| Dr Kyllie Cripps |
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Post Doctoral Research Fellow |
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| Biography |
Kyllie Cripps is a Pallawah woman whose research interests include issues relating to Indigenous family violence and child abuse including policy development and program delivery; Indigenous research processes and practices; Indigenous health and Indigenous education.
Kyllie is currently leading an ARC project called ‘Building and supporting community led partnerships to respond to Indigenous family violence in Victoria’. Her PhD thesis was entitled 'Enough Family Fighting: Indigenous Community Responses to Addressing Family Violence in Australia & the United States'.
Kyllie has taught Aboriginal Health to nursing students at the University of South Australia and the University of Melbourne and supervised higher degree research students.
She has also previously worked on the analysis of ABS data, Indigenous family violence policy with ATSIS, the literature review for the Gordon Inquiry, and worked in Indigenous education at the Department of Education, Science and Technology.
For more information including Kyllie’s qualifications, publications, research grants and classifications, visit Find an Expert.Professional Profile
