NCJ Number: 187351
Title: Models of Community Coordination in Partner Violence
Cases: A Multi-Site Comparative Analysis, Final Report
Author: Alissa P. Worden
Sponsor: National Institute of Justice US Dept of Justice
810 Seventh Street NW
Washington, DC 20531
Sale: National Institute of Justice/NCJRS
Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20849
Paper Reproduction Sales National Institute of Justice/NCJRS
Box 6000 Department F
Rockville, MD 20849
Date Published: 2001
Page Count: 199
Country of Origin: United States
Language: English
Grant Number: 95-WT-NX-0006
Annotation: The purposes of this study were to explore the
dimensionality of community responses to domestic violence and to
develop and test hypotheses about the efficacy of different coordination
experiences in five communities.
Abstract: The study found that, despite strong policy interest
in arrest and numerous reforms at the State and local levels in
the direction of less discretionary arrest policies, the mandatory
or discretionary nature of the arrest decision was only one dimension
of law enforcement practice in domestic violence cases. Other dimensions
included prosecutorial policies and victim involvement. Despite
the fact that coordination was frequently conceptualized as an aggregation
of progressive policies aimed at holding offenders accountable and
maximizing victim safety, in reality police departments and prosecutors
reported having policies and practices that were a mix of recommended
ideas. Profiles of the five communities revealed diverse circumstances
in local responses to domestic violence and in local efforts to
work cooperatively toward more coordinated responses. Communities
varied in terms of the strength of community victim safety nets
and offender accountability. Criminal justice responses to domestic
violence in the five communities also varied. The study sheds light
on the role of courts, domestic violence advocacy programs, community
task forces, victims, and offenders and discusses implications of
the findings for future research in these areas. The survey and
case data collection instruments are appended. Footnotes and tables
Thesaurus Term: Comparative criminology ; Violent offenders
; Interagency cooperation ; Prosecution ; Comparative analysis ;
Domestic assault ; Police policies and procedures ; Arrest procedures
; Criminal justice research ; Victims of
violence ; Violence prevention ; NIJ final report ; NIJ grant-related
documents
The NIJ Research Review: NCJ Number 187351
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