What Works in Reducing Domestic Violence
- A Comprehensive Guide for Professionals
- Indbinding:
- Hardback
- Sideantal:
- 412
- Udgivet:
- 1. marts 2001
- Størrelse:
- 140x216x26 mm.
- Vægt:
- 671 g.
- 2-3 uger.
- 28. november 2024
Normalpris
Abonnementspris
- Rabat på køb af fysiske bøger
- 1 valgfrit digitalt ugeblad
- 20 timers lytning og læsning
- Adgang til 70.000+ titler
- Ingen binding
Abonnementet koster 75 kr./md.
Ingen binding og kan opsiges når som helst.
- 1 valgfrit digitalt ugeblad
- 20 timers lytning og læsning
- Adgang til 70.000+ titler
- Ingen binding
Abonnementet koster 75 kr./md.
Ingen binding og kan opsiges når som helst.
Beskrivelse af What Works in Reducing Domestic Violence
This is probably one of the most important book on domestic violence to be published in Britain in the last several years. What Works in Reducing Domestic Violence? presents a wealth of information on domestic violence and the strategies which have proved effective for dealing with it. The book is outstanding for in the quality and number of its contributors, all of whom are well-known and respected in the field. The book is written to be accessible to practitioners, academics and any one engaged in multi-agency work in this area.Focusing on how to improve agency responses to women?s needs, the chapters draw on a wide range of evaluations carried out internationally and on feedback from women themselves.
Subjects covered include:?
housing needs;
?health services;
the criminal justice response;
?children?s needs;
multi-agency working;
perpetrators;?
civil remedies;
?outreach and advocacy.
The book also examines what is known about the risks of domestic violence and its costs, and makes the case for targeted interventions which will ultimately save both lives and money. The bibliography offers a most helpful listing of recent work in this field. This book has its origins in work commissioned in 1999 by the Home Office of England and Wales under its Crime Reduction Programme Violence against Women Initiative. Summaries of the work in each area were published as a Crime Reduction Programme Briefing Note which proved to be one of the most popular collections that the Home Office ever issued. The reports, now available in this book, represent the views of the authors, and should not be taken to be Home Office or Government policy. However, they amount to a comprehensive guide- which any professional in this field will want to have always to hand.
Contents
Women survivors? views on domestic violence services Audrey Mullender and Gill Hague
Meeting the needs of children who live with domestic violence Audrey Mullender
Dealing with perpetrators Audrey Mullender and Sheila Burton
What role can the Health services play? Leslie L Davidson, Valerie King, Jo Garcia, Sally Marchant
Effective policing of domestic violence Jalna Hanmer and Sue Griffiths
Accommodation provision for households experiencing domestic violence
Debra Levison & Nicola HarwinDomestic violence and harassment: An assessment of the civil remedies Susan Edwards
New directions in prosecuting domestic violence Susan Edwards
Supporting women and children in their communities: Outreach and advocacy approaches to domestic violence Liz Kelly and Cathy Humphreys
Multi-agency initiatives as a response to domestic violence Gill Hague
Assessing and managing the risk of domestic violence Sylvia Walby and Andrew Myhill
Monitoring costs and evaluating needs Debbie Crisp and Betsy Stanko
Julie Taylor-Browne was a Principal Research Officer the Home Office, responsible for the Crime Reduction Programme?s Violence against Women Initiative.
Subjects covered include:?
housing needs;
?health services;
the criminal justice response;
?children?s needs;
multi-agency working;
perpetrators;?
civil remedies;
?outreach and advocacy.
The book also examines what is known about the risks of domestic violence and its costs, and makes the case for targeted interventions which will ultimately save both lives and money. The bibliography offers a most helpful listing of recent work in this field. This book has its origins in work commissioned in 1999 by the Home Office of England and Wales under its Crime Reduction Programme Violence against Women Initiative. Summaries of the work in each area were published as a Crime Reduction Programme Briefing Note which proved to be one of the most popular collections that the Home Office ever issued. The reports, now available in this book, represent the views of the authors, and should not be taken to be Home Office or Government policy. However, they amount to a comprehensive guide- which any professional in this field will want to have always to hand.
Contents
Women survivors? views on domestic violence services Audrey Mullender and Gill Hague
Meeting the needs of children who live with domestic violence Audrey Mullender
Dealing with perpetrators Audrey Mullender and Sheila Burton
What role can the Health services play? Leslie L Davidson, Valerie King, Jo Garcia, Sally Marchant
Effective policing of domestic violence Jalna Hanmer and Sue Griffiths
Accommodation provision for households experiencing domestic violence
Debra Levison & Nicola HarwinDomestic violence and harassment: An assessment of the civil remedies Susan Edwards
New directions in prosecuting domestic violence Susan Edwards
Supporting women and children in their communities: Outreach and advocacy approaches to domestic violence Liz Kelly and Cathy Humphreys
Multi-agency initiatives as a response to domestic violence Gill Hague
Assessing and managing the risk of domestic violence Sylvia Walby and Andrew Myhill
Monitoring costs and evaluating needs Debbie Crisp and Betsy Stanko
Julie Taylor-Browne was a Principal Research Officer the Home Office, responsible for the Crime Reduction Programme?s Violence against Women Initiative.
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