Rallies have taken place across Australia in response to a wave of recent violence against women.
Demonstrators want gender-based violence to be declared a national emergency and stricter laws put in place to stop it.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the issue was a national crisis.
In Australia, a woman has been killed on average every four days so far this year.
Organiser Martina Ferrara said: “We want alternative reporting options for victim survivors to let them own their stories and own their healing and reporting journey.
“And we want the government to acknowledge this is an emergency action and take immediate action.”
Speaking at a march in the capital Canberra attended by thousands of protesters, Mr Albanese admitted the government at all levels needed to do better.
“We need to change culture, the attitudes, the legal system and the approach by all governments,” he said.
“We need to make sure that this isn’t up to women, it’s up to men to change men’s behaviour as well,” he added.
Responding to calls by protestors for violence against women to be classified as a national emergency, Mr Albanese said the classification was normally used during floods or bushfires to release a temporary injection of cash.
“We don’t need one month or two months – we need to address this in a serious way, week by week, month by month, year by year,” he said.
His comments were met with mixture of heckles and cheers,
But Australia’s federal attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, has rejected holding a royal commission into gender-based violence.
Mr Albanese has repeatedly called gender-based violence an epidemic but it’s not new: in 2021, marches took place across the country over allegations of sexual misconduct within the government.