formal relationships.84 DVVicâs founding coordinator, Janine Bush, identifies merit in âhaving a feminist organisational structure thatâs got some hierarchy but thatâs ethical, transparent and with clear processes and acknowledging the power and where it lies and making that power accountableâ.85 Current CEO of DVVic Fiona McCormack also perceived the change as positive: âI would much rather have a formal relationship with bureaucrats because itâs acknowledging that we have very different roles ⦠and that your responsibility is to keep government accountable and that itâs not personal.â86
These transitions were contentious, member services being largely suspicious of DVVicâs engagement with the state and less than willing to compromise on their tactics and principles. DVVic also incurred criticism by some members for being unwilling to adopt militant protest tactics during their negotiations with government. Some perceived that their achievements and âpowerâ as a group had been âweakenedâ as a result.87 This criticism from their membership led to concerns by some within DVVic that a âlegitimacy crisisâ had developed.88 However, it was not DVVicâs changing methods and tactics that reduced domestic violence servicesâ position of power in their negotiations with their funding bodies but rather the growing capacity and desire of modern government to exert control over the planning and operation of human service organisations. Ironically, this paralleled the governmentâs determination to relocate responsibility away from the state to âreduce their exposure to riskâ.89 These changes were combined with a preference for funding prevention-based policy initiatives and reluctance to invest in bricks and mortar, including womenâs refuges and other forms of medium- and long-term social housing. The emergence of this new administrative regime from the 1990s also worked to constrain domestic violence servicesâ capacity to undertake political work.
A degree of suspicion continued to plague DVVic following the appointment
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