World-Renowned Expert Leads Domestic Violence Training
World-Renowned Expert Leads Domestic Violence
Training
An expatriate New Zealander
working at the cutting edge of domestic violence prevention
in the USA will headline a series of nationwide workshops to
be hosted by the National Network of Stopping Violence, Te
Kupenga.
Graham Barnes is currently with the
Battered Women’s Justice Project in Minneapolis, Minnesota
– a nationally-recognised initiative of Duluth’s
Domestic Abuse Intervention Program.
Graham works
closely with community organisations, law enforcement,
prosecution, corrections, courts and judiciary as part of a
multi-disciplinary team that provides technical assistance
to communities that have successfully obtained grants from
the Department of Justice’s Federal Violence Against Women
Office.
He will lead a workshop – ‘Making a
Real Difference: Effective Co-ordinated Community Responses
(CCR) to Domestic Violence’ – in four main centres:
Wellington (April 24), Auckland (April 26), Hamilton (April
30) and Christchurch (May 2).
The training has been
organised by Te Kupenga in partnership with the National
Collective of Independent Women’s Refuges and supported by
the Family Safety Teams and the Ministry of Social
Development.
Te Kupenga national manager Brian
Gardner says a range of community and government interagency
initiatives – providing an effective co-ordinated response
to domestic violence – have been developed in New Zealand
over the past decade.
Brian says experience and
research shows that successful interagency responses
increase the safety and wellbeing of individuals, whānau,
families and communities.
“But what is it that
makes a real difference?” he asks. “How do we measure
success?
“The co-ordinated community response
model is much more than a networking opportunity. It
potentially links government and community agencies into a
seamless response to domestic violence intervention, drawing
on experience gained in Duluth, Minnesota, and other
progressive cities in America who have used a systemic
change perspective to address domestic violence in their
communities.”
The ‘Making a Real Difference’
workshop will provide participants
with:
· Information, resources and
case studies on providing effective, seamless, interagency
responses to domestic violence.
·
An understanding of the diverse experiences of victims of
violence and how to maximise their safety and
autonomy.
· Skills on how to use
effective interagency processes to hold offenders
accountable for their violence and engage them in a change
process.
· Expertise in building
risk assessment into case
management.
· A mechanism to track
case outcomes.
· Experience on how
to constructively solve problems common to co-ordinated
interagency responses.
· A range
of resources to support the development of interagency
groups.
Te Kupenga is a network of 42 independent
community-based organisations – from Whangarei to
Invercargill – working to end violence and abuse in
families.
For more information or to register for
the workshop, go to the website www.nnsvs.org.nz.
ENDS