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"Assisting women in the development, growth and creation of outstanding opportunities in all aspects of their lives."
Community Support
Stellar Women recognises the need for awareness, support and understanding within the community to facilitate the creation of opportunities and personal growth.
With that in mind, we have chosen to support the following organisations ...

Catherine House is the only provider of supported accommodation in South Australia for women over 21 years, unaccompanied by children, who are affected by homelessness for reasons other than domestic violence.
Over 700 women a year come to Catherine House.
At Catherine House we seek to offer a woman the opportunity to transform her life, through the various supports and programs that we provide. Our underlying philosophy is that we always see a client as a person first, and not the sum of all the problems that has brought her to homelessness. We have a holistic approach to the work that we do. We not only deal with the immediate problems and issues that have led a client to homelessness, we also look with her at how she can create a more sustainable, satisfying future.

National Adoption Awareness Week (NAAW) is a series of community based events exploring the process of adoption, and the journeys of all people touched by adoption, locally and internationally.
NAAW aims to acknowledge and learn from all adoption-related journeys and experiences. It creates opportunities for open, honest and ongoing dialogue between all parties to adoption, to increase awareness of its complexities, challenges and opportunities.

An investment in girls, more than 500 million strong in the developing world, is the key to breaking the intergenerational poverty cycle and the greatest force for global change.
At each stage of a girls life, she faces unique obstacles and discrimination.
Girls are less likely to survive until their first birthday. During childhood, girls can be burdened with such chores as childcare and food preparation, preventing them from attending school. During teen years the world expands for boys, but contracts for girls. Girls have fewer opportunities, are at greater risk of forced marriages, pregnancy and HIV. By the age of 24, there are far less women than men in the workplace in all developing countries.
So why invest in girls? Because we would transform their lives and they would inturn, lift their families out of poverty.