The Royal Children's Hospital

FVP - Men's Behaviour Change Men's Engagement Practitioner - 6.1 PFT

The Royal Children's Hospital  •  $111k - $116k/yr  •  Alice Springs, AU (Onsite)  •  2 months ago
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Job Description

Tangentyere Council
Aboriginal Corporation (TCAC) is a community controlled Public Benevolent
Institution delivering human services and social enterprise activities for the
benefit of Aboriginal people from the Alice Springs Town Camps, urban Alice
Springs, and Central Australia.

The Family Violence Prevention (FVP)
Division includes a variety of programs including Tangentyere Family
Violence Prevention Program (FVPP) under which sits the Men’s Behaviour Change
Program (MBCP), Tangentyere Women’s Family Safety Group (TWFSG), Strong
Families Program, and Domestic Violence Specialist Children’s Service (DVSCS).

The Tangentyere Men’s Behaviour Change Program (TMBCP) works
towards the safety, wellbeing, human rights, and dignity of women, children,
and others affected by men’s use of violence. It incorporates Element Four of
the Northern Territory’s Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence Reduction
Framework 2018–2028 — Safe, Respected and Free from Violence — and forms part
of the Territory’s ten-year plan to reduce the impact of domestic, family, and
sexual violence in our communities.

The Men’s Engagement Practitioner is a senior role within
the TMBCP, responsible for coordinating the Men’s Engagement Outreach stream,
including the Co-Responder follow-up model, participant case management and
aftercare, and co-coordination of the Tangentyere Men’s Family Safety Group
(TMFSG). The position ensures that men who use violence are engaged through
culturally safe, accountable, and trauma-informed approaches that promote
responsibility, healing, and behaviour change.

Working alongside the Men’s Behaviour Change Practitioners,
Women’s Safety Services of Central Australia (WoSSCA), and partner agencies,
this role contributes to an integrated, whole-of-community response that keeps
men in view, upholds partner safety, and strengthens Aboriginal-led pathways of
accountability and healing.

As part of your role, you will be
working with children, people with a disability and people who are vulnerable.
It is your obligation to always ensure their safety and report any concerns in
line with our duty of care obligations. We have zero tolerance when it comes to
abuse of any kind and will take disciplinary action, including and up to
termination of employment, should we determine that abuse has taken place or
there has been a failure to report any suspected or alleged abuse.

Responsibilities

  • ·Ensure women and their children’s safety is a
    core priority of Men’s Behaviour Change program through collaboration with
    Women’s Safety Services of Central Australia (WoSSCA).
  • ·Coordinate and action outreach responses under
    the Co-Responder model and Men’s Behaviour Change Program (MBCP), ensuring
    timely engagement with men following police call-outs and program referrals.
  • ·Strengthen integrated responses through the
    development of Memorandums of Understanding (MOUs), referral protocols, and
    collaborative case management processes.
  • ·Conduct intake, assessment, and ongoing
    engagement with men in high-risk or complex circumstances to support
    accountability and behavioural change.
  • ·Facilitate TMFSG meetings, manage logistics, and
    document actions and outcomes in accordance with organisational and funding
    requirements.
  • ·Coordinate and co-facilitate the Tangentyere
    Men’s Family Safety Group (TMFSG) as a recognised cultural authority body that
    provides guidance to the Men’s Behaviour Change Program (TMBCP).
  • ·Provide structured mentoring, aftercare, and
    outreach support to men participating in the TMBCP and Co-Responder pathways.
  • ·Maintain accurate, timely, and confidential
    documentation, including risk assessments and detailed case notes, in
    accordance with legal, ethical, and organisational standards.
  • ·Support the development of program manuals,
    referral systems, digital workflows, and evaluation tools to ensure program
    quality and consistency.
  • ·Assist with achieving quality management
    objectives across the organisation.
  • ·Assist with achieving safeguarding objectives
    across the organisation.
  • ·Assist with achieving compliance objectives
    across the organisation.
  • ·Other reasonable duties as required.

Qualifications and Selection Criteria

Required

  • ·Tertiary
    qualification in Social Work, Psychology, Community Development, or related
    discipline (or equivalent experience).
  • ·Demonstrated
    experience providing specialist support to Aboriginal men, families, and
    communities.
  • ·Strong
    knowledge of DFV dynamics and the ability to exercise professional judgement on
    risk and safety.
  • ·Experience
    in outreach engagement in high-risk contexts (e.g., police call-outs, prisons,
    Town Camps).
  • ·Skills
    in program coordination, group facilitation, mentoring, and community
    development.
  • ·Ability
    to contribute to program development, evaluation, and protocols.
  • ·Capacity
    to represent the organisation in interagency forums and provide specialist
    advice.
  • ·High-level
    communication, advocacy, and cultural competency skills.
  • ·Commitment
    to trauma-informed, strengths-based practice prioritising women’s and
    children’s safety.
    Desirable
  • ·An understanding of Aboriginal culture and a
    broad range of contemporary issues affecting Central Australian Aboriginal
    people.
  • ·Current NT Drivers Licence, NT Working with
    Children (Ochre) Card, satisfactory Police Check, and proof of full (3)
    vaccination against COVID-19.

Desirable

  • ·Lived
    experience of men’s engagement or leadership within Aboriginal
    communities.
  • ·Program experience working with Aboriginal Men
    in Central Australia.
  • ·Demonstrated delivery skills in a family
    violence program.
  • ·Current First Aid Certificate, or ability and
    willingness to attain.
  • ·Experience
    in program evaluation and sector advocacy.
The Royal Children's Hospital

About The Royal Children's Hospital

The Royal Children's Hospital (RCH) has been providing outstanding care for Victoria's children and their families for over 147 years.

We are the major specialist paediatric hospital in Victoria and our care extends to children from Tasmania, southern New South Wales and other states around Australia and overseas.

With a passionate, highly skilled and committed staff campus wide of over 5,000, we provide a full range of clinical services, tertiary care and health promotion and prevention programs for children and young people.

We are the designated state-wide major trauma centre for paediatrics in Victoria and a Nationally Funded Centre for cardiac and liver transplantation.

When it comes to training and research we partner with the very best. Our campus partners, the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute (MCRI) and The University of Melbourne Department of Paediatrics, along with the RCH Foundation, are on site with the hospital in Parkville. Together, we are committed to improving the health outcomes for children today and in the future.

In 2016–17, more than 85,654 children attended our Emergency Department, 322,291 specialist clinic appointments were held which was almost 70,000 more than the previous year, more than 17,000 surgeries were performed and more than 48,552 children were admitted to our wards.

Industry
Healthcare & Social Services
Company Size
1,001-5,000 employees
Headquarters
Parkville, AU
Year Founded
Unknown
Website
org.au
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