A variety of programs and services, both for victims and offenders, exist to treat and prevent
domestic violence. Since 1964, more than 1800 shelters or refuges for battered women have
been established in the United States. Initially designed to provide simply a safe place for victims
(and often victims' children), shelters now provide a wide range of programs. At shelters, victims
of abuse receive legal assistance, counseling for themselves and their children, referral to other
treatment programs (such as substance abuse rehabilitation), and additional treatment and
advocacy services.
An increasingly common response to domestic violence has been the establishment of treatment
programs for offenders. Courts often require offenders who are found guilty of physically or
sexually assaulting their partners to attend these programs as a condition of their sentences. The
length of programs varies, but many are short termlasting from 6 to 32 weeks.
Although programs for offenders vary in form and in underlying theory, most involve group
therapy. Many are educational and offer a feminist perspective on domestic violence. Such
programs seek to educate male offenders about the role of patriarchy and to demonstrate that
men's attitudes and behavior about control and power lead to abuse of women. The programs
also encourage men to examine their attitudes about what it means to be a man. Many treatment
programs also emphasize anger management for offenders. Counselors teach participants to
recognize cues of anger and then use a technique, such as waiting a period of time to calm down
before reacting, to control the anger and avoid violent behavior.
The laws of all 50 U.S. states provide that domestic violence is a crime. These laws have made it
easier for victims to obtain protective or restraining court orders that prohibit offenders from
having contact with them. Also, laws in most states allow police officers to arrest people
suspected of committing domestic violence without the victim filing charges. Before the 1980s
arrests were uncommon, in part because many victims were unwilling to press charges and also
because many law enforcement officials were reluctant to make arrests. Instead, officers typically
attempted to calm the violent parties down or restore order. In response to criticism by feminist
activists and as a result of research indicating that arrests seemed to reduce subsequent
violence, many cities changed their intervention policies.
In 1994 Congress passed the Violence Against Women Act, which authorized more than $800
million in federal funds for state and local programs to combat domestic violence. This law makes
it a federal crime for a person to travel from one state to another in order to violate a restraining
order. It also prohibits an individual who is subject to a restraining order from possessing
firearms. Although the title of the law refers to women victims, both male and female offenders
are subject to its provisions.
The vast majority of programs that deal with intimate violencesuch as shelters, police intervention
programs, and treatment groupsare implemented after a severely abusive incident. A few
programs and policies attempt to prevent intimate violence before it occurs. The most widespread
prevention programs have been community and national public awareness campaigns that
identify intimate violence as an important social problem.
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