Transcript Document

‘If only we’d known’: what a small
sample of femicides tells us about
responses to domestic violence
Linda Regan
2008
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
Intimate Partner Violence
…. A process whereby one member of an intimate
relationship experiences vulnerability, loss of power and
control and entrapment as a consequence of the other
member’s exercise of power through the patterned use of
physical, sexual, psychological and/or moral force.
(Coker et al, 2003, p260)
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
Women killed as a result Intimate
Partner Homicide
Russia: 2-3,00 women per year
USA: 1,400 women per year
South Africa: 1,400 per year
Australia: 77 women per year
Israel: 15 women per year
England and Wales:
In 2007/7 547homicides (adults), 187 female, 44% murdered by current or ex
partners.
Overall rate: 45-49% of women are killed by current or ex male partners
5-7% of men are killed by current or ex female partners
Ireland: 8 women in 2007, 12 in 2006
Average since 2000 = 10 per year
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
Source material
Murder in Britain Study
Rebecca & Russell Dobash, Kate Cavanagh & Ruth Lewis, 2002
Findings from the Multi-Agency Domestic Violence Murder Review
Laura Richards, Metropolitan Police, 2003
Perpetrators of Spousal Homicide. A review
Mari L. Aldridge & Kevin D. Browne, 2003
A matter of life and death: Intimate partner homicide in Ireland
Stephanie Holt, 2007
‘If only we’d known’: an exploratory study of seven intimate partner
homicides in Engleshire
Linda Regan, Liz Kelly, Anne Morris & Rebecca Dibb, 2007
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
Risk factors for Intimate Partner
Violence
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Being a young woman
Large age differential between woman and her male partner
Children/pregnancy
Poverty
Co-habitation
Previous violence by the man
Jealousy
Separation
Infidelity
Substance misuse
Threats to kill
Use of weapons
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Extracted from a range of national and international research
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
Which IPV Perpetrators kill? - 1
Homicide perpetrators were less likely to have:
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a father who abused their mother
a problem with alcohol abuse
grown up in unskilled or unemployed households
a mother who worked outside the home
Been physically abused by their father
Experienced long-term unemployment
Worked in an unskilled job
Abused alcohol
A previous criminal conviction
A criminal conviction for violence
Used violence towards their current partner
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
Which IPV Perpetrators Kill - 2
BUT MORE LIKELY TO HAVE:
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Used violence against a previous partner
Been cohabiting or have never lived with their partner
Separated from their current partner if cohabiting or
married – or about to be
Displayed possessiveness and jealousy
Sexually assaulted their partner
Been sober at the time of the incident
Used a weapon during the incident
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
Assessing risk of lethality
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The research evidence points to IPH perpetrators:
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Having at least one prior broken relationship
Having a history of violence, against a partner in a previous relationship and
potentially also in current relationship
If has a criminal conviction it will be for violence against a woman
Being possessive and jealous of his partner
Having a partner he perceives is unfaithful or who has actually been unfaithful
Having a partner who is or has left him
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
The Engleshire Study – Risk
Assessment Instruments
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SPECSS+
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SARA
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Separation (child contact); Pregnancy (new birth), Escalation, Culture (understood to
encompass multiple forms of isolation and barriers to reporting), Stalking and Sexual
Assault plus additional 8 to be considered including abuse of children.
comprises 22 indicators,including: past assault of any family member, strangers or
acquaintances; sexual assault of and/or threats to kill previous partner/s; threats to kill
unspecified others; personality disorder; past or current breach of
probation/supervision; victim of or witness to domestic violence as a child. How the
perpetrator understands domestic violence is also covered through questions about
minimisation or denial and attitudes that support or condone violence
Danger Assessment
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comprises 20 indicators, which overlap and differ with SPECSS+. DA includes whether
or not the victim believes the perpetrator is capable of homicide
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
The Engleshire Study – risk factors
 Jealous surveillance –
all 7 cases
 Relationship conflict – all 7 cases
 Controlling behaviour – in 6 cases
 Actual or potential separation – in 6 cases
 Perpetrator depression – in 5 cases
 Histories of violence – in 5 cases
 Potential suicide – in 5 cases
 Clustering!
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
Coercive Control
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Violence (including sexual coercion and jealousy)
Intimidation (including threats, surveillance, stalking, degradation and shaming)
Isolation (including from family, friends and the world outside the home)
Control (including control of family resources and ‘micromanagement’ of everyday
life)
“Not only is coercive control the most common context in which women are abused, it
is also the most dangerous’
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Evan Stark (2007) Coercive Control. How Men Entrap Women in Personal Life. New York: Oxford
University Press
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
What we learnt about Agencies in
Engleshire
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Limited understanding of IPV by GP’s
Extremely variable understanding of IPV among front line police
officers – more among specialist officers
Very limited knowledge or understanding about risk assessment
processes
Little evidence of any training on risk assessment
Ongoing problems with information sharing across agencies except
in cases subject to MARACs
Limited ability of risk assessment instruments to predict lethality
Outcomes of risk assessments often not shared with victims
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
If only we’d known
Nobody obviously thought he was going to really do too
much to her, and they obviously didn’t think he was going
to kill her,or it would’ve been a completely different
situation.
The story in Coronation Street now. The character of
Charlie. Since this happened with my daughter, that
character is in my mind, and I think it’s a different girl but it
is the same scenario. The womaniser, the control, that is
the same … [If you had seen that] you would have put it
together, I probably would.
Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit