LGBTQI domestic violence a crisis of ‘invisibility’
Domestic violence in the LGBTQI community is not taken seriously enough and victims often don’t...
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by Ainslie McNally | Mar 18, 2024
Domestic violence in the LGBTQI community is not taken seriously enough and victims often don’t...
Read Moreby Ali Baker | Feb 28, 2023
Outside Manly Library there’s a little girl wearing a pink dressing gown patterned with unicorns...
Read Moreby Ali Baker | Feb 7, 2023
Beneath the wall-mounted TV broadcasting an NRL game, Buster Nut is strapped in bondage-style...
Read Moreby Sam Kosack | Jul 28, 2022
Manly players will take to the field tonight in their Pride jerseys for the match against the...
Read Moreby Mie Jensen | Jun 9, 2022
Jeraldine is navigating her new life as a woman, but she feels imprisoned by her past. “I do...
Read Moreby Phoebe McDermott | Sep 7, 2021
Blue and red lights flash around the room, reflected by a disco ball dangling from the ceiling....
Read Moreby Arshmah Jamal | Jun 8, 2021
Queer, Arab, and Muslim are phrases you don’t commonly see together, but, for writer Mohammad...
Read Moreby Dana Rutner | Feb 23, 2021
Bangalore, India has a hidden underground scene. And who runs this scene? Drag Queens. It a place where LGBTQIA+ culture is not always spoken about, Bangalore’s Queens shed light on a taboo topic.
The story was produced by Dana Rutner as part of the UTS Foreign Correspondents Study Tour.
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