Webinars - Center for Victim Research.
The first phase entailed mapping of local services, literature reviews of 'what works' for victims of specific crime types and victim profiling. The second phase involved focus groups with service users, an online survey and service provider workshops. The research ultimately produced a Victim Needs Assessment which identified gaps in provision and opportunities for commissioning, which.
Literature review on DOMESTIC VIOLENCE. Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Humanities. 4 pages, 1626 words. Abstract. The concept of domestic violence is not a new phenomenon in the contemporary world that we live in. Domestic violence is the term that is used to indicate the aggressive deeds perpetrated by one of the partners in an intimate association on the other with whom they share close.
Review of Interventions to Identify, Prevent, Reduce and Respond to Domestic Violence Prepared by the British Columbia Centre of Excellence for Women’s Health.
Development Services Group, Inc. Publication Series. OJJDP Model Programs Guide Literature Reviews. Award. FY2010 Maintenance and Expansion of the Model Programs Guide and SMART GIS. Annotation. Based on a literature review, this paper defines “restorative justice,” followed by descriptions of various structured manifestations that implement its principles, as well as evaluation findings.
Most papers were published between 2007 and 2019, and this bibliography includes systematic literature reviews, journal articles, and program evaluations. Topics include intimate partner violence, sexual assault, gender-based violence, adverse childhood experiences, and elder abuse; other interpersonal crimes are not included. Articles are sorted first by barriers to service and the needs of.
About the website. The Victim Services Website for Cambridge and Peterborough is designed to provide victims and witnesses of crime with information about the support available to them, and make it easier for them to access this support. This website was commissioned and is paid for by Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner for Cambridgeshire and Peterborough, to ensure that all services.
This article reviews and synthesises the available literature on help-seeking behaviours among adult victims of crime. Formal helpers such as law enforcement officials, and informal helpers, such as family and friends, are considered and the prevalence rates for each type are examined. The predictors of help seeking are examined in various categories, such as reporting to law enforcement.