the abcs of relationship abuse and family violence

30
The ABCs of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence Presenter: Brenda Rosenthal, Prevention of Relationship Abuse Program Coordinator Athabasca

Upload: palmer

Post on 04-Feb-2016

27 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

The ABCs of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence. Presenter: Brenda Rosenthal, Prevention of Relationship Abuse Program Coordinator Athabasca. Prevention of Relationship Abuse Program. Support and education for those affected by relationship abuse Action plans Safety Plans - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

The ABCs of Relationship Abuseand Family Violence

Presenter:

Brenda Rosenthal, Prevention of Relationship Abuse Program Coordinator

Athabasca

Page 2: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Prevention of Relationship Abuse Program

Support and education for those affected by relationship abuse

Action plans

Safety Plans

Supported access to community resources

Page 3: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Community Action for Healthy Relationships -CAHR

Kelly Lynn Spafford – local CAHR Program Coordinator

Community agencies in Athabasca, Barrhead and Westlock are working together to address family violence

Funding of 1.1 Million received from Alberta Justice –Safe Communities Innovation Fund for the 3 communities until 2014

Page 4: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Community Action for Healthy Relationships -CAHR

3 key components:

Enhanced Outreach Services to full time – PRAP Coordinator

Coordinated Community Response e.g. Workplace & Community Protocols; referral protocols to increase awareness & to ensure timely access to services

Men’s and Women’s Treatment Program based on the Duluth Model and Alberta Health Services Provincial Family Violence Treatment Program Standards (draft May 2012)

Page 5: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Creating Change for Healthy Relationships Treatment Program:

New program for Athabasca for people struggling with the issue of relationship abuse

Separate Women’s and Men’s program; NOT couples counselling

Referral from agencies, community organizations and self referrals

No charge to attend

Led by a qualified Therapist and trained Co-Facilitators

30 hours in length in either weekly sessions or Weekends format

Call (780) 689-8136 to refer

Page 6: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Family Violence

Alberta Government’s definition of Family Violence is  

Family Violence: any use of physical or sexual force, actual or threatened, in an intimate relationship. It may include a single act of violence, or a number of acts forming a pattern of abuse through the use of assaultive and controlling behavior. (AB. 2011)

Page 7: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Its about Power and Control

The abuse or violence is used to intimidate, humiliate or frighten a partner of an intimate relationship, or to make them powerless.

Page 8: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Abuser’s Beliefs

Abusers feel entitled and justify their behavior

Abusers disrespect their partners and feel superior

Abusers confuse love and abuse

Abusers are manipulative

Page 9: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Abuser’s Beliefs

Abusers try to present a good public image

Abusers deny and minimize their abuse

Abusers are possessive

Abusive behavior is a chosen behavior.

Page 10: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Types of Abuse

Power and Control

Physical Abuse Sexual

Abuse

EmotionalAbuse

Verbal Abuse

Social AbuseSpiritual

Abuse

FinancialAbuse

CulturalAbuse

Intellectual Abuse

Property/Pets Abuse

Page 11: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Physical Abuse

Behaviors that cause pain or physical injury or the threat of, to the another person’s body.

Page 12: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Psychological/ Emotional Abuse Behaviors that undermine their partner’s sense of well-being or that causes the individual to perceive himself or herself as inept, not cared for, and worthless

Page 13: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Verbal Abuse The use of negative comments that are unwelcome, embarrassing, offensive, or threatening to another person

Page 14: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Sexual Abuse

Any unwelcome or forced sexual activities

Page 15: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Social AbuseAny behaviour resulting in the isolation and alienation of a person from friends or family

Page 16: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Intellectual AbuseDisrespecting, or devaluing another’s opinions, ideas or learning styles.

Page 17: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Financial Abuse

Using money to gain control or have power over another person

Page 18: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Spiritual Abuse Any tactics that exert power and control over a woman's spirituality or uses religious teachings to justify abusive behaviors.

Page 19: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Cultural Abuse

The use of culture to justify abusive behaviors or the use of power to devalue another’s culture.

Page 20: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Abuse of Property or PetsDamaging or threatening to damage another’s personal property to intimidateor control.

Page 21: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Using ChildrenGaining power over another person by threatening the child or access to the child.

Page 22: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Victim

Abuser

Children

Extended family

Friends

Society

Page 23: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

<iframe width="853" height="480" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/videoseries?list=PL9AEECFD6FC1E7B6F&amp;hl=en_US" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Page 24: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Children Exposed to Family Violence

Alberta Government definition:

Seeing, hearing, being told about, or seeing the aftermath of abuse and coercive control used against a parent. (2011)

Page 25: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

“Children are not ‘witnesses’ to events in their home.” (2004)

Page 26: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Children “Exposed” to Family Violence have an increased risk of:

Page 27: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

How can I help?

One caring person in a child’s life can make a difference.

• Listen to what the child has to say without interrupting or judging.

• Believe the child (but do not over-react).

• Assure the child that abuse is not their fault – no one deserves to be hurt or abused.

Report immediately to authorities.

Page 28: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Hands are Not For Hitting/Words are Not For HurtingPrograms

Page 29: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Dating Violence Awareness Program

New this fall

Vecova’s Research Services, with funding from the Canadian Women's Foundation and TELUS, developed a Dating Violence Awareness Program. Completed this spring the Plain Language program includes a Facilitator’s Guide, a Workbook, six PowerPoint Presentations, and two videos. The program is divided into six modules:

What is a Relationship?

Gender and Media Stereotypes

What is Dating Violence?

Abuse, Power and Control

Sexual Relationships

Help! I’m in an Abusive Relationship

Page 30: The  ABCs  of Relationship Abuse and Family Violence

Our Hope for the future

Children will understand that “Abuse is not normal”

A healthy role model takes an interest in them.

Children have reasons to believe in themselves.