Community Safety Grants in Australia: Funding Safer Neighbourhoods and Violence Prevention

Community safety — the experience of being safe in one's home, neighbourhood, and public spaces — is foundational to wellbeing and community participation. While policing is government-funded, community-based safety programs play an essential complementary role: neighbourhood watch, crime prevention through environmental design, youth violence prevention, crisis intervention, and programs that address the root causes of community harm. Grant funding supports these community-based approaches to safety.

Community safety in Australia

What community safety covers

  • Neighbourhood crime prevention (burglary, property crime)
  • Personal safety (assault, harassment, violence in public spaces)
  • Domestic and family violence (the most common serious safety issue)
  • Youth violence and gang involvement
  • Anti-social behaviour
  • Road safety
  • Fire safety
  • Emergency preparedness and resilience

Who is most affected by safety challenges

  • High-crime areas: public housing, disadvantaged communities
  • Young people: both as victims and perpetrators of violence
  • Women: domestic violence, street harassment, intimate partner violence
  • People from CALD backgrounds: targeted racism and hate crime
  • LGBTQ+ individuals: targeted harassment and violence
  • Indigenous Australians: significantly higher rates of violence victimisation
  • Older Australians: property crime, elder abuse, financial exploitation

Evidence on community safety

  • Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED): lighting, sight lines, territoriality
  • Neighbourhood programs build social cohesion that reduces crime
  • Youth intervention works when evidence-based (not all programs are)
  • Restorative justice reduces reoffending
  • Hotspot policing plus community programs more effective than policing alone

Government community safety funding

State Police

Police grants and crime prevention programs.

Department of Home Affairs

Countering violent extremism, community resilience.

Local government

CCTV, lighting, and community safety programs.

State justice and community safety departments

Crime prevention grants (varies by state).

Philanthropic community safety funders

Local community foundations

Safety programs in specific communities.

Real estate industry

Some safe neighbourhood initiatives.

Crime Stoppers Australia

Community crime reporting programs.

Road safety foundations

Road safety grant programs.

Types of funded community safety programs

Neighbourhood programs

  • Neighbourhood Watch (reporting, connection, prevention)
  • Community patrols
  • Street ambassador programs
  • Community crime reporting and information
  • Safe streets programs

Crime prevention through design

  • CCTV in public spaces
  • Lighting improvements
  • Urban design for safety
  • Graffiti removal and beautification

Youth violence prevention

  • Youth outreach and diversion
  • Gang intervention programs
  • Youth employment as crime prevention
  • Mentoring for at-risk young people
  • School violence prevention

Domestic violence

  • Community awareness and bystander programs
  • Perpetrator accountability programs
  • Hotspot intervention in domestic violence

Crisis intervention

  • Mobile crisis response (alternative to police)
  • Mental health crisis de-escalation
  • Mediation services

Road safety

  • Speed and alcohol awareness
  • Young driver programs
  • Road safety education

Online safety

  • Scam and cybercrime awareness
  • Elder financial safety
  • Digital safety in communities

Emergency preparedness

  • Community resilience planning
  • Neighbourhood emergency response
  • Disaster readiness programs

The evidence on youth violence prevention

Youth violence prevention is a well-researched area — but program quality varies enormously:

Effective approaches:
- Cognitive behavioural therapy for high-risk youth
- Mentoring with structured programs (not just any mentoring)
- Family therapy alongside youth intervention
- Violence interruption (credible messenger intervention)
- Employment and education diversion

Less effective approaches:
- Scared Straight programs (evidence shows they backfire)
- Boot camps without follow-up support
- Awareness campaigns without skill-building

Applications for youth violence prevention should build on evidence — the Australian Institute of Criminology maintains a clearinghouse of what works.

Grant application considerations

Root causes

Community safety interventions that only address immediate crime don't prevent it. Applications that address root causes — disadvantage, mental illness, substance use, family violence — alongside immediate safety are more comprehensive.

Trauma-informed

Communities affected by crime are often also trauma-affected. Applications with trauma-informed approaches — for both victims and perpetrators — are more appropriate.

Partnerships with police

Effective community safety programs often partner with police — but also maintain independence. Applications that demonstrate respectful police partnership without being wholly police-driven reach communities that distrust formal policing.

Measurement

Safety outcomes are measurable: crime rates, reported incidents, community fear surveys. Applications with clear measurement plans are more credible.


Tahua's grants management platform supports community safety funders and crime prevention organisations — with program reach tracking, incident reduction data, community safety outcome measurement, and the reporting tools that help community safety funders demonstrate their investment in safer Australian neighbourhoods.

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