Research to policy and practice Invisible practices: Intervention with fathers who use violence:
Key findings and future directions
This project aimed to provide an evidence base for intervening with fathers who use domestic and family violence (DFV), in order to enhance support for women and children living with DFV.
Key findings and future directions
The project is a part of ANROWS’s Perpetrator Interventions Research Stream.
The project delivered an evidence-informed Practice Guide for workers and highlights the need for organisations to undertake systemic change to embed new practice approaches.
Structured interventions with men who use violence mostly occur through the criminal justice system and specialist men’s behaviour change programs. While other services, such as child protection and family support services, work with fathers who use violence, this work has never been documented or formalised. In other words, to date, this work has been largely “invisible”.
The project’s findings are structured around four themes:
- key skills identified for working with fathers who use violence and control;
- key factors identified in partnering with women;
- key skills in ensuring a focus on children and young people; and
- the role of organisations and practitioner capacity building.
The project built upon earlier ANROWS research, including the PATRICIA (PAThways and Research Into Collaborative Inter-Agency practice) project, which investigated fostering collaboration between child protection and specialist DFV services.
The Invisible Practices project also draws on evidence from other existing research, the expertise of practitioners in four states and the technical skills and knowledge of the US-based Safe & Together Institute’s consultants David Mandel and Kyle Pinto.
Publication details
ANROWS Research to policy and practice papers are concise papers that summarise key findings of research on violence against women and their children, including research produced under ANROWS’s research program, and provide advice on the implications for policy and practice.
Authors
DR LUCY HEALEY
The University of Melbourne
PROFESSOR CATHY HUMPHREYS
The University of Melbourne
DR MENKA TSANTEFSKI
Griffith University
DR SUSAN HEWARD-BELLE
The University of Sydney
DAVID MANDEL
Safe & Together Institute
Suggested citation
Healey, L., Humphreys, C., Tsantefski, M., Heward-Belle, S., Chung, D., & Mandel, D. (2018). Invisible Practices: Intervention with fathers who use violence: Key findings and future directions (Research to policy and practice, 04/2018). Sydney, NSW: ANROWS.
15 pp.