Ending Coercive Control, Family & Domestic Violence
Take action on prevention, response & recovery to drive safer outcomes for women
Family, domestic, and intimate partner violence against women is a national crisis and it’s not slowing down.
A 2023 study found that 57% of FDV reports included coercive control behaviours. The same study found DV assaults have risen 13.5% in the last 5 years.
Over two days, the ‘Ending Coercive Control, Family & Domestic Violence Against Women’ conference brings together practitioners, experts, and advocates to educate and inspire attendees. It creates a genuine opportunity for collective education, awareness-building, and relationship-building.
Discussion on critical issues such as the criminalisation of coercive control, the status of legislation across states, pending changes in family law, prevention of, responses to, and recovery from coercive control will take centre stage in this thought-provoking, timely, and insightful event.
Immediate action is imperative to improve outcomes for women. Connect with peers at this event and be part of the drive for change.
Attend and learn how to
Strengthen & frame how we talk about & assess coercive control in practice
Re-think systems responses to family & domestic violence
Move away from incident-based responses and towards a lifespan approach to violence & coercive control
Ensure that practice reflects the current and emerging evidence base & legal framework on coercive control
Ask the right questions at the right time to assess risk & safety
Navigate interagency collaboration effectively
Instil culturally safe & inclusive practice & better support under-represented communities
Effectively prevent & respond to intimate partner violence
Centre the voices of children in responses to violence
Connect with culturally responsive practice & learn from First Nations and CALD perspectives, voices, lived experiences, & expertise
The Hatchery Impact Program
The Hatchery is committed to ensuring this conference is inclusive and accessible – even when budgetary or financial constraints might be a barrier. The Hatchery Impact Program supports this by offering a small number of guest passes for representatives of small NGOs or other interested individuals who may not otherwise be able to pay to attend and who wish to join this important conversation. To apply, please complete this short online application
Speakers
Catherine Fitzpatrick
Founder & Director, Flequity Ventures & Adjunct Associate Professor, School of Social Sciences
UNSW Sydney
Jess Hill
Walkley Award-winning journalist, advocate, public speaker, and Premier's NSW Woman of Excellence for 2024
Annabelle Daniel OAM
CEO, Women’s Community Shelters, Chair of the Board, DV NSW, Independent Member
NSW Coercive Control Taskforce
Detective Superintendent Jayne Doherty APM
Commander
New South Wales Police Sex Crimes Squad
Detective Sergeant Ellen Quinn
Investigations Manager
New South Wales Police Sex Crimes Squad
Delilah Shinko
Community Liaison Officer, Multicultural Policy and Engagement
Department of Communities and Justice NSW
Thelma Schartz
Principal Legal Officer
Queensland Indigenous Family Violence Legal Service (QIFVLS)
Kelly-Ann Tansley
CEO, The Zahra Foundation Australia, Vice Chair, Embolden (SA Peak Body for DFSV), Deputy Chair
CT OARS
Kate Fylan
DFV and Children's Service Practice, Policy, and Sector Leader. Board Director. Social Worker, Approved Victim Services Counsellor, Play Therapist, and Clinical Supervisor
Non-Executive Director, Women and Girls’ Emergency Centre
Geraldine Bilston
Independent speaker, also Senior Policy Officer, Family and Sexual Violence System Policy, Policy, Prevention and Impact Branch
Department of Families, Fairness and Housing
Ajsela Siskovic
Executive Manager of Legal Services and Principal Lawyer
InTouch Multicultural Centre Against Family Violence
Carolyn Robinson
Founder/Managing Director, Beyond DV,
Board Chair, Australian Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence Recovery Alliance
Kate Fitz-Gibbon
Director of the Monash Gender and Family Violence Prevention Centre & Professor of Social Sciences in the Faculty of Arts
Monash University
Professor Silke Meyer
Chair in Child & Family Research
School of Health Sciences and Social Work, Griffith Criminology Institute & Griffith Centre for Mental Health, Griffith University
Hayley Foster
Director – Family Violence, Director – Access, Equity and Inclusion
Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia
Dr Tessa Boyd-Caine
CEO
Australia’s National Research Organisation for Women’s Safety (ANROWS)
Who will attend
This event is appropriate for any practitioner in the FDV and related sectors seeking to stay informed about coercive control in Australia and to engage in key discussions surrounding this critical issue.
Relevant for representatives from the NGO Community, Government, Police & Justice sectors, with roles & responsibilities for:
- Family & Domestic Violence Services
- Intimate Partner & Assault Services
- Women’s Services, Shelters & Refuges
- CALD, Refugee, Migrant & Immigration Services
- Family Services, Relationship & Counselling
- Children’s Services & Child Protection
- Men’s Behaviour Change
- Alcohol & Other Drugs
- Mental Health Services
- Legislative Change & Reform of Family Law
- Economic & Financial Support for Victim-Survivors
- Healing, Recovery, & Therapeutic Services
The advisory team consists of experts and experienced practitioners who are passionate, experienced, and committed to change, innovation, and evolution.
This team is involved in a thought-leadership ongoing capacity. They lend their experience to ensure that The Hatchery continues delivering best-practice, evidence-based content, and education in our family and domestic violence training and events.
The Hatchery would like to thank them for their participation, time, contribution, and insight.
Annabelle Daniel OAM
CEO, Women’s Community Shelters, Chair of the Board, DV NSW, Independent Member
NSW Coercive Control Taskforce
Jess Hill
Walkley Award-winning journalist, advocate, public speaker, and Premier's NSW Woman of Excellence for 2024
Agenda
OPENING KEYNOTE: Dr. Hannah Tonkin, NSW Women’s Safety Commissioner
Hannah commenced as the inaugural NSW Women’s Safety Commissioner in February 2023. In this role, she provides leadership on whole-of-government policies and programs on domestic, family, and sexual violence. Previously Hannah worked at the United Nations, as Disability Rights Director at the Australian Human Rights Commission, and as a barrister in London and Adelaide.
Dr. Hannah Tonkin
NSW Women’s Safety Commissioner
Legislating for coercive control: Updates & reflections on criminalising coercive control
This session invites discussion and input on pending legislative change as well as the implementation of post-legislative changes in practice
- Protecting against the misidentification of women as perpetrators
- Moving away from incident-based responses
- Reviewing community, victim-survivor and services insights
- Evidencing coercive control and proving intent
- Investing in a different system’s response including training and resourcing
CHAIR
Elena Rosenman
Board Chair, Women’s Legal Services Australia
CEO, Women’s Legal Services ACT
Angela Lynch
Sector Engagement Manager
DV-Alert, Lifeline Australia QLD
Pip Davis
Principal Solicitor
Women’s Legal Service NSW
Christine Robinson
CEO
Wirringa Baiya Aboriginal Women's Legal Centre
Yvette Cehtel
CEO
Women’s Legal Service TAS
Ajsela Siskovic
Executive Manager of Legal Services and Principal Lawyer
InTouch Multicultural Centre Against Family Violence
Cutting through the noise: An open conversation about prevention work
- Making prevention work more focused, accountable, and results-oriented
- Embedding and coordinating prevention work across every stage of our response system
- Addressing the contextual, material, and commercial determinants of violence
- Taking a lifespan approach to violence and coercive control
CHAIR
Katherine Berney
Executive Director
National Women’s Safety Alliance
Jess Hill
Walkley Award-winning journalist, advocate, public speaker, and Premier's NSW Woman of Excellence for 2024
Prof. Michael Salter
Professor of Criminology, School of Social Sciences
UNSW
Angela Lynch
Sector Engagement Manager
DV-Alert, Lifeline Australia QLD
Annabelle Daniel OAM
CEO, Women’s Community Shelters, Chair of the Board, DV NSW, Independent Member
NSW Coercive Control Taskforce
Moo Baulch OAM
Chair of the Board of Directors
Our Watch
Welcome to Country & Opening remarks from MC
CHAIR
Dr Tessa Boyd-Caine
CEO
Australia’s National Research Organisation for Women’s Safety (ANROWS)
OPENING KEYNOTE: Dr. Hannah Tonkin, NSW Women’s Safety Commissioner
Hannah commenced as the inaugural NSW Women’s Safety Commissioner in February 2023. In this role, she provides leadership on whole-of-government policies and programs on domestic, family, and sexual violence. Previously Hannah worked at the United Nations, as Disability Rights Director at the Australian Human Rights Commission, and as a barrister in London and Adelaide.
Dr. Hannah Tonkin
NSW Women’s Safety Commissioner
Legislating for coercive control: Updates & reflections on criminalising coercive control
This session invites discussion and input on pending legislative change as well as the implementation of post-legislative changes in practice
- Protecting against the misidentification of women as perpetrators
- Moving away from incident-based responses
- Reviewing community, victim-survivor and services insights
- Evidencing coercive control and proving intent
- Investing in a different system’s response including training and resourcing
CHAIR
Elena Rosenman
Board Chair, Women’s Legal Services Australia
CEO, Women’s Legal Services ACT
Angela Lynch
Sector Engagement Manager
DV-Alert, Lifeline Australia QLD
Pip Davis
Principal Solicitor
Women’s Legal Service NSW
Christine Robinson
CEO
Wirringa Baiya Aboriginal Women's Legal Centre
Yvette Cehtel
CEO
Women’s Legal Service TAS
Ajsela Siskovic
Executive Manager of Legal Services and Principal Lawyer
InTouch Multicultural Centre Against Family Violence
Morning Tea
Cutting through the noise: An open conversation about prevention work
- Making prevention work more focused, accountable, and results-oriented
- Embedding and coordinating prevention work across every stage of our response system
- Addressing the contextual, material, and commercial determinants of violence
- Taking a lifespan approach to violence and coercive control
CHAIR
Katherine Berney
Executive Director
National Women’s Safety Alliance
Jess Hill
Walkley Award-winning journalist, advocate, public speaker, and Premier's NSW Woman of Excellence for 2024
Prof. Michael Salter
Professor of Criminology, School of Social Sciences
UNSW
Angela Lynch
Sector Engagement Manager
DV-Alert, Lifeline Australia QLD
Annabelle Daniel OAM
CEO, Women’s Community Shelters, Chair of the Board, DV NSW, Independent Member
NSW Coercive Control Taskforce
Moo Baulch OAM
Chair of the Board of Directors
Our Watch
One-third of teens experience intimate partner violence: Working with teenage boys to facilitate respectful & consensual relationships
- Meeting teenage boys where they’re at through preventative mental health programs to create positive shifts in attitudes and behaviours
- Understanding and addressing the harmful influence of online figures on boys and young men
- Data and insights from The Man Cave’s 2024 survey of boys about respectful relationships and consent
Hunter Johnson
CEO
The Man Cave
Dr Zac Seidler
Clinical psychologist, Global Director - Men’s Health Research, Movember
and Senior Research Fellow with Orygen, University of Melbourne
Lunch
Endorsing & enabling victim-centric trauma-informed approaches to sexual violence investigations
- Instilling transparency in the reporting of sexual violence
- Transforming the NSW Police response to sexual violence
- Ensuring better outcomes for victim-survivors
- Producing higher-quality criminal investigations
Detective Superintendent Jayne Doherty APM
Commander
New South Wales Police Sex Crimes Squad
Detective Sergeant Ellen Quinn
Investigations Manager
New South Wales Police Sex Crimes Squad
Respect & protect – The role of business to end gendered violence
- Financial abusers are weaponising bank accounts, loans, and insurance policies as a tactic of coercive control
- Businesses can disrupt financial abuse through better product and service
- design – providing more protection to victim-survivors and holding perpetrators to account
- Designed to Disrupt provides an industry blueprint
Catherine Fitzpatrick
Founder & Director, Flequity Ventures & Adjunct Associate Professor, School of Social Sciences
UNSW Sydney
Afternoon Tea
It’s time to tackle the “too-hard” basket: Unpacking the practical applications of coercive control
- Understanding the gaps and risks we collectively hold
- Navigating interagency collaboration effectively – risks, challenges, and changes
- Legislative change is coming – we need to talk about it now, not after the fact
CHAIR
Hayley Foster
Director – Family Violence, Director – Access, Equity and Inclusion
Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia
Anne Hollonds
National Children’s Commissioner
Australian Human Rights Commission
Kate Fitz-Gibbon
Director of the Monash Gender and Family Violence Prevention Centre & Professor of Social Sciences in the Faculty of Arts
Monash University
Superintendent Danielle Emerton APM
Commander DV Register
NSW Police
Carolyn Robinson
Founder/Managing Director, Beyond DV,
Board Chair, Australian Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence Recovery Alliance
Inspector Melissa Dwyer
Manager, State DFVVP Unit
Queensland Police
Reflections from the Lived Expertise Advisory Group on the implementation of NSW’s Coercive Control Offence
- Providing strategic direction and advice on policy approaches to domestic, family, and sexual violence in NSW
- Offering contextual advice from lived experience
- Sharing knowledge on response and prevention of domestic, family, and intimate partner violence
Annabelle Daniel OAM
CEO, Women’s Community Shelters, Chair of the Board, DV NSW, Independent Member
NSW Coercive Control Taskforce
Empowered women, empower women: A journey with coercive control
- My journey from relationship expert to victim-survivor of coercive control, to healthy relationship advocate
- Having, losing, and reclaiming power and freedom
- What coming full circle feels like
Jane Caro AM
Speaker, writer, novelist, AM, Walkley winner, author of 'The Mother
Dr. Gabrielle Morrissey
CEO
Women and Children First
Closing remarks & networking drinks
Choose your own journey.
The morning & afternoon sessions will be presented in curated streams allowing you to pick the pathway that best resonates with your learning journey.
STREAM A
Re-thinking systems responses to family & domestic violence
Acknowledgement of Country and opening remarks from MC
CHAIR
Rebecca Glenn
CEO
Centre for Women’s Economic Safety
Strengthening how we talk about, assess & respond to coercive control in practice & Policy
- Ensuring that risk factors reflect the evidence base on coercive control
- Asking the right questions at the right time to assess risk and safety
- Understanding that coercive control can be exerted through any combination or pattern of evidence-based risk factors
- Educating and training practitioners to recognise and respond appropriately
- Planning system responses to identify systems abuse and rectifying misidentification
Fran Jacka
Director MARAMIS Unit
Department of Families, Fairness and Housing (VIC)
The weaponisation of legal and other systems to perpetrate domestic and family violence
- Insights of Women’s Legal Services on systems abuse engaged in by perpetrators of domestic and family violence
- Experiences of Women’s Legal Service clients who are victim-survivors
- How a range of legal and other systems are being used to perpetrate domestic and family violence
- Impacts of systems abuse on First Nations women and culturally and linguistically diverse women
Lara Freidin
Executive Officer
Women’s Legal Services Australia
Morning break
Understanding financial & economic abuse as factors for women being fearful of leaving or having no choice but to return to abusive relationships
- The impact of financial hardship, homelessness and poverty on the choices women make
- Working with stigma and shame
- Empowering women to make their own choices to determine their future and support their independence
Kelly-Ann Tansley
CEO, The Zahra Foundation Australia, Vice Chair, Embolden (SA Peak Body for DFSV), Deputy Chair
CT OARS
Unpacking the potential & success of integrated service responses
- Working within a high-risk teams framework and providing an integrated service response approach
- Implementing and working within a multi-agency, coordinated service
- Building and maintaining interagency trust
- Providing holistic, culturally appropriate safety responses
- Exploring the challenges and opportunities of working this way
Amie Carrington
CEO
Domestic Violence Action Centre
Inspector Rowena Hardiker
Inspector DFV Coordinator & Advocacy
Queensland Police
Co-designing training on coercive control for UnitingCare community’s state-wide family law programs
- Tailoring our approach to meet staff needs
- Educating family law teams to identify and respond to coercive control in our services
- Reviewing and re-framing the experiences of training
- Unpacking ongoing challenges post-training Our next steps
Dr. Chez Leggatt-Cook
Practice Improvement & Development
UnitingCare
Professor Silke Meyer
Chair in Child & Family Research
School of Health Sciences and Social Work, Griffith Criminology Institute & Griffith Centre for Mental Health, Griffith University
STREAM B
Instilling culturally safe & inclusive practice
Acknowledgement of Country and opening remarks from MC
CHAIR
Representative TBC
Our Watch
Providing in-language, in-culture support to women in migrant & refugee communities
- Providing culturally-specific services to ensure women’s safety
- Understanding the potential impacts of culture and the migration journey on women experiencing family violence
- Breaking down barriers women face when trying to seek help
- Understanding the intersections of family violence, culture, temporary migration, family law and the legal system
Ajsela Siskovic
Executive Manager of Legal Services and Principal Lawyer
InTouch Multicultural Centre Against Family Violence
Inclusive & affirming practice for LGBTQ+ people experiencing violence
- Understanding the gendered nature of sexual, domestic, and family violence for LGBTQ+ victim-survivors
- Coercive control and identity-based abuse
- Key principles for affirming practice with LGBTQ+ people
- Allyship and advocacy to end coercive control, family & intimate partner violence against LGBTQ+ people of all genders
Eloise Layard
Manager
LGBTQ+ Health Programs
Morning break
Understanding & responding to the misidentification of First Nations women as perpetrators
- Why have First Nations women been misidentified?
- Understanding the nature of trauma
- Understanding police responses and their importance
- Unpacking the Queensland landscape
- Leaning into National Partnership Agreement on Closing the Gap
Thelma Schartz
Principal Legal Officer
Queensland Indigenous Family Violence Legal Service (QIFVLS)
What drives coercive control & domestic violence against Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander women?
- Addressing the gendered drivers of violence against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women
- Changing the picture to address the many drivers of violence against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women
- Violence against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women as a whole of community issue
Regan Mitchell
Head of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Strategy
Our Watch
Upskilling faith-based & community leaders to respond to domestic and family violence
- Providing guidance, insight and contacts for appropriate referral pathways
- Sharing information relating to the legal process after a FDV report is made
- Guiding leaders to understand how they can act as first responder to assist community members who disclose to them
- Educating about the cycle of violence
- Providing a connection with a local service and working together to support their community
Delilah Shinko
Community Liaison Officer, Multicultural Policy and Engagement
Department of Communities and Justice NSW
Fatima Sayed
Specialist Domestic and Family Violence Officer
Advance Diversity Services
Stream A & B conclude and lunch break commences.
Sessions will re-commence with Stream C & D at 1:20 pm.
STREAM C
Centering the voices of children & mothers in responses to violence
Opening remarks from the MC
Collaborative referral pathways: Working across system siloes to get the support women need when they need It
- Breaking down and working across silos to connect and support women
- Managing and documenting current and ongoing health risks and safety concerns
- Considering the experience of each woman – and designing care to meet their needs
- Framing the journey for women – and validating that journey from a clinical and a support perspective
Tanya Whitehouse OAM
Manager
Macarthur Women’s Domestic Violence Court Advocacy Service
Dr. Helen Rhodes
Emergency Specialist
South Western Sydney LHD
Let’s keep kids in the picture: Family violence hurts children too
- Understanding the post-separation risk to children as victim-survivors in their own right
- Increasing recognition of children and young people as direct victims of domestic and family violence
- Sharing ideas on safety planning, talking with them to risk assess and adequately identify the harm they experience
Mary Jo McVeigh OAM
CEO, Cara House and CaraCare
Former AASW Social worker of the year
Afternoon break
Post-separation coercive control in children’s & mother’s lives: Conversations that empower safety
- Recognise and respond to post-separation coercive control in the lives of women and children
- Engage in respectful empathetic conversations with mothers and children that empower them
- Supporting safety planning that is DFV-informed and trauma-based
Kate Fylan
DFV and Children's Service Practice, Policy, and Sector Leader. Board Director. Social Worker, Approved Victim Services Counsellor, Play Therapist, and Clinical Supervisor
Non-Executive Director, Women and Girls’ Emergency Centre
Coercive Control – What does it mean for children?
- A framework for understanding how children experience coercive control
- Some ways in which children resist coercive control
- Impacts of coercive control on children
- The meaning of coercive control for children
- What does this then mean for how we therapeutically support children?
Mary-Ann Delaney
Program Manager, Therapeutic Services
Australian Childhood Foundation
Focus, review & reflect
At their tables, attendees are invited to interact and share with each other their experience’s of the last two days and to reflect on what they have learned, what they intend to do differently and what has inspired them.
STREAM D
Effectively preventing & responding to sexual violence in intimate partner relationships
Opening remarks from the MC
CHAIR
Tara Hunter
Director of Clinical & Client Services
Full Stop Australia
It’s both/and not either/or: Exploring the reality of intimate partner sexual violence
- Unpacking IPSV and what contributes to the invisibility
- Barriers to disclosure and help-seeking
- Responding appropriately to women seeking help
Di Macleod
Director
Gold Coast Centre Against Sexual Violence
“You think it’s common knowledge, but it’s not”: Making prevention everyone’s business
- Leveraging social media to make information and knowledge easily accessible
- If it doesn’t feel ok, it’s not ok
- Breaking the silence and bringing conversations about sexual violence into the mainstream
Sarah Williams
Survivor Advocate, Founder
What Were You Wearing Australia
Afternoon break
How engaged is the workforce, taking the pulse?
- Working with men who use sexually coercive and violent behaviour within domestic and family violence and intimate partner violence
- Understanding workforce competencies and confidence responding to and working with men who use sexual and intimate partner violence
- Talking about consent with men in men’s family violence interventions
- Understanding patterns of sexual violence and sexually coercive controlling behaviour and links to pornography
Lizette Twisleton
Head of Engagement
No to Violence
Healing & recovery: Meeting the needs of victim survivors
- Understanding the long-term impacts of domestic abuse
- Exploring how services and practitioners can better understand and respond to the needs of victim-survivors in therapeutic care
- Addressing therapeutic readiness and supporting a healing and recovery journey
- Exploring ‘Survivorledresources.com’ – a project led by 14 victim-survivors
Geraldine Bilston
Independent speaker, also Senior Policy Officer, Family and Sexual Violence System Policy, Policy, Prevention and Impact Branch
Department of Families, Fairness and Housing
Focus, review & reflect
At their tables, attendees are invited to interact and share with each other their experience’s of the last two days and to reflect on what they have learned, what they intend to do differently and what has inspired them.
End of streamed sessions, closing remarks & end of conference
Times are shown in AEST
Perpetrators exert coercive control using a range of behaviours over time, and their effect is cumulative. It can be demonstrated through repeated patterns of behaviour including emotional and financial abuse and isolation, stalking, controlling behaviours, choking and strangulation, and sexual and physical violence.
This practice-based workshop will invite participants to explore how to have conversations with victim-survivors of coercive control that are trauma-informed, work towards a pattern-based risk assessment, and keep central the responses and resistance of victim-survivors.
Attend & learn
- Unpack key elements of trauma-informed practice
- Understand the complexity of victim-survivors lived experience, responses, and resistance to coercive control
- Explore practice models that move away from ‘incident-based’ approaches and instead examine a ‘pattern of behaviour’ approach for risk assessment
- Strengthen and frame how to talk about and assess coercive control in practice
- Ask the right questions at the right time to assess risk and safety
Kelly Barrett
Learning and Education Coordinator
Women's Safety Services SA
Imagine risking your life to keep your children safe only to be accused of “choosing him over your children?”
Domestic violence survivors all over the world share the experience of protecting their children yet still being blamed for “choosing their partner over their children,” “failing to protect,” and perpetrating “parental alienation.” Unchecked, these accusations can become the justification for separating children from their protective mothers. Harmful claims can thrive in environments in which fathers’ behavior is ignored while mothers are blamed for domestic violence’s negative impacts.
In David’s recently released book, ‘Stop Blaming Mothers and Ignoring Fathers: How to Transform the Way We Keep Children Safe from Domestic Violence’ he de-constructs the six key myths at the heart of mother-blaming and father-ignoring culture, demonstrating their flaws and limitations.
At each step along the way, David uses the principles and tools of the Safe & Together Model to outline easy-to-implement solutions to these all-too-common problems. With an approach that is supported by case studies and testimonials of practitioners and survivors, you will learn new ways to partner with survivors and intervene with domestic violence perpetrators as parents.
As a result of this training, participants will have:
- A better understanding of how the Safe & Together Model improves systems’ abilities to keep children safe from domestic violence
- How the Safe & Together Model tackles the underlying “myths” that impede successful outcomes in cases
- How to apply the Model in diverse sectors to improve outcomes for families experiencing domestic violence
It is recommended that participants read David’s latest book release before attending this workshop in order to get the most from their experience
David Mandel
Executive Director
Safe & Together Institute
Venue
The Sydney Boulevard Hotel
Sydney, Gadigal Land & Online
Online
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Save up until the 14 June
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Save up until the 5 July
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Standard prices after early bird
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Workshops
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Save up until 3 May
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Save up until 24 May
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Save up until 14 June
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Save up until 5 July
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Early bird pricing
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Standard rate after early bird
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Workshops
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Save up until 3 May
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Early bird pricing
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Save up until 24 May
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The speakers and topics were incredible. There was such a wealth of knowledge and thought-provoking points were raised. The passion with which they spoke was powerful. I have come away from this conference reinvigorated, and keen to explore the topics and thoughts raised in these sessions”