Biography and expertise

Biography

Professor Lynne McPherson is the Chair, Out of Home Care Research and Deputy Director Centre for Children and Young People, Faculty of Health Southern Cross University. Lynne's program of research has focussed on out of home care: foster care / kinship care /residential care, drawing on participatory methodology. Lynne is interested in looking beyond ‘care’ to ameliorating the impact of adversity- therapeutic models of care. A range of projects over last 10 years-reflect that interest, including her current ARC Linkage Grant 2022-2024 Strengthening Connections and Relationships in Therapeutic Residential Care )

Lynne's work contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals

Source: Scopus

Prior to becoming an academic, Lynne spent more than 25 years as a senior social work manager and practice leader in child protection and the wider child, youth and family sector. She has undertaken roles as a practitioner, manager, training consultant and senior policy advisor. Lynne became a social work academic just over 15 years ago, initially based in Melbourne at La Trobe University. Lynne joined the School of Arts and Social Sciences at Southern Cross University in 2016 as an academic who is engaged in teaching and research.

Links

Honours

Outstanding Contribution to Impact, Award for Research Excellence
Southern Cross University, 2022
Southern Cross University Research Award - Inspiring Researchers – Deans Nomination
Southern Cross University, 2023
Senior Researcher Award for Research Excellence
Southern Cross University, 2025

Organisational affiliations

Social Work, Faculty of Health, Southern Cross University

Deputy Director, Centre for Children and Young People, Faculty of Health, Southern Cross University

Chair, Out of Home Research, Centre for Children and Young People, Faculty of Health, Southern Cross University

Past affiliations

Associate Professor, School of Arts and Social Sciences, Southern Cross University

Highlights - Output

Journal article

by Lynne McPhersonKathomi GatwiriAnne GrahamDarlene RotumahKelly HandCorina ModdermanJaime Chubb and Samara James

Published 04/2025

Child & youth care forum, 54, 2, 515 - 544

Background
Global research has found that prevalence rates of child sexual abuse suggest that this is a significant ongoing public health concern. A recent Australian study, for example, revealed that more than three girls and almost one in five boys reported experiencing sexual abuse before the age of 18. Self-reported rates of abuse, however, far exceed official figures, suggesting that large numbers of children who experience sexual abuse do not come to the attention of relevant authorities. Whether and how those children have tried to tell their stories remains unclear.

Objective
The goal of the review was to explore scholarly literature to determine what was known about what enables or constrains children to disclose their experience of sexual abuse.

Method
A systematic scoping review was undertaken to better understand the current state of knowledge in the scholarly literature on child sexual abuse disclosure. Thirty-two scholarly publications were included for analysis following a rigorous process of sourcing articles from five databases and systematically screening them based on transparent inclusion and exclusion criteria. Ecological systems and trauma-informed theoretical paradigms underpinned an inductive thematic analysis of the included manuscripts.

Results
Three multi-dimensional themes were identified from the thirty-two publications. These themes were: factors enabling disclosure are multifaceted; barriers to disclosure include a complex interplay of individual, familial, contextual and cultural issues; and Indigenous victims and survivors, male survivors, and survivors with a minoritised cultural background may face additional barriers to disclosing their experiences of abuse.

Conclusions
The literature suggests that a greater understanding of the barriers to disclosures exists. Further research that supports a deeper understanding of the complex interplay of enablers and the barriers to disclosure across diverse populations is needed. In particular, future research should privilege the voices of victims and survivors of child sexual abuse, mobilising their lived experiences to co-create improved practice and policy.

Education

La Trobe University
BSocWk
Monash University
MSocWk
2014
PhD, La Trobe University