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Understanding the responsibilities for organisational leaders - MARAM framework

Pillar 3 of the MARAM framework requires organisations to assign responsibilities of services and service providers within them. Download and print the PDF or read the accessible version:

MARAM Responsibilities Guide PDF 878.37 KB (opens in a new window)

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Pillar 3 of the MARAM Framework requires organisations to ‘assign responsibilities of services and service providers within them’.

Framework organisations have responsibilities under MARAM. To effectively meet these responsibilities, organisations need to:

MARAM victim survivor practice guides PDF 16.32 MB (opens in a new window)

The Responding to Family Violence Capability Framework (the Capability Framework) refers to four workforce tiers. These span specialist family violence services, core support services and professionals, mainstream/social support services and universal services.

The Capability Framework also identifies five capabilities (as well as foundational knowledge) and details the level of skill each tier should have within each capability.

The table on p. 14 of the Capability Framework shows where different organisations fit within the workforce tiers.

If your organisation is new to MARAM, these tiers are a useful starting point to determine where you fit in the family violence service system.

However, the tiers do not encapsulate or address the complexity and diversity of individual roles and programs within specific services and sectors under MARAM. For example, a tier 4 organisation might provide education services, but also employ welfare officers who hold capabilities described in tiers 2 or 3.

Once you have identified the tier your organisation belongs to according to the large portion of its workforce, you can cross-reference this with the

MARAM Responsibilities decision guide for leaders PDF 160.81 KB (opens in a new window)

The decision guide cross-references the capability framework with the MARAM responsibilities.

So for example, a tier 4 service holds responsibilities 1, 2, 5, 6, 9 and 10 – however, some tier 4 organisations may also have staff members holding responsibilities 3 and 4 or 7 and 8.

MARAM Responsibilities decision guide for leaders PDF 160.81 KB (opens in a new window)

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 1

Any employee who interacts with a service-user or discharges other responsibilities related to family violence needs to be able to engage in a respectful, sensitive and safe way.

How your organisation can meet responsibility 1

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Foundation Knowledge - Victim Survivor PDF 2.62 MB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 1 PDF 1.71 MB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpage under “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Consider training all employees to have the capability to meet responsibility 1, even those who do not directly engage with service users.

This will enable all employees to engage respectfully, safely and sensitively with colleagues who may be dealing with family violence either personally or in the work scenario.

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 2

Any employee who interacts with or observes service users will hold responsibility 2. This involves supporting the early identification of family violence indicators and observable signs of trauma.

Responsibility 2 also entails ‘screening’, where family violence is indicated by disclosure or by observation of signs of trauma.

The word screening may have different meanings in different organisations. For responsibility 2, screening means asking appropriate questions where family violence is suspected to identify family violence risk and to inform the next steps to take.

Some organisations require ‘routine screening’, including antenatal and some health settings. In this context, screening may occur at identified service delivery points, regardless of whether there are disclosures of family violence or observation of signs of trauma.

How your organisation can meet responsibility 2

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 2 PDF 1.55 MB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 2: Appendix 1 Word 27.02 KB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 2: Appendix 2 Word 27.49 KB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 2: Appendix 3 Word 41.6 KB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpage under “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Employees who do not directly engage with service users may be able to identify family violence.

This could include employees such as food service workers in a hospital, support workers in an early childhood education centre, administrative staff positioned in waiting rooms.

These staff may observe concerning behaviour among service users.

Screening should take place in a safe space, and responsibility 1 addresses what a safe environment may be.

A ‘safe space’ for screening will depend upon the circumstances of the interaction.

Office-based organisations that interact with service users in a controlled environment may be able to use private rooms for screening. Emergency responders may have to undertake screening in a variety of scenarios and locations.

In addition, a safe space for a child may be different than that for an adult (‘child friendly environments’).

The following considerations apply:

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 3

Employees who can assess family violence risk alongside their usual work.

These employees are those who:

How your organisation can meet responsibility 3

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Responsibility 3: brief and intermediate risk assessment PDF 2.18 MB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 3: Appendix 5 Word 43.26 KB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 3: Appendix 6 Word 50.1 KB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 3: Appendix 7 Word 27.8 KB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 3: Appendix 8 Word 76.32 KB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpageunder “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Consider the position of employees undertaking intermediate risk assessments.

Will those employees practically be able to undertake information sharing, secondary consultations and referrals under responsibilities 5 and 6? Or would this be the responsibility of another employee within the organisation or a manager or central team?

While the ideal is for individual employees to hold both responsibilities, if this is not possible, your organisation must ensure procedures are in place to prevent delays or failure to record important information.

Generally, employees who hold responsibility 3 will also hold responsibility 4. If there is any circumstance where this is not the case, Framework organisations must have in place a clear policy and procedure to map a facilitated/warm referral to get from assessment to management.

This should also include ensuring risk is managed on an interim basis pending that referral being completed.

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 4

Employees who can manage family violence risk assessed under responsibility 3, alongside their usual work.

These employees are those who:

How your organisation can meet responsibility 4

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 4 PDF 1.75 MB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 4: Appendix 9 Word 30.22 KB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 4: Appendix 10 Word 21.75 KB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpageunder “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Consider the management of risk at an intermediate level in all circumstances.

As well as ongoing risk management as agreed with the service user, there may be a need to manage risk on an interim basis. This may include when waiting for a referral to be accepted to a specialist family violence service if immediate assistance is not available.

Risk management may also change over time. There must be procedures to ensure risk levels and safety plans are reviewed in response to change of circumstances or risk periodically.

Managers must be able to actively review and facilitate safety plans and risk management activities.

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 5

A core component of the MARAM Framework is to work collaboratively to assess and manage risk. Organisations are required to align with the responsibilities, and need to ensure their employees can appropriately make secondary consultations and referrals.

Most employees within Framework organisations make referrals and seek secondary consultations. This will enable a holistic response to family violence risk by supporting victim survivors to be safe, recover and thrive, and by keeping perpetrators in view and accountable.

How your organisation can meet responsibility 5

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 5 PDF 979.24 KB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpage under “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Secondary consultations are used to seek and receive additional input to assess or manage risk, determine actions in line with the assessed level of risk, and/or determine whether a referral or further coordinated actions are needed (see responsibilities 9 and 10).

Referrals are used make and receive referrals – a process of connecting individuals (adults or children) to information, services or another professionals outside the original professional’s practice area. This may be within the same organisation or in a different organisation. It may help provide targeted support to enable a culturally safe and appropriate service response and to respond to wellbeing and needs.

Organisations can enable their workforces to feel confident in seeking and providing secondary consultations and to make warm referrals by building key external partnerships.

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 6

A core component of the MARAM Framework is to introduce a collective responsibility to understand, assess and manage risk.

Framework organisations will need to ensure their employees can share information appropriately.

Most employees within framework organisations will seek and share risk-relevant information as authorised under relevant information-sharing schemes (which include, but are not limited to, the FVIS and CIS Schemes).

This will enable a holistic response to family violence risk by supporting victim survivors to be safe, recover and thrive, and by keeping perpetrators in view and accountable.

How your organisation can meet responsibility 6

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 6 PDF 1.03 MB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpage under “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Information sharing occurs to support more robust risk identification, assessment and management, and to reduce the number of times a victim survivor needs to speak about the violence. Information sharing can be sharing information between organisations, but also sharing risk-relevant information directly with a victim survivor.

Organisational leaders need to consider the process for sharing information with other organisations and responding to information sharing requests.

For example, will managers or a central team be responsible for information sharing? (Note that even with a central team, all employees still hold responsibilities 5 and 6, as they need to share the information with their central team if not straight to external partners.

All employees need to understand the organisation’s responsibilities to share information under all relevant legislation, and specific obligations if prescribed as an Information Sharing Entity (ISE) under the FVIS or CIS Scheme.

Record-keeping systems must be established as required under the Family Violence Information Sharing Scheme, and to comply with the legislative requirements of any other information sharing legislative provisions.

In relation to the FVIS Scheme, the Ministerial Guidelines (p. 20) require ISEs to prioritise requests for information sharing[1] in a timely manner. In particular, where a serious threat has been identified, ISEs should respond to those requests for information without delay. Organisations need to ensure processes are in place to enable a timely response to information-sharing requests.

[1] Under Part 5A Family Violence Protection Act 2008

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 7

Building from strength: 10-year industry plan for family violence prevention and response and the Responding to family violence capability framework identify family violence specialists as professionals whose role may sit in specialist services, or in organisations with a focus on the provision of other services.

These positions:

How your organisation can meet responsibility 7

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 7 PDF 1.83 MB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 7: Appendix 11 Word 54.91 KB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 7: Appendix 12 Word 446.02 KB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpage under “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Your organisation may include employees who hold responsibility 7 even if it is not a specialist family violence service.

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 8

Their positions:

How your organisation can meet responsibility 8

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 8 PDF 1.83 MB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 8: Appendix 14 Word 27.04 KB (opens in a new window)

MARAM Responsibility 8: Appendix 15 Word 373.42 KB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpage under “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Your organisation may include employees who hold responsibility 8 even if it is not a specialist family violence service.

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 9

Coordinated risk management requires an employee to actively work with others to manage risk.

In practice, this means maintaining visibility of risk and a shared understanding of the perpetrator’s behaviour, tactics and whereabouts to have a coordinated response.

All employees will hold responsibility 9, but may meet the responsibility in different ways (i.e. some will action safety plans, others may be the contact point for coordinated risk management plans).

All specialist family violence professionals/services are responsible for setting up and managing coordinated risk management meetings and processes.

How your organisation can meet responsibility 9

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 9 PDF 1.11 MB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpage under “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Organisations should identify the processes required for effective coordinated risk management.

This may include:

Framework organisations with employees holding responsibilities 7 and 8 will need to ensure those employees are able to fulfil a coordination role.

To ensure successful operation of responsibility 9, organisational leaders should take steps to build strong external partnerships.

Who it applies to

Employees likely to hold responsibility 10

Ongoing collaborative risk management requires an employee to actively work with others in assessing and managing risk.

All employees involved with an at-risk service user will contribute to ongoing risk assessment and risk management by keeping the victim survivor visible and the perpetrator accountable.

How your organisation can meet responsibility 10

Enable relevant employees to:

MARAM Practice Guide: Responsibility 10 PDF 1.93 MB (opens in a new window)

All practice guides and appendices can be found on the MARAM practice guides and resources webpageunder “practice guide resources”.

Things to consider

Responsibility 10 overlays the preceding responsibilities, and essentially requires organisations to ensure structures are in place to facilitate collaborative practice and promote ongoing assessment and management of risk.

Organisations should consider how they can strengthen organisational culture change and procedures/practice so that ongoing risk assessment and management, and collaborative practice, become business as usual.

Steps should also be taken to build multi-agency practices through participating in governance groups, communities of practice, advocating for policy changes, and memorandums of understanding with key partners.

As well as assigning responsibilities within the workforce, it is important to map the relationship between responsibilities both in terms of internal workforces and external partnerships.

Internal mapping – the responsibilities in practice within an organisation

Particularly in large organisations, it is likely the MARAM responsibilities will be held across different job roles.

Identification and screening may be undertaken by an office administrator, an assessment by an intake worker, and management by a case manager.

It is important to have clear organisational charts on the family violence pathways within the organisation.

Consider:

External mapping – the responsibilities in practice between two separate organisations

All organisations will need to consider mapping responsibilities to external agencies.

This is particularly the case if a Framework organisation holds identification and screening, but not risk assessment and risk management responsibilities (noting that limited safety planning is still required after screening).

Consider:

Framework organisations should consider the role of team managers and leaders.

Responding to family violence may impact upon the wellbeing of staff members, and this can be mitigated if they are fully supported in meeting the MARAM responsibilities.

Consider:

Health & social support

Updated 18 July 2024



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