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Resources for Domestic Violence Teams

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Title: Resources for Domestic Violence Teams


1
Resources for Domestic ViolenceTeams
2
RCPI Domestic Violence Investigator (DVI) Series
  • Part I - Dynamics of Domestic Violence
  • Part II - Legal Aspects of Domestic Violence
  • Part III - Resources for Domestic Violence Teams

3
Performance Objectives
  • At the end of this course, students will be able
    to
  • Understand that community policing is a
    philosophy built upon a specific organizational
    strategy.
  • Explain how community policing can prevent
    domestic violence.
  • Explain the SARA process and to understand the
    main components of the four steps of the problem
    solving model.
  • Understand the purpose of a Coordinated Community
    Response to domestic violence.

4
Performance Objectives
  • At the end of this course, students will be able
    to
  • Identify the elements of a Coordinated Community
    Response to domestic violence.
  • Learn the importance of being sensitive to the
    issues facing victims of domestic violence.
  • Learn techniques to increase the impact of
    domestic violence teams.
  • Apply information and skills learned in this
    class to domestic violence scenarios.

5
Teams
  • Definition
  • A number of individuals associated in some joint
    effort

6
Teams
  • Participants
  • The whole is greater than the sum of the parts.
  • Synergy

7
Teams
  • Team Focus
  • Purpose
  • Type
  • Position
  • Power
  • Design
  • Members

8
Teams
  • Type
  • Project
  • Task only
  • Temporary
  • Long term
  • Members chosen
  • Members voluntary

9
Teams
  • Plan
  • Structure of the team
  • Who will do what, when and how
  • Number of members
  • Leadership configuration permanent, shared or
    rotated
  • Authority and responsibilities of all members
  • Timing of Meetings
  • Time commitment of members

10
Teams
  • Position
  • How team fits into current community
  • How team members are chosen
  • To whom the team is accountable
  • Who supports the teams credibility
  • How members compensated for time

11
Teams
  • Types of Power
  • Power To
  • Power Over
  • Power With

12
Teams
  • Power
  • Responsibility and Authority
  • Boundaries of teams work
  • Makes recommendations only
  • Makes policy only
  • Acts out of decision making ability
  • Job descriptions
  • Power differences in members outside of the team

13
Quotes
  • Americans are a peculiar peopleif, in a local
    community, a citizen becomes aware of a human
    need that is not met, he (sic) discusses the
    situation with his neighbors. Suddenly, a
    committee comes into existence. The committee
    begins to operate on behalf of the need, and a
    new common function is established. It is like
    watching a miracle.
  • Alexis de Tocqueville

14
Community Response
  • A truly successful community response to family
    violence commits to
  • Keep victims safe
  • Hold batterers accountable
  • Reduce incidents of domestic violence
  • Prevent family violence in all its forms

15
Community Response
  • A Successful Community Response
  • Utilizes multidisciplinary approach
  • Involves commitment of entire community
  • Inspires and engages people
  • Advocates personal, professional and civic
    responsibility
  • Promotes resident leadership

16
Domestic Violence Teams
  • Purpose
  • Keep victims safe
  • Hold batterers accountable
  • Bring people together
  • Common mission and vision
  • Work connected in some fashion
  • Increases collaboration
  • Facilitates achievement of objectives

17
Successful Prevention Requires
  • Active Involvement and Support From
  • Residents
  • Government
  • Business
  • Religious entities
  • Media
  • Civic organizations
  • Funding sources

18
Successful Prevention Requires
  • Trained Personnel
  • Justice system
  • Health and human services
  • Protective services
  • Religious institutions
  • Educational system
  • Human resources

19
Successful Prevention Requires
  • Provide
  • Coordination
  • Monitoring
  • Evaluation of programs, services and
    interventions

20
Levels of Prevention
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary (direct response to crisis)

21
Levels of Prevention
  • Tertiary Prevention
  • Interactions and services
  • Impacts lives of family violence victims and
    abusers
  • Assists in breaking the cycle of violence

22
Tertiary Prevention
  • Safety for Victims
  • At the scene of incident(s)
  • In the immediate short term

23
Tertiary Prevention
  • Crisis Intervention Services for Victims
  • Culturally appropriate
  • Easily accessible
  • Available through outreach

24
Tertiary Prevention
  • Appropriate Referrals
  • Health
  • Legal
  • Shelter
  • Economic
  • Human Services
  • Educational

25
Tertiary Prevention
  • Post Crisis Services
  • Victims
  • Abusers
  • Children

26
Levels of Prevention
  • Secondary Prevention
  • Focuses on reaching individuals and families at
    risk for violent behavior or experiencing
    violence in the home.

27
Levels of Prevention
  • Primary Prevention
  • Changing values
  • Changing attitudes
  • Changing behaviors
  • Changing conditions in societyto be in alignment
    with prevention goals

28
Community Accountability Wheel
  • This wheel begins to demonstrate the ideal
    community response to the issue of domestic
    violence. Community opinion, which strongly
    states that battering is unacceptable, leads all
    of our social institutions to expect full
    accountability by applying appropriate
    consequences.

29
Community Accountability Wheel
This wheel was developed by Mike Jackson and
David Garvin of the Domestic Violence Institute
of Michigan.
30
The Cs
  • Communication
  • Giving, sharing, exchanging information
  • Atmosphere is friendly, helpful, assertive

31
The Cs
  • Communication Occurs Between or among
  • Residents
  • Frontline workers
  • Mid-level workers
  • Leaders/Chiefs/Directors/Agency Heads
  • Systems/Institutions/Organizations
  • All systems in a jurisdiction

32
The Cs
  • Coordination or Cooperation
  • Staff work together on a case-by-case basis
  • Participate in cross training to understand roles
    and responsibilities

33
The Cs
  • Coordination or Cooperation
  • Between or among
  • Residents
  • Frontline workers
  • Mid-level workers
  • Leaders/Chiefs/Directors/Agency Heads
  • Systems/Institutions/Organizations
  • All systems in a jurisdiction

34
The Cs
  • Collaboration adds
  • Joint analysis, planning and adjustment to others
    needs, schedules, etc.
  • Joint work on agency protocols
  • Supports work done by other individuals/entities
  • Increased funding opportunities

35
The Cs
  • Successful Collaboration with the Community
  • Increases community capacity to solve problems
  • Contributes to increased trust and respect
  • Builds partnering skills
  • Increases ability to identify stakeholders
  • Contributes to the belief that we are all in
    this together

36
Role of Local Coalitions
  • Training and Technical Assistance
  • Dont reinvent the wheel.
  • Share what you have, ask for what you need.
  • Strengthen individual knowledge and skills.
  • Advance organizational development.

37
Role of Local Coalitions
  • Public Education
  • Support local programs in reaching their
    communities.
  • Provide information on violence against women to
    associations of professionals, civic groups and
    other entities.
  • Support local, state and national efforts and
    organizations.

38
Role of State Coalitions
  • Public Policy
  • Analyze and develop policy and legislation.
  • Advocate for policy and legislative change.
  • Support implementation of new policies and laws.
  • Foster cooperation, coordination and
    collaboration.
  • Contribute to national policy initiatives.

39
Role of State Coalitions
  • Philosophy
  • Women are not square pegs to be pushed into the
    small holes of programs.
  • Justice for battered women involves more than
    safety.

40
The Development of Modern Policing
  • To maintain at all times a relationship with the
    public that gives reality to the historic
    tradition that the police are the public and the
    public are the police the police being only the
    members of the public that are paid to give
    full-time attention to the duties which are
    incumbent on every citizen in the interest of
    community welfare and existence.
  • Sir Robert Peel, 19th Century English statesman
    and father of modern policing.

41
Sir Robert Peel's Nine Principles For Modern
Policing
  • 1. The basic mission for which the police exist
    is to prevent crime and disorder.
  • 2. The ability of the police to perform their
    duties is dependent upon public approval of
    police actions.
  • 3. Police must secure the willing cooperation of
    the public in voluntary observance of the law to
    be able to secure and maintain the respect of the
    law.

42
Sir Robert Peel's Nine Principles For Modern
Policing
  • 4. The degree of cooperation of the public that
    can be secured diminishes proportionally to the
    necessity of the use of force.
  • 5. Police seek and preserve public favor not by
    catered public opinion, but by constantly
    demonstrating absolute impartial service to the
    law.

43
Sir Robert Peel's Nine Principles For Modern
Policing
  • 6. Police use physical force to the extent
    necessary to secure observance of the law or to
    restore order only when exercise of persuasion,
    advice and warning is found to be insufficient.
  • 7. Police at all times should maintain a
    relationship with the public that gives reality
    to the historic tradition the Police are the
    public and the public are the police. The police
    being only full time individuals charged with the
    duties that are incumbent on all of the citizens.

44
Sir Robert Peel's Nine Principles For Modern
Policing
  • 8. Police should always direct their actions
    strictly towards their functions and never appear
    to usurp the powers of the judiciary.
  • 9. The test of police efficiency is the absence
    of crime and disorder, not the visible evidence
    of police action in dealing with it.

45
Problems with the Professional Model of Policing
  • Crime began to rise and research suggested that
    conventional police methods were not effective.
  • The public experienced increased fear.
  • Many minority citizens did not perceive their
    treatment as equitable or adequate.
  • The anti-war and civil rights movements
    challenged the police.

46
Research on Traditional Policing Strategies
  • Increasing the number of police does not lower
    the crime rate or increase the number of crimes
    solved.
  • Randomized patrol does not reduce crime nor
    increase the chance of catching suspects.
  • Two-person patrol cars are not more effective
    than one-person cars in lowering of crime rates
    or catching criminals.

47
Research on Traditional Policing Strategies
  • Saturation patrol does not reduce crime, it
    displaces it.
  • The kind of crime that terrifies Americans most
    is rarely encountered by police on patrol.
  • Improving response time on calls has no effect on
    the likelihood of arresting criminals or even in
    satisfying involved citizens.
  • Crimes are not usually solved through criminal
    investigations conducted by police.

48
Factors that Influenced the Development of New
Police Strategies
  • The police field is preoccupied with management,
    internal pressures, and efficiency to the
    exclusion of concern for effectiveness in dealing
    with serious problems.
  • The police devote most of their resources to
    responding to calls from citizens, reserving too
    small a percentage of their time and energy for
    acting on their own initiative to prevent or
    reduce community problems.

49
Factors that Influenced the Development of New
Police Strategies
  • The community is a major resource with an
    enormous potential, largely untapped, for
    reducing the number and magnitude of problems
    that otherwise become the business of the police.
  • Police are not using the time and talent of
    available rank-and-file officers effectively.
  • Efforts to improve policing have often failed
    because they have not been adequately related to
    the overall policies and structure of the police
    organization. Herman Goldstein,
    1977

50
Community Policing Defined
  • Herman Goldstein, who has been regarded by many
    as the father of Community Policing, authored the
    following definition
  • Community policing is an organizational wide
    philosophy and management approach that promotes
    community, government and police partnerships
    proactive problem-solving and community
    engagement to address the causes of crime, fear
    of crime, and other community issues.

51
Core Components of Community Policing
  • Community policing has two core, equally
    important components
  • Community Partnership
  • Problem-solving

52
Community Policing "Is Not
  • It Is Not a Technique or a Program
  • It Is Not a Limited or Specialized Style of
    Policing
  • It Is Not Foot Patrol or Riding a Bicycle
  • It Is Not "Soft" on Crime
  • It Is Not a Specialized Unit or Group

53
Principles of Community Oriented Policing and
Problem Solving
  • Reassesses who is responsible for public safety
    and redefines the roles and relationships between
    the police and the community.
  • Requires shared ownership, decision making, and
    accountability, as well as sustained commitment
    from both the police and the community.
  • Establishes new public expectations of and
    measurement standards for police effectiveness.
  • Increases understanding and trust between police
    and community members.

54
Principles of Community Oriented Policing and
Problem Solving
  • Empowers and strengthens community-based efforts.
  • Requires constant flexibility to respond to all
    emerging issues.
  • Requires an on-going commitment to developing
    long-term and pro-active programs/strategies to
    address the underlying conditions that cause
    community problems.
  • Requires knowledge of available community
    resources and how to access and mobilize them, as
    well as the ability to develop new resources
    within the community.

55
Principles of Community Oriented Policing and
Problem Solving
  • Requires buy-in of the top management of the
    police and other local government agencies, as
    well as a commitment from all levels of
    management.
  • Decentralizes police services, operations, and
    management. Encourages innovative and creative
    problem solving by all - making greater use of
    the knowledge, skill, and expertise throughout
    the organization.

56
Principles of Community Oriented Policing and
Problem Solving
  • Shifts the focus of police work from responding
    to individual incidents to addressing problems
    identified by the community and the police,
    emphasizing problem-solving approaches to
    supplement traditional law-enforcement methods.
  • Requires commitment to developing new skills
    through training (e.g., problem-solving,
    networking, mediation, facilitation, conflict
    resolution, cultural competency/literacy).

57
The Main Principles of Quality Leadership
  • Maintaining a vision and managing through values
    rather than rules.
  • Focusing on teamwork.
  • Commitment to the problem-solving process with
    focus on data.
  • Seeking input before decisions are made.
  • Asking people who do the work about ways to
    improve the process.

58
The Main Principles of Quality Leadership
  • Avoiding "top-down" decision making.
  • A customer orientation.
  • Focusing on improving systems and processes
    before blaming individuals.
  • Encouraging creativity, risk-taking, and
    tolerance of honest mistakes.
  • Creating an open climate that encourages
    providing and accepting feedback.
  • Developing goals and a plan to achieve them.

59
Major Components of Community Policing
  • Citizen Empowerment
  • Officer Empowerment
  • Collaboration
  • Problem Solving

60
How Citizens Can Help Control Crime
  • Citizens can watch and report suspicious activity
  • Citizens can patrol, confront suspicious people,
    take active involvement
  • Citizens can reduce their chances of
    victimization or causing neighborhood
    deterioration
  • Citizens can put pressure on others
  • Citizens can authorize the police to act in their
    behalf

61
The Four Parts of SARA
  • Scanning
  • Identify problems
  • Analysis
  • Collect and analyze information
  • Response
  • Collaboratively develop and implement solutions
    with other agencies and the public
  • Assessment
  • Evaluate strategy effectiveness

62
Potential Sources of Information for Identifying
Problems
  • Crime Analysis Unit
  • Time trends and patterns (time of day, day of
    week, monthly, seasonal, and other cyclical
    events), and patterns of similar events) offender
    descriptions, victim characteristics, locations,
    physical settings, and other circumstances)
  • Patrol
  • Recurring calls, bad areas, victim types,
    complaints from citizens

63
Quote
  • Never doubt that a small group of committed
    citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the
    only thing that has.
  • Margaret Mead

64
Quote
  • Those who are truly in earnest must be willing
    to be anything or nothing and publicly and
    privately, in season and out avow their
    sympathies with despised and persecuted ideas
    and bear the consequences.
  • Susan B. Anthony

65
Definitions
  • Culture The shared values, traditions, norms,
    customs, arts, history, folklore, and
    institutions or a group of people that are
    unified by race, ethnicity, language,
    nationality or religion.
  • Cultural Group A group of people who
    consciously or unconsciously share identifiable
    values, norms, symbols and some ways of living
    that are repeated and transmitted from one
    generation to another.

66
Definitions
  • Cultural Diversity Differences in race,
    ethnicity, language, nationality or religion
    among various groups within a community,
    organization or nation.
  • Culturally Appropriate Demonstrating both
    sensitivity to cultural differences and
    similarities and effectiveness in using cultural
    symbols to communicate a message.

67
Definitions
  • Ethnicity This term refers to those who share
    common traits of history, national origin, and
    cultural patterns.
  • Ethnocentric The belief or attitude that ones
    own group is superior.

68
Definitions
  • Race A socially defined population that is
    derived from distinguishable physical
    characteristics that are genetically transmitted.
  • Heritage Something that is passed down from
    one's predecessors legacy, birthright.
  • Prejudice An unfavorable opinion formed before a
    current interaction.

69
Three Levels of Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Institutional Businesses, government agencies,
    schools, media, health care, legal system,
    religious organizations and other institutions
    may discriminate on the basis of race, sexual
    orientation, etc.
  • Social/Cultural Acceptable cultural norms and
    values of society are reflective of experiences
    of dominant groups.
  • Individual Personal attitudes and beliefs of
    prejudice when one interacts personally with a
    person or group of people from a different group
    from oneself.

70
Power and Control Wheel
Developed by the Domestic Abuse Intervention
Project.
71
Obstacles Victims Face
  • Oppression Institutional power, ideological
    domination and promulgation of the culture, logic
    system and ideology of one group over another.
    Forms of oppression include racism, sexism,
    class-ism, ageism, anti-Semitism, "able-ism",
    homophobia.
  • Prejudice Attitude, opinion or feeling formed
    about individuals or groups without adequate
    knowledge, thought or reason.

72
Obstacles Victims Face
  • Discrimination Manifestation of oppression,
    differential treatment that favors one group over
    another, including the denial or limitation of
    access to rights, goods and privileges.
  • Homophobia Fear, dislike, hatred or ignorance of
    gay men and lesbians as individuals, a culture, a
    community and of homosexuality as an identity

73
Link Between Animal Abuse and Human Violence
74
Cruelty to Animals Another form of Family
Violence
  • Abusers threaten to kill victims pet.
  • Batterers abuse pets to hurt victim.
  • Parents kill a childs pet to punish the child.
  • Parents threaten to kill childs pet to secure
    acquiescence or silence for sexual abuse.

75
Quotes
  • I know of no higher fortitude than stubbornness
    in the face of overwhelming odds.
  • Louis Nizer

76
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