Skip navigation

Gendered Violence and Abuse Conference 2025

Great Hall

Tickets Available

-

Changing Public and Professional perceptions of Gendered Violence and Abuse through research and policy implementation 

Hosted by Northumbria University's Gendered Violence and Abuse Interdisciplinary Research Theme.

This interdisciplinary conference will focus on how to overcome the challenges and complexities of changing public and professional perceptions of gendered violence and abuse.

The topic is complex and multifaceted, influenced by cultural, social, and economic factors. Despite a growing awareness and concern about gendered violence and abuse, changing public and professional perceptions that lead to better outcomes for victim-survivors remains slow.

This conference will focus on how research and organisational policies on gendered violence and abuse are, and can be, used to bring about changes to practice, delivering better outcomes for victim-survivors.

It will explore the complex relationships between research, policy and practice and will address in relation to gendered violence and abuse questions such as:

  • How can academic research and organisational policies effect change in professional practice?
  • How can policy-makers, practitioners and researchers collaborate to increase public and professional awareness of gendered violence and abuse in order to prevent and reduce it?
  • What kinds of strategies are needed to implement change that is capable of ending gender-based violence?

 

Confirmed Speakers

Employer’s Initiative on Domestic Abuse

Professor Parveen Ali, University of Sheffield

Steve Russell, Chief Delivery Officer, NHS England

Responders’ Lab

 

 

Event Details

Great Hall
Sutherland Building, Northumbria University
City Campus
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 8ST


-


Latest News and Features

The Converted Flat in 2049, by the Interaction Research Studio, is one of seven period rooms built as part of the Real Rooms project which opened in July at the Museum of the Home in London.
The UK Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling (CPOM), based at Northumbria University, has been awarded over £400,000 by the European Space Agency to investigate tipping points in the Earth’s icy regions with a focus on the Antarctic. Photo by Professor Andrew Shepherd.
Nature Awards Inclusive Health Research
Some members of History’s editorial team (from left to right): Daniel Laqua (editor-in-chief), Katarzyna Kosior (reviews editor), Lewis Kimberley (editorial assistant), Charotte Alston (deputy editor) and Henry Miller (online editor).
Dr Elliott Johnson, Vice Chancellor’s Fellow in Public Policy at Northumbria University.
Balfour Beatty graduates at Northumbria's winter congregation
NIHR multiple and complex needs
Paramedics at work

Back to top