Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/20070
Record ID: 93f7af27-5c08-44ce-834a-cd4d703e5160
Web resource: https://aic.gov.au/publications/tandi/tandi552
Type: Report
Title: Targeting repeat domestic violence: Assessing short term risk of reoffending
Authors: Boxall, Hayley
Brown, Rick
Morgan, Anthony
Keywords: Australia;Perpetrators;Domestic violence;Intimate partner violence;Recidivism;risk;Offenders
Year: 2018
Publisher: Australian Institute of Criminology
Citation: No. 552
Notes:  " Drawing on repeat
victimisation studies, and analysing
police data on domestic violence
incidents, the current study examined
the prevalence and correlates of
short-term reoffending.
The results showed that a significant
proportion of offenders reoffended in
the weeks and months following a
domestic violence incident. Individuals
who reoffended more quickly were
more likely to be involved in multiple
incidents in a short period of time.
Offenders with a history of domestic
violence—particularly more frequent
offending—and of breaching violence
orders were more likely to reoffend.
Most importantly, the risk of
reoffending was cumulative, increasing
with each subsequent incident.
The findings have important
implications for police and other
frontline agencies responding to
domestic violence, demonstrating the
importance of targeted, timely and
graduated responses. "
URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/20070
Appears in Collections:Reports

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