One in 10 NSW men have had domestic violence run-ins with police a new report claims

Neve Brissenden
AAP
Nearly 10 per cent of NSW men have had contact with police for domestic and family violence matters.
Nearly 10 per cent of NSW men have had contact with police for domestic and family violence matters. Credit: AAP

One in 10 men in NSW have had run-ins with police for domestic and family violence matters.

The finding was revealed in a report from the Australian Institute of Criminology, which used data from NSW Police and birth data to determine the prevalence of gendered violence across the state.

The report found that 9.6 per cent of men had contact with police over domestic and family violence issues, compared to one in 33 women.

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Overall, 6.3 per cent of people born in NSW have been proceeded against by police for a family and domestic violence offence by age 37.

The research also found that 1.2 per cent of people were responsible for more than half of all recorded family and domestic violence matters.

Family and domestic violence offenders accounted for nearly half of all recorded offences by people in the birth cohort.

Institute of Criminology Deputy Director Rick Brown said the report was the first of its kind to record the prevalence of violence in a population sample.

“By identifying and targeting those who commit domestic violence, especially early in their offending trajectory, we can not only reduce violence against intimate partners and family members but prevent crime more generally,” he said.

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