PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report

Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report
2025-03-14
(Press-News.org) Violence is trapping women across Northern Ireland in cycles of trauma and homelessness, with some facing further abuse in temporary accommodation, despite moving there to find a place of safety.

The research from Heriot-Watt University and University of Edinburgh was commissioned by the Community Foundation for Northern Ireland and funded by the Oak Foundation. It is based on in-depth interviews with women with lived experience of violence over five areas of Northern Ireland.

The areas include Belfast and Derry, one smaller urban area in County Down, and two more rural areas of County Antrim and County Fermanagh. The report also covers findings from focus groups with frontline workers and senior key stakeholders.

Shockingly, the report found that victims often face abuse from multiple perpetrators, including intimate partners, extended family members, strangers, and in some cases, paramilitary violence. This combination of threats creates deep challenges for women seeking safety in Northern Ireland communities.

Women in rural areas face particular isolation, with limited access to support services and increased vulnerability to abuse. The research highlighted how perpetrators exploit this isolation, with one woman describing: "You get caught up because it happens incrementally. It gets a bit worse, just a little bit, and then just a bit more every time, it becomes your influence. You're constantly hearing them all the time, especially when they isolate you from your friends."

Despite seeking protection through Northern Ireland's criminal and civil justice systems, many women were failed by inconsistent police responses and faced significant challenges in securing and enforcing protection orders.

A participant explained: "Even though I have that protection order, he and two of his friends came round with hatchets. He actually came through my window, and I phoned the police and said, 'Look, I have a protection order right here,' and it took them over two hours to come."

The report also found stark evidence that many women are forced to leave their homes due to abuse, resulting in homelessness, even when they held legal tenancy or ownership rights. Post-separation harassment meant that many women had to flee again and again, leading to repeat episodes of homelessness.

Temporary accommodation in Northern Ireland, including B&Bs and hostels, were found to have regularly failed to provide adequate safety. Women reported feeling re-traumatised in these settings, particularly in mixed-gender facilities, finding themselves vulnerable to the same dangers they had tried to escape. Due to feeling unsafe, some women choose to sleep rough.

The research also revealed how substance use acts as a coping mechanism for the trauma of abuse, creating additional barriers for some women to accessing essential support.

Women who used substances were often excluded from mainstream temporary accommodation services and pushed toward acutely harmful forms of homelessness, including night shelters and rough sleeping, where they were often exposed to extreme violence and abuse.  

Dr Lynne McMordie is from the Institute for Social Policy, Equalities and Housing Research (I-SPHERE) at Heriot-Watt University. She said:

"This research reveals profound failings in how we respond to women experiencing violence in Northern Ireland. The intersection of domestic abuse, paramilitary threats, and isolation – especially for women living in more rural areas - creates unique challenges that our current systems are failing to address adequately.

"For too long, the focus has been on expecting women to remove themselves from violent situations but this leads to huge financial challenges and loss of housing security. There is a stubborn presumption that women will need to flee their homes if they are escaping abuse. However, time and again, women's attempts to find a place of safety are undermined by systems that should protect them but instead leave them exposed to further harm.

Dawn Shackels, Director of Programmes at Community Foundation Northern Ireland, said:

“The findings of this important study shine a much-needed light on the ongoing failures within our systems to protect women who are survivors of violence and abuse. It is deeply concerning to see how women in Northern Ireland are caught in a relentless cycle of trauma, abuse, and homelessness - often while seeking refuge from violence.

“We echo the study’s recommendations and call for urgent action from all levels of government to ensure that women's safety, dignity, and right to secure housing are prioritised. The Community Foundation for Northern Ireland stands ready to work with our partners to support these vital changes and to ensure that no woman ever has to choose between staying with an abuser or living on the streets."

The study makes several Northern Ireland-specific recommendations, including that the Department of Justice should strengthen protections for women facing violence by ensuring rapid police responses and accessible protection orders that allow women to remain safely in their homes.

The full recommendations and the report’s findings are available on https://i-sphere.site.hw.ac.uk

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Latin American intensivists denounce economic and cultural inequities in the global scientific publishing system

2025-03-13
Researchers from Brazilian, Argentine, and Uruguayan institutions analyze the barriers that low- and middle-income countries face in disseminating research on intensive care medicine, particularly in the treatment of critically ill patients. Published this month in The Lancet, the study highlights how historical and economic biases perpetuate inequalities and suggests changes to make the scientific publishing system more inclusive and representative of the global community. Low- and middle-income countries are home to 85% of the world's population and bear a disproportionate burden of critical illnesses. ...

Older adults might be more resistant to bird flu infections than children, Penn research finds

Older adults might be more resistant to bird flu infections than children, Penn research finds
2025-03-13
PHILADELPHIA— Prior exposures to specific types of seasonal influenza viruses promote cross-reactive immunity against the H5N1 avian influenza virus, according to new research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Older adults who were exposed to seasonal flu viruses that circulated prior to 1968 were found to be more likely to have antibodies that bind to the H5N1 avian flu virus. The findings, published today in Nature Medicine¸ suggest that younger adults and children would benefit more from H5N1 vaccines, even those not tailored specifically to the current strain circulating in birds and ...

Dramatic increase in research funding needed to counter productivity slowdown in farming

2025-03-13
ITHACA, N.Y. – Climate change and flagging investment in research and development has U.S. agriculture facing its first productivity slowdown in decades. A new study estimates the public sector investment needed to reverse course. In the paper, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers model both the dampening effects of climate change on U.S. agriculture and the accelerating effects of publicly funded research and development (R&D) – and use the estimates to quantify the investment in research required to maintain agricultural productivity through 2050. They find that a 5% to 8% per year growth in research investment ...

How chemistry and force etch mysterious spiral patterns on solid surfaces

How chemistry and force etch mysterious spiral patterns on solid surfaces
2025-03-13
Key takeaways Curiosity about a mistake that left tiny dots on a germanium wafer with evaporated metal films led to the discovery of beautiful spiral patterns etched on the surface of the semiconductor by a chemical reaction. Further experiments showed that the patterns arise from chemical reactions that are coupled to mechanical forces through the deformation of a catalyzing agent. The new system is the first major advance in experimental methods to study chemical pattern formation since the 1950s. Studying these complex systems will help scientists understand other natural processes, from crack formation in materials to how stress ...

Unraveling the mysteries of polycystic kidney disease

Unraveling the mysteries of polycystic kidney disease
2025-03-13
OKLAHOMA CITY – Polycystic kidney disease (PKD), a family of genetic disorders that causes clusters of cysts to form on the kidney, is among the most common genetic disorders, affecting some 500,000 people in the United States. Roughly one in every 1,000 people will develop some form of cystic kidney disease during their lifetime, and nearly 40,000 Oklahomans have a chronic kidney disease, according to the Oklahoma Health Care Authority. For many patients, dialysis – a time-consuming and costly procedure – is one of few treatment options. A 2021 study ...

Mother’s high-fat diet can cause liver stress in fetus, study shows

Mother’s high-fat diet can cause liver stress in fetus, study shows
2025-03-13
OKLAHOMA CITY – When mothers eat a diet high in fat and sugars, their unborn babies can develop liver stress that continues into early life. A new study published in the journal Liver International sheds light on changes to the fetus’s bile acid, which affects how liver disease develops and progresses. Bile acids typically help with digestion and absorb dietary fats in the small intestine, but when they reach excessive levels, they become toxic and can damage the liver. While the mother can detoxify the acids, the fetus lacks that ability. Bile acids may re-circulate to the mother for detoxification, but if they don’t, they build ...

Weighing in on a Mars water debate

2025-03-13
More than 3 billion years ago, Mars intermittently had liquid water on its surface. After the planet lost much of its atmosphere, however, surface water could no longer persist. The fate of Mars’ water—whether it was buried as ice, confined in deep aquifers, incorporated into minerals or dissipated into space—remains an area of ongoing research, one of particular interest to LASP Senior Research Scientist Bruce Jakosky, former principal investigator of the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) mission. Last week, in a letter to the editor ...

Researchers ‘seq’ and find a way to make pig retinal cells to advance eye treatments

Researchers ‘seq’ and find a way to make pig retinal cells to advance eye treatments
2025-03-13
MADISON — Inside the human eye, the retina is made up of several types of cells, including the light-sensing photoreceptors that initiate the cascade of events that lead to vision. Damage to the photoreceptors, either through degenerative disease or injury, leads to permanent vision impairment or blindness.  David Gamm, director of UW–Madison’s McPherson Eye Research Institute and professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences, says that stem cell replacement therapy using lab-grown photoreceptors ...

Re-purposed FDA-approved drug could help treat high-grade glioma

2025-03-13
High-grade glioma, an aggressive form of pediatric and adult brain cancer, is challenging to treat given the tumor location, incidence of recurrence and difficulty for drugs to cross the blood-brain barrier. Researchers from the University of Michigan, Dana Farber Cancer Institute and the Medical University of Vienna established a collaborative team to uncover a potential new avenue to address this disease. A study, published in Cancer Cell, shows that high-grade glioma tumor cells harboring DNA alterations in the gene PDGFRA responded to the drug avapritinib, which is already approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration to treat gastrointestinal ...

Understanding gamma rays in our universe through StarBurst

Understanding gamma rays in our universe through StarBurst
2025-03-13
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), in partnership with NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), has developed StarBurst, a small satellite (SmallSat) instrument for NASA's StarBurst Multimessenger Pioneer mission, which will detect the emission of short gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), a key electromagnetic (EM) signature that will contribute to the understanding of neutron star (NS) mergers. NRL transferred the instrument to NASA on March 4 for the next phase, environmental ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Breaking free from dependence on rare resources! A domestic high-performance permanent magnet emerges!

Symptoms of long-COVID can last up to two years after infection with COVID-19

Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report

Latin American intensivists denounce economic and cultural inequities in the global scientific publishing system

Older adults might be more resistant to bird flu infections than children, Penn research finds

Dramatic increase in research funding needed to counter productivity slowdown in farming

How chemistry and force etch mysterious spiral patterns on solid surfaces

Unraveling the mysteries of polycystic kidney disease

Mother’s high-fat diet can cause liver stress in fetus, study shows

Weighing in on a Mars water debate

Researchers ‘seq’ and find a way to make pig retinal cells to advance eye treatments

Re-purposed FDA-approved drug could help treat high-grade glioma

Understanding gamma rays in our universe through StarBurst

Study highlights noninvasive hearing aid 

NASA taps UTA to shape future of autonomous aviation

Mutations disrupt touch-based learning, study finds

Misha lived in zoos, but the elephant’s tooth enamel helps reconstruct wildlife migrations

Eat better, breathe easier? Research points to link between diet, lung cancer

Mesozoic mammals had uniform dark fur

Wartime destruction of Kakhovka Dam in Ukraine has long-term environmental consequences

NIH’s flat 15% funding policy is misguided and damaging

AI reveals new insights into the flow of Antarctic ice

Scientists solve decades-long Parkinson’s mystery

Spinning, twisted light could power next-generation electronics

A planetary boundary for geological resources: Limits of regional water availability

Astronomy’s dirty window to space

New study reveals young, active patients who have total knee replacements are unlikely to need revision surgery in their lifetime

Thinking outside the box: Uncovering a novel approach to brainwave monitoring

Combination immunotherapy before surgery may increase survival in people with head and neck cancer

MIT engineers turn skin cells directly into neurons for cell therapy

[Press-News.org] Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report