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The Role of Accountability in Batterers Intervention Programs and Community Response to Intimate Partner Violence

To describe how stakeholders involved in intimate partner violence prevention and treatment at different levels of the Social Ecological Model view accountability in relationship to the key actors at various levels in the intervention process and their role in addressing future incidence of IPV. We...

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Published in:Journal of family violence 2019-10, Vol.34 (7), p.631-643
Main Authors: Pallatino, Chelsea L., Morrison, Penelope K., Miller, Elizabeth, Burke, Jessica, Cluss, Patricia A., Fleming, Rhonda, Hawker, Lynn, George, Donna, Bicehouse, Terry, Chang, Judy C.
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creator Pallatino, Chelsea L.
Morrison, Penelope K.
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George, Donna
Bicehouse, Terry
Chang, Judy C.
description To describe how stakeholders involved in intimate partner violence prevention and treatment at different levels of the Social Ecological Model view accountability in relationship to the key actors at various levels in the intervention process and their role in addressing future incidence of IPV. We conducted 36 in-depth qualitative interviews with BIP facilitators, IPV advocates, socio-judicial officials, and local and state policy makers. Participants were recruited via snowball sampling and interviews were audiorecorded, transcribed verbatim, and coded in ATLAS.ti. Interviews broadly explored the challenges and best practices in facilitating BIPs, as well as perceptions on the etiology of IPV. The current analysis focuses on participant views related to accountability, and the role that various groups and institutions have in addressing IPV perpetration. Interview participants emphasized a multi-systems level approach to addressing IPV, one that required the responsibility of both programs and judicial systems in establishing IPV as a serious crime, and stressed the need to ensure accountability across all relevant stakeholders engaged in the broader scope of IPV intervention. In order to have a sustainable impact on IPV perpetration, stakeholders across the Social Ecological Model will need to utilize crucial intervention periods using a standardized response to improve outcomes for IPV survivors, perpetrators, families and communities.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10896-019-00050-6
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subjects Accountability
Analysis
Best practice
Clinical Psychology
Community involvement
Crime
Criminology and Criminal Justice
Domestic violence
Ecological studies
Etiology
Family violence
Interest groups
Intervention
Intimate partner violence
Law and Psychology
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Original Article
Perpetrators
Policy making
Prevention
Psychotherapy and Counseling
Quality of Life Research
Responsibility
Snowball sampling
Social aspects
Social response
Stakeholders
Survivor
Victims
title The Role of Accountability in Batterers Intervention Programs and Community Response to Intimate Partner Violence
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