Woman smiling in an office setting, sitting in front of a camera display showing her image, with a cityscape visible in the background.

Voice of Change is a national non-profit organisation dedicated to ending domestic and family violence using arts to break down the barriers to empower storytelling, community education and collective action.

Founded by Shaynna Blaze and co-founded by Neva Morrissy, Voice of Change was born from a belief that stories can change systems — that powerful, lived-experience storytelling can influence behaviour, shift culture, and drive national impact.

We bring together survivors, creatives, workplaces, educators, and communities to spark conversations, provide practical tools, and lead a unified, urgent movement for change.

At Voice of Change, we aren’t about raising awareness - we come together to take action.

Group of five people in business meeting at a conference table, laptops and bottled water on table.

Our Mission

To end domestic and family violence in Australia within the next 15 years.

Our Vision

To be the national voice that unites communities, workplaces, and individuals in preventing domestic and family violence through storytelling, education, advocacy and action.

Our Impact in Motion

From The Fort to I Stand Up, from national media to community workshops — our campaigns, resources, and partnerships are uniting Australia around a shared mission: to end family violence for good.

Whether you're a workplace leader, creative professional, policymaker or advocate — you have a role to play.

Together, we are the Voice of Change.

Our Approach

At Voice of Change we believe that by telling stories of family violence – through mediums including film, music, exhibitions, live theatre, fine arts and role play – we can amplify the voices of survivors and families of victims, champion meaningful education about, and action against, family violence, and ultimately bring about prevention and change. 

Family violence is often hidden behind closed doors, so the physical and mental scars aren’t always acknowledged in the moment, or long-term. 

It Doesn’t Always Look Like Violence

Abuse doesn’t discriminate — it can affect anyone, regardless of age, gender, culture, or background.
It doesn’t always look the same. Some forms of family violence are visible, while others are harder to detect — but all are deeply harmful.

Physical, emotional or
verbal abuse

The use of force, intimidation, or words to cause harm, fear, or loss of self-worth.

Ghosting

Abruptly cutting off all communication to avoid accountability or inflict emotional harm.

Withholding intimacy or communication

Deliberately denying affection or dialogue to punish, isolate, or control someone.

Sexual violence

Any sexual act or behaviour carried out without consent, including coercion or assault.

Neglect

Failing to provide care, attention, or basic needs, resulting in harm or distress.

Coercive, strategic or financial control

Manipulating someone’s choices, freedom or resources to assert power and dominance.