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SoSafe Manual & Tools

The refreshed SoSafe manual and tools include many small changes that reflect the values and new issues in our community in 2025.

These changes include:

  • An increased focus on implementation
  • Increased clarification of the consistent language, tools, rules, and practices that are central to SoSafe implementation
  • Highlighted further the importance of human and sexual rights that underpin the SoSafe Framework
  • Use of Boardmaker pictographs
  • Updated references and research
  • Included new assessment and evaluation tools

Implementation Guides

Four Implementation Guides have been created to demonstrate SoSafe implementation with diverse groups of people with disability and the workforce sectors who support them. Each of the Implementation Guides explores SoSAFE implementation with people in specific contexts:

  • LGBTQIA+
  • First Nations
  • Rural and remote
  • Culturally and linguistically diverse.

More Resources

Sexual Health and Family Planning ACT (SHFPACT) are the owners of the SoSafe Framework.

SoSafe® is a Registered Trademark and can only be used to describe materials and training programs approved by the authors of the SoSafe® Framework.

The SHFPACT office is located on the land of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri people. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present. We acknowledge all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Traditional Custodians of Country and their continuing connection to land, sea, culture and community. We encourage any First Nations visitors to this site to share their voice with the project by contacting us.

logo with two human-like figures beside SHFPSCT above sexual health and family planning ACTAustralian Aboriginal Flag where the top half is black and the lower half is red with a yellow circle in the centre.Torres Strait Islander Flag with the green panels at the top and bottom, black lines dividing the panels, a white traditional headdress Dhari at the centre and underneath the Dhari a white five-pointed star.Imposed from the left on six horizontal stripes of red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple, is a chevron that starts with a field of yellow superimposed with a purple circle followed by angled stripes of white, pink, light blue, brown, and black.Disability pride flag which is charcoal grey with a diagonal band from the top left to bottom right corner, made up of five parallel stripes in red, gold, pale grey, blue, and green
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