SWIRLS is committed to nurturing future leaders through groundbreaking research that actively collaborates with industry, government, and the community. Within our vibrant research ecosystem, our dedicated PhD students are empowered to pursue advanced studies in social work, enabling them to innovate and drive meaningful change.
Dr Amy Bromley
Thesis title:
Creating meaningful change: A critical realist study of the relationship between psychological empowerment and systemic reform in the Australian child protection system.
Supervisors:
Associate Professor Helen McLaren and Associate Professor Michelle Jones
In Australia, the proportion of children experiencing abuse and neglect continues to rise despite ongoing systemic reforms. Without an in-depth analysis of how systems change, there is the risk that future reforms will continue to be costly, ineffective, and leave children vulnerable to maltreatment. This thesis contributes originally to the growing body of knowledge by examining the relationship between the psychological empowerment of child protection practitioners and their response to systemic reform.
Dr Roxana Diamond
Awards:
2022 Recipient of the Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Doctoral Thesis Excellence Prize
Thesis title:
Come as you are’: Peer research exploring the everyday lives of sex workers in South Australia.
Underpinned by a ‘Nothing About Us Without Us’ approach, this research is conducted by a sex worker and explores the everyday lives of South Australian sex workers, centring their voices. It rejects the binary that depicts either the ‘victimised’ sex worker or the fully empowered one to expose the nuances and shifts in power and agency that sex workers experience day to day.
Nicola Trenorden
Thesis title:
The use of creativity and imagination to promote children’s voice, visibility, meaning making and resilience.
Supervisors:
Professor Sarah Wendt and Dr Carmela Bastian
This study involves child centred participatory and collaborative therapeutic approaches utilizing creativity and imagination to explore how they uniquely contribute to trauma informed practice and bolster resilience in vulnerable children. This study recognises that when children’s capability and agency is acknowledged and embraced in a creative therapeutic relationship, their ability to the navigate the effects of trauma is possible. Central to this study is listening and consulting with vulnerable children to seek their views and experiences in therapy through child centric approaches, in particular, trauma informed expressive arts therapies. A participatory action research method employing arts based and child-centred methods will be used, involving middle years children (ages 7- 11). To support genuine engagement with children, a rights-based approach and a childism lens will be central in elevating the voice and views of children and analysing structural experiences of children in therapy and surrounding systems.
Emma Brennan
Thesis title:
Feminist mental health professionals and the pathologisation of domestic violence in Australia from 1980 to 2020.
Supervisors:
Associate Professor Catherine Kevin and Dr Monique Mulholland
This research investigates how feminist mental health professionals responded to domestic violence in Australia from 1980 to 2020. It explores the capacities of feminist, trauma-informed and victim-centred approaches to domestic violence from within mental health services; professions that have historically blamed and pathologised victim/survivors.
Jade Yim Moore
Thesis title:
How are children seen, heard, and responded to in the context of family focused services when domestic and family violence is present?
Supervisors:
Professor Sarah Wendt and Dr Carmela Bastian
The impact of domestic and family violence (DFV) on children and young people is widely understood with recognition of the need to respond to children directly. However, children and young people continue to be seen as secondary or at times invisible victims in responses to DFV, especially prior to separation. This research aims to develop an understanding of how family focused services ensure that children are heard and responded to when a family presents experiencing DFV.
Lida Shams
Thesis title:
Digital Health for Substance Use Disorder Treatment: Technology Acceptance by Social Workers.
Supervisors:
Professor Sara Wendt, Professor Giselle Rampersad, Associate Professor Niranjan Bidargadd
Lida Shams is a third-year PhD candidate working at the intersection of technology and social work. She specializes in humanizing digital health and driving digital health transformation in social work practice. Her research focuses on "Digital Health for Substance Use Disorder: Technology Acceptance by Social Workers.
Recognizing the profound impact of human connection in social work, Lida is dedicated to facilitating positive change. Her work aims to bridge the gap between digital health and social workers, as well as other clinicians, to understand how their roles are evolving and how to harness the power of technology for the benefit of those they serve
Sharon Meagher
Thesis title:
Aboriginal Health Workers and Child Protection. Tell me Why: the story of my life and my music. Archie Roach singing up stories of loss and sorrow.
Supervisors:
Professor Sarah Wendt and Associate Professor Natalie Harkin
The lyrics of Archie Roach attesting his and his sibling’s removal is a sorrow that he returns to constantly because songs are the story of his life, how he was stolen from parents who loved and cherished him. This study is an exploration of the roles and responsibilities that Aboriginal Health Workers can have in child protection.
Tessa Cunningham
Thesis title:
Criminalised young people and the worlds we create for them: an exploration of discourse, subjectivity and power.
Supervisors:
Professor Sarah Wendt and Dr Kate Seymour
Tessa's PhD research involves narrative based, co-design research with criminalised young people to explore the complexity of their everyday lives and lived experiences. It aims to provide criminalised young people a platform to speak to their lived experiences on their own terms, and challenges the individualising approaches that dominate criminological research. Rather than analysing what these narratives say about young people themselves, Tessa's research uses these narratives to explore and analyse discourse and the worlds we, as a society, have created for these young people.
Natalie Parmenter
Thesis title:
Exploring lived experiences of personal safety in supported accommodation with people with intellectual disability.
Supervisors:
Professor Sally Robinson, Professor Sarah Wendt
Everyone has the right to feel safe and to feel protected in their own home. Unfortunately, for many people with intellectual disability, safety is not always assured. People with disability are able to realise greater independence living outside of the family home in supported accommodation or supported independent living. With a sense of autonomy, choice, and control, comes an additional factor of safety and self-protection.
There was a direct collaboration with people with intellectual disability who live in supported accommodation, framed using a post-structural feminist and inclusive citizenship framework. They shared stories of the barriers and facilitators to enacting safety. This provided a platform for exploring what implications these might have in ensuring people feel they have the power to determine their safety in their own homes.
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