1 / 12

Fighting violence against women and children–

Fighting violence against women and children– the need for integrated models in work with the violent men EuroSafe conference, Vienna 25.-27. June 2006 Assistant Director / Clinical Psychologist Marius Råkil, ATV. Homicide of women.

clea
Download Presentation

Fighting violence against women and children–

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fighting violence against women and children– the need for integrated models in work with the violent men EuroSafe conference, Vienna 25.-27. June 2006 Assistant Director / Clinical Psychologist Marius Råkil, ATV

  2. Homicide of women • The Council of Europe have found that among its45 member countries, 70% of all women murdered, are killed by a partner or former partner. • Among the women in these countries between the ages of 16 and 44, more women die each year from violence than from cancer, traffic accidents and war.

  3. Prevalence • Based on data from 35 countries, the WHO reports that between ¼ and ½ of all women have been exposed to violence from a present or former partner

  4. Gender differences • 9 out of 10 reported perpetrators are men • 90% of people charged for crimes against “life, body and health” in Norway and 98% of people charged for sexual offences are men • Studies from the USA indicate that women use violence towards children more often than men

  5. Different traditions • The psychoeducational tradition (reeducation) • USA • Great Britain • Canada • The Nordic tradition • Therapy-oriented elaborations of the psychoeducational tradition • Emphasis on emotions like shame, inferiority + personal history related to violence

  6. The ATV model: • Interventions with the perpetrators must be • based on the integration of: • Perpetrator perspective • Victim perspective • Child perspective • Without the two latter, safety and dangerousness as the primary concerns regarding violence is often missed!

  7. The men’s programme at ATV • 3000 men have taken contact since the start in 1987. • Nearly 70% of the men who contact ATV go through a complete course of therapy. (mean = 10 months in individual therapy or 1.5 years in group therapy) • The drop-out rate is 25% during the first 3 assessment sessions, then declines to 8% (individual therapy) and 3% (group therapy). • Statistics: • 67% of the men make contact themselves by phone. • 45% have used violence towards more than one partner • 42% have never attended any form of treatment before • 83% were exposed to or witnessed violence as a child or adolescent • 10% have alcohol or drug problems, a few have mental health problems • 23% report also having used violence against their children

  8. Maintaining factors of violence • Cognitive factors • Externalizing, denial, minimisation and fragmentation • Dealing with shame (emotions): • Violence  Shame  ”Oblivion” •      • Violence is functional to the abuser • Cultural conditions, gender roles and patriarchal attitudes

  9. Treatment principles • 1. FOCUS ON VIOLENCE • Detailed and expanding reconstruction of the violence (behaviour) • 2. FOCUS ON RESPONSIBILITY • Focus on choices and intentions. Get in touch with own need for control and own control strategies (responsibility) • 3. FOCUS ON THE CLIENT’S PERSONAL HISTORY • Re-establish the connection between own “life learning” on masculinity, manhood, attitudes towards women etc, childhood experiences, significant aspects of adult coping strategies and the use of violence (connections) • 4. RECOGNISING THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE VIOLENCE • Empathy with the victims (partner/children) of the violence. Recognising the pain inflicted on others (consequences)

  10. Violent men as fathers • Men's perceptions of themselves as fathers • How the violence is affecting the father – child relationship • How the violence is affecting the mother – child relationship • How the child is affected by the violence itself on both a short and long term basis • The basic psychological needs of the child in a developmental perspective and how these needs are violated by the presence of violence.

  11. Early detection • Mandatory education for all relevant professionals • Imperative standards from the national authorities • The need for professionals to act on their knowledge (accountability) • The need for leadership based organizational support to the practitioners

  12. Contact information • Marius Råkil • Alternative to Violence (ATV) • Address: Lilletorget 1, 0184 Oslo, Norway • Telephone: +47-22401110 • Fax: +47-22401111 • E-mail: marius@atv-stiftelsen.no or • Web: http://www.atv-stiftelsen.no

More Related