Sexual exploitation can have significant short- and longer-term impacts on victim-survivors. However, there is currently a lack of research exploring the support needs of sexual exploitation victim-survivors accessing support in Australia, and barriers to support provision. To address this knowledge gap, we analysed case management records for 50 victim-survivors of sexual exploitation in Australia and conducted interviews with 12 victim-survivor caseworkers.
On average, victim-survivors required support across six domains, the most common being financial hardship, mental health, social isolation and housing and accommodation. The most crucial barriers to service provision were systemic in nature. For example, some victim‑survivors on temporary visas were ineligible for government funded medical services, affordable housing or welfare schemes, which placed significant financial burdens on victim‑survivors and support services.
These findings demonstrate that to support the recovery of victim-survivors, services need to be funded appropriately to ensure they can provide holistic wraparound interventions.
Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abstract
- Executive summary
- Support needs of sexual exploitation victim-survivors
- Barriers to supporting sexual exploitation victim-survivors
- Discussion and conclusion
- Introduction
- Defining sexual exploitation
- Prevalence and impact
- Research aims and methods
- Ethics approval
- Analysis
- Final sample
- Limitations
- Support needs of sexual exploitation victim-survivors in Australia
- Financial assistance
- Housing and accommodation
- Employment and education
- Health care
- Social and community engagement
- Safety, legal and visa issues
- Domestic and family violence
- Co-occurrence of support needs
- Barriers to supporting sexual exploitation victim-survivors in Australia
- Individual barriers
- Interrelationship barriers
- Systemic barriers
- Discussion
- The importance of flexible and responsive service delivery models
- The influence of policy and legislative frameworks in determining support needs
- Addressing the primary needs of sexual exploitation victim-survivors as a first priority
- Conclusion
- References
- Appendix: Coding framework