Puneet Varma (Editor)

Freda Briggs

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Freda Akeroyd

Spouse(s)
  
Ken Briggs

Title
  
Emeritus professor

Children
  
2

Freda Briggs httpsfarm3staticflickrcom2753412679893816a

Born
  
1 December 1930 (
1930-12-01
)
Huddersfield, England

Occupation
  
Teacher, social worker, academic, author

Known for
  
Child protection expert

Awards
  
Inaugural Australian Humanitarian Award 1998Senior Australian of the Year 2000Officer of the Order of Australia 2005

Died
  
7 April 2016, Adelaide, Australia

People also search for
  
Gillian K. Potter, Russell Hawkins, Donna Broadhurst

Books
  
Child Protection: The Esse, Developing Personal Safety Ski, Child Protection: A Guide f, Smart Parenting for Safer, The Early Years of School: T

Professor freda briggs issues in child protection


Freda Briggs AO (1 December 1930 – 7 April 2016) was an Australian academic, author and child protection advocate. In 2000, she was named Senior Australian of the Year for her pioneering work in child protection.

Contents

Freda briggs a simple tribute


Early life and education

Briggs was born Freda Akeroyd on 1 December 1930 in Huddersfield, England. She had one brother, nine years her junior. She attended Deighton Council School and Royds Hall School.

Briggs worked briefly as an office clerk at Imperial Chemical Industries before joining the London Metropolitan Police, working in child protection. She said in 2007 that she joined the police after seeing an advertisement in a local paper seeking female police recruits, noting that it offered free accommodation and food.

In 1963, Briggs started studying by correspondence, eventually completing a teacher training course at Warwick University. She worked as a teacher and social worker in Derbyshire for six years. She completed a graduate degree in education and obtained postgraduate qualifications in psychology and sociology at the University of Sheffield and became a lecturer in child development.

Career

Briggs emigrated to Melbourne in 1975 to become Director of Early Childhood Studies at the State College of Victoria (now part of Monash University). She moved to Adelaide in 1980, where she became dean of the Institute of Early Childhood and Family Studies at the University of South Australia and established a pioneering child protection course. In 2004, the Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard, recognised her work by awarding a $10 million endowment for the provision of the National Child Protection Research Centre at the university. In 2005, she was appointed Foundation Chair of Child Development and an emeritus professor, lecturing in sociology, child protection and family studies.

Briggs provided assistance to royal commissions and parliamentary inquiries and wrote numerous submissions to state and federal inquiries relating to child protection including the Mullighan Inquiry, and the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. She advised police forces in Australia and New Zealand and was a media consultant on child protection issues relating to TV, movies and computer games. Briggs was considered one of Australia's leading experts about child abuse issues and an outspoken advocate for children's rights internationally.

Briggs was a patron for the Adelaide Women's and Children's Hospital paediatric palliative care project and a South Australia ambassador to the prime minister's department on the recognition of women. She also campaigned with success against mandatory retirement from the workforce at 65.

Personal life

Briggs married Kenneth Briggs in 1952. They became foster carers early in their marriage and had two children of their own.

Death

Briggs died at the Royal Adelaide Hospital on 7 April 2016 at age 85.

Awards and honours

Briggs was the inaugural recipient of the Australian Humanitarian Award in 1998. She was named Senior Australian of the Year in 2000 and became an officer of the Order of Australia in 2005. She was also a recipient of the Anzac Fellowship Award, the national Centenary Medal, the Jean Denton Memorial Fellowship and the Creswick Fellowship Award.

In 2009, Briggs received an honorary Doctor of Letters degree from the University of Sheffield for outstanding research, publications and contributions to education relating to child abuse and child protection.

Books

  • Briggs, F. (1986) Child sexual abuse: confronting the problem Melbourne: Pitman. ISBN 978-0858963870
  • Briggs, F. (1993) Why my child?: Supporting the Families of Victims of Child Sexual Abuse Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-0788155437
  • Briggs, F. (Editor) (1995) From victim to offender: How child sexual abuse victims become offenders Sydney: Allen and Unwin. ISBN 978-1863737593
  • Briggs, F. (Editor) (1998) Children and families- Australian perspectives Sydney: Allen and Unwin. ISBN 978-1863736268
  • Briggs, F. and Hawkins, R.M.F. (1998) Dare to Support Your Kids: A drug education programme for parents Wellington: DARE Foundation.
  • Briggs, F. and Hawkins, R.M.F. (1998) Dare to Make Change Wellington: DARE Foundation.
  • Briggs, F. and Potter, G. (1999) The early years of school: teaching and learning Melbourne: Addison-Wesley Longman. ISBN 978-0733901706
  • Briggs, F. and McVeity, M. (2001) Teaching Children to Protect Themselves Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1864489927
  • Briggs, F. (2000) Developing Personal Safety Skills in Children with Disabilities London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers. ISBN 978-1853022456
  • Briggs, F. (2002) To what extent can “Keeping ourselves safe” protect children? PUB L 169. New Zealand Police, Wellington.
  • Briggs, F. (2012) Smart Parenting for Safer Kids Melbourne: JoJo Publishing. ISBN 978-0980871005
  • Briggs, F. (2012) Child Protection: The Essential Guide Melbourne: JoJo Publishing. ISBN 978-0987463579
  • Book chapters and journal articles

  • Briggs, F. and Lehmann, K. (1989) "Significance of children's drawings in cases of sexual abuse". Early Child Development and Care Vol 47 (1), 131-147. doi:10.1080/0300443890470107
  • Briggs, F. (1991) "Child protection programmes - Can they protect young children?" Early Child Development and Care Vol 67. 61-72. doi:10.1080/0300443910670106
  • Briggs, F. and Hawkins, R. M. F. (1994) "Follow-up data on the effectiveness of New Zealand's national school based child protection program". Child Abuse and Neglect Vol 8 (8), 635, 643. doi:10.1016/0145-2134(94)90013-2
  • Briggs, F. and Hawkins, R.M.F. (1995) "Protecting boys from the risk of sexual abuse". Early Childhood Development and Care. Vol 110, 19-32. DOI:10.1080/0300443951100102
  • Briggs, F. (1996) "To what extent can child protection programs protect children?" in Nicola J. Taylor and Anne B. Smith (eds) Investing in children: Primary Prevention Strategies. Dunedin. Otago University Press. ISBN 9780958359511
  • Briggs, F. and Hawkins, R. (1996) "Low socio-economic status children are disadvantaged in the provision of school based child protection programmes". British Journal of Social Work Vol 26, 667-678. DOI:10.1093/oxfordjournals.bjsw.a011140
  • Briggs, F. and Hawkins, R. M. F. (1996) "A comparison of the childhood experiences of convicted male child molesters and men who were sexually abused in childhood and claimed to be non offenders". Child Abuse and Neglect Vol 20 (3), 221-233. doi:10.1016/S0145-2134(95)00145-X
  • Hawkins, R.M.F. and Briggs, F. (1997) "The institutionalised abuse of children in Australia: Past and present". Early Childhood Development and Care Vol 133, 41-55. DOI:10.1080/0300443971330104
  • Briggs, F. and Hawkins, R.M.F. (1998) "The importance of parent participation in child protection curricula" in Laura E. Berk (ed), Landscapes of Development: An Anthology of Readings. Belmont CA: Wadsworth. ISBN 9780534543785
  • Briggs, F., Lushington, K., Yeo, G (2001) "Social worker and counsellor perceptions of Singapore’s domestic violence prevention system." Asian Pacific Journal of Social Work 11 (2), 85-108. DOI:10.1080/21650993.2001.9755862
  • Briggs F and Hawkins, RMF (2005) "Personal safety issues in the lives of children with learning disabilities". Children Australia Vol 30 (2), 19-27
  • Briggs F. (2006) "The role of the teacher in child protection". Australian College of Educators Yearbook
  • Briggs, F. and Hawkins, R. M. F (2006) "Choosing between child protection programmes". Child Abuse Review Vol 3 (4), 272-283. DOI: 10.1002/car.2380030406
  • References

    Freda Briggs Wikipedia


    Similar Topics