³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾

Funding for public policy research

Four University of Sydney projects have been awarded funding for public policy research on family violence, youth runaways, gender equity in the workplace and disaster management.

The prestigious (JMI) Policy Challenge Grants were awarded at a breakfast event at NSW Parliament this morning.

Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) said she was thrilled to see four all-women teams leading this important research.

“The University of Sydney has been a partner of JMI since its inception in 2019. We are thrilled to collaborate with government, industry and community partners to review and co-design public policies that have a significant impact on the lives of Australians,” Professor Johnston said.

“I look forward to seeing the progress of these important new projects that aim to better understand and reduce the prevalence of youth runaways, establish gender-equitable workplaces in NSW as the norm, design disaster management policies in partnership with the community and assess the impact COVID had on family violence services.”

JMI is an independent, non-partisan policy institute, bringing government, academic and other experts together to develop practical solutions that address societal challenges and improve lives. It is a partnership between the NSW Government, the University of Sydney, Western Sydney University, and the University of Technology Sydney. Professor Johnston sits on the JMI board.

Understanding youth runaways

will lead a team from the , which includes , , , and Ms Suzanne Pope, on a project investigating the characteristics and risk profiles for youth who go missing or run away. The project will receive around $81,000 in funding.

Creating a gender-equitable future

from the , will lead a team, including and on a $40,000 project to develop research-informed principles for a gender equitable future of work in NSW.

Working together on disaster management

will lead a team from the , which includes , and on a $50,000 project to formalise community perspectives in disaster management.

Examining family violence services

from the , will lead a team, including Dr Amira Aftab (WSU), Professor Farrah Ahmed (Melbourne) and Dr Balawyn Jones (La Trobe), to look at the impacts of COVID-19 on domestic and family violence service provision in culturally and linguistically diverse and faith-based communities. They will receive $25,000 in funding.

/University Release. View in full .