System Failure: The Silencing of Rape Survivours

Summary from Goodreads

One in five Australian women has been the victim of a sexual assault. For these women, there is less than a 1 per cent chance that their rapist has been arrested, prosecuted, and convicted of the crime. These are the bare numerical facts of system failure.

We offer rape survivors a stark go to the police, or remain silent. In recent times, the public pressure on survivors to report has increased, alongside a growing focus on two other civil action against the perpetrator, or going public.

These evolving social responses are intended to offer an alternative to the tradition of silencing. However, each of these choices, for survivors, involves a further sacrifice of what they have already lost. The legal system’s responses to rape were designed without survivors in mind, and they do not address, in any way, the questions that survivors ask or the needs they express.

Simply put, on the systemic response to rape, we are having the wrong conversation.

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Caddyshack Review

This short book is an engaging, rigorous and hard read about how the legal systems response fails rape survivors. The book chronicles some of the author’s clients’ experiences and calls for urgent system change, although does not provide any solutions.

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