Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/19831
Record ID: cb5917cf-c79a-4adf-80e3-912f21ec4793
Electronic Resources: https://www.anrows.org.au/project/invisible-practices-intervention-with-fathers-who-use-violence/
Web resource: https://www.anrows.org.au/publication/invisible-practices-intervention-with-fathers-who-use-violence/
Type: Report
Title: Invisible Practices: Intervention with fathers who use violence
Authors: Humphreys, Cathy
Heward-Belle, Susan
Tsantefski, Menka
Healey, Lucy
Mandel, David
Keywords: Victims of family violence -- Legal status, law, etc -- Australia;Family violence -- Services for;Family violence -- Law and legislation -- Australia;Safety;Family violence -- Australia -- Prevention
Topic: Perpetrator interventions
Categories: ANROWS Publications
Year: 2018
Publisher: ANROWS
Citation: Issue 04/2018
Abstract:  This project had its genesis in the need to develop effective and safe ways of working with fathers who use violence in order to better support women and children living with domestic and family violence (DFV). The DFV system, in particular, specialist women's DFV services, developed from interventions focused largely on supporting women and children living with DFV to separate from men who use violence. Separation has also been a key priority for the statutory child protection (CP) system that has often required women to leave violent men for the sake of the children, in spite of the danger and likely impoverishment of doing so, for many women and their children.

At the same time, family law with its "pro-contact culture" (Humphreys & Campo, 2017, p.5) presents potentially dangerous situations for adult and child victims/survivors
alike in supporting fathers' involvement with children despite their use of DFV (Hester, 2011). Further, intervention with men who use violence and control occurs mostly through justice responses and/or specialist men's behaviour change programs (MBCPs) neither of which focus on fathering issues. While significant intervention with fathers occurs through CP and generic family service programs, workers' practice with fathers who use DFV and control is neither documented nor evidence-based in the way it has occurred, for example, with MBCPs. In other words, to date, the nature of these practice interventions have been largely "invisible".
Notes: 

This report addresses work covered in the ANROWS research project PI.17.06 Invisible practices: Intervention with fathers who use violence. Please consult the ANROWS website for more information on this project.

ANROWS research contributes to the six National Outcomes of the National Plan to Reduce Violence against Women and their Children 2010-2022. This research addresses National Plan Outcome 6 – Perpetrators stop their violence and are held to account, and National Plan Outcome 5 - Justice responses are effective.

Suggested citation:
Healey, L., Humphreys, C., Tsantefski, M., Heward-Belle, S., & Mandel, D. (2018). Invisible practices: Intervention with fathers who use violence (Research report, 04/2018). Sydney, NSW: ANROWS

URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/19831
ISBN: 978-1-925372-94-6
978-1-925372-95-3
Physical description: 142 p. ; ill.
Appears in Collections:ANROWS Publications
Reports

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