Thank you for that.
It's along the same lines and in the same topic area. Clearly, while it's certainly good news that the incidence of violence is coming down, 640,000, which I think was the number, is clearly substantive. It really conjures up concerns about how you come at the root causes of this. There's a breakdown of respect within the family unit--whatever that might be.
You have some numbers looking at the fact that certainly the younger women, in particular the 15-to-24 category, higher incidents among the aboriginal families and so on.... I wonder, was there any measure looking at issues of education and economic affluence within the family? Were there relationships there? Ultimately you need to come to Ms. Mathyssen's point, which is how you then come at solutions for this kind of thing.
Clearly, those are the sorts of questions that come to mind when you see these critical issues happening within the family. There is still a lack of respect that is ultimately endangering the lives of women and children. What can we do to address that? It would interesting to know where and what categories of our society are more affected by this.