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Seeds of Affinity Pathways for Women Inc in Adelaide, South Australia | Non-profit organisation



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Seeds of Affinity Pathways for Women Inc

Locality: Adelaide, South Australia

Phone: +61 8 8242 7210



Address: 146-150 Semaphore Rd 5019 Adelaide, SA, Australia

Website: http://www.seedsofaffinity.org.au

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24.01.2022 As we did last lockdown we will be offering women delivery of essential goods tomorrow. Please contact me via Facebook or phone 0488002178 if you require this.



23.01.2022 The National Network of Incarcerated & Formerly Incarcerated Women & Girls meet today. We are dedicated to driving our own collective vision for the future, our... way. Across the country people are speaking about us, without us. This must end. We demand that every jurisdiction in Australia immediately decarcerate all women & children locked in prisons. Today we also mourned the loss of another sista in a WA prison Another death in custody #FreeHer

22.01.2022 How many times do we need to learn this but continue the same thing. Definition of insanity.

20.01.2022 This health crisis has pushed many Australians to the edge, especially older women. We're calling on the Government to build more social housing to protect those most at risk. #HW2020 #BuildSocialHousing



20.01.2022 Shame shame shame Australia

19.01.2022 Domestic Terrorists at work again. Why do we fund these actions that we see everyday in our community now?

18.01.2022 With all thats happened lately, you might be wondering what we can actually do to stop so many Indigenous Aussies being locked up, and killed. Well, theres one key change that could make a huge difference and thats to stop treating kids as criminals. #raisetheage



17.01.2022 Experts estimate there are up to 400 trans and gender-diverse people in prison cells around Australia right now. They are often assessed and housed inappropriat...ely, which can mean they are placed in areas they're not safe in, such as trans women being held in men's prisons. It's a dangerous situation for many and research suggests trans prisoners are more likely to be physically and sexually assaulted and verbally harassed by other inmates or staff. https://www.abc.net.au//why-are-transgender-women/12416562

16.01.2022 Legal services say Queenslands emergency lockdown of prisons due the Covid-19 has led to human rights breaches, including inmates being denied access to lawyer...s and medical care . It is unacceptable to use solitary confinement as a response to the pandemic instead of humane medical isolation. We know that solitary confinement is a dangerous practice as theres a high likelihood that people who experience it will suffer psychological damage, Helen Blaber, the director of Prisoners Legal Service, said. https://www.theguardian.com//vulnerable-prisoners-sent-to- See more

15.01.2022 Media Release: The National Network of Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women & Girls calls for the release of all women & children from every prison cell... in Australia. Women and children are self harming & attempting suicide, they are in solitary confinement due to COVID19 and one woman has died. Its an outrage & theres not a whisper let alone a roar about human rights violations. #freeher

13.01.2022 Our Xmas party will be on 15.12.2020 from 10am. Hope to see you there.Our Xmas party will be on 15.12.2020 from 10am. Hope to see you there.

10.01.2022 EVENT: Transformative Justice Panel TIME: 7pm Wednesday 4 November, 2020 PRESENTERS: Debbie Kilroy, Tabitha Lean, Georgia Mantle (facilitator) Event Description...: In recent times, discussions about transformative justice as an alternative to carceral justice have begun to become more prevalent in the wake of global movements like Black Lives Matter gaining a significant increase in public attention and media traction. With public concern over the institutions of policing and incarceration starting to rise, it has become increasingly necessary to look towards radical alternatives. Join Georgia Mantle, Debbie Kilroy of Sisters Inside, and Tabitha Lean, a Gunditjmara woman who is a storyteller, writer, and activist, in discussing transformative justice, prison abolitionist work in practice, and why we must pursue radical alternatives to the carceral state. Debbie Kilroy is one of Australia’s leading advocates for protecting the human rights of women and children through decarceration. Debbie’s passion for justice is a result of her personal experience of the criminal (in)justice system and an unwavering belief that prison represents a failure of justice. After her experience of being incarcerated, she established Sisters Inside in 1993. Sisters Inside advocates for the human rights of women in the criminal justice system and responds to gaps in services available to them. It is an organisation of women with shared experiences supporting each other to change their lives and change the system. Sisters Inside has won international recognition for its work and its unique structure which ensures it is driven by women with lived prison experience. Tabitha Lean is a Gunditjmara woman living on Kaurna country. As a formerly incarcerated woman, she now works to speak out for criminalised women, and to fight against the prison system. She is a storyteller, a writer, and a passionate advocate for transformative justice approaches, decolonising the criminal justice system, and prison abolition. Tabitha is currently completing her Masters in Aboriginal Studies and hopes to use her studies to raise awareness of this nation’s brutal, violent, and often lethal criminal justice system. This panel will take place across many nations, but will primarily be hosted on the stolen land of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation. In discussing transformative justice and prison abolition, it is crucial to note that First Nations peoples on this continent are disproportionately incarcerated, surveilled, and murdered by the state, and that the carceral system is just one of many arms of the colonial violence which has violently oppressed First Nations peoples from the beginning of colonisation and which continues to this day. The fight to abolish prisons and policing must be grounded in the knowledge that this is a fight which must be deeply aware of the colonial, racialised aspects of these systems, and which must centre people who have been directly harmed by these systems. Sovereignty was never ceded. We pay our respects to elders past, present, and emerging. Event Link: https://www.facebook.com/events/409787363371654



10.01.2022 Hope to see you all out in support of Latoyas family.

10.01.2022 Nothing to see here. The Liberals are more invested in building more prisons ready to destroy more women & childrens lives.

09.01.2022 86 year old Aboriginal Grandmother with dementia jailed in WA In The West Australian today the must-read investigation by @AnnabelHennessy that left WA Attorne...y-General asking if an elderly white woman with dementia in a wealthy suburb would have found herself in prison in such circumstances?#BlackLivesMatter See more

09.01.2022 Our families deserve to know that their loved ones are safe, but for decades too many First Nations people have been killed in prisons - and the Coronavirus pan...demic is only making it even more dangerous. Coronavirus outbreaks in prison are becoming more and more common - without adequate medical facilities. Urgent action is required to prevent further prison outbreaks, to protect our communities from the coronavirus. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are some of the most vulnerable people in our community - we need to ensure the safety of all Australians and their families and end black deaths in custody. #blacklivesmatter

08.01.2022 Share & sign please

08.01.2022 Never forgotten

06.01.2022 Not about us as women.

06.01.2022 Statement from the people gassed in Long bay Gaol recently.

06.01.2022 Legal services say Queensland’s emergency lockdown of prisons due the Covid-19 has led to human rights breaches, including inmates being denied access to lawyer...s and medical care . It is unacceptable to use solitary confinement as a response to the pandemic instead of humane medical isolation. We know that solitary confinement is a dangerous practice as there’s a high likelihood that people who experience it will suffer psychological damage, Helen Blaber, the director of Prisoners’ Legal Service, said. https://www.theguardian.com//vulnerable-prisoners-sent-to- See more

06.01.2022 "I have come here because the Australian Government is not listening." Last year 12-year-old Dujuan, the star of In My Blood It Runs, flew to Geneva to address ...the United Nations Human Rights Council. This is the future he wants to see possible for young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians. In My Blood It Runs will air on ABC TV + iView, Sunday the 5th of July at 9.30pm: https://iview.abc.net.au/collection/2380 #walkingtogether2020 #inmyblooditruns

04.01.2022 Seeds Xmas party 2020.

04.01.2022 Its almost AGM time at Seeds so we are asking for our wonderful members to renew their membership and we are always looking for new members. Please refer to website for details. Women with lived prison experience are only $5.00.

02.01.2022 Thanks for your support Katrine Hildyard MP.

02.01.2022 Another Aboriginal woman dies in custody RIP sista #StopBlackDeathsInCustody #FreeHer... When will the killing of Aboriginal women end? Prisons must be abolished.

01.01.2022 Please sign & share.

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