The Home Office announced the 21 organisations who have been
successful in securing funding for research projects on
perpetrators of domestic abuse.
The £1.4 million funding will support 21 projects that build on
existing research and aim to cover gaps in areas where there is
limited knowledge, including interpersonal abuse in adolescent
relationships, suicides associated with domestic abuse and
identifying perpetrators.
This works follows a similar £500,000.00 funding stream, which
ran last year. These
organisations are currently in the process of publishing their
research.
Safeguarding Minister said:
Research plays a vital role in strengthening our approach to
preventing domestic abuse and safeguarding victims.
This new funding will enable organisations to significantly
improve our understanding of many aspects of perpetrators’
behaviour and I look forward to seeing the results.
In recognition of the pervasiveness and devastating harm domestic
abuse is having on millions of lives, we have doubled funding for
tackling perpetrators in 2021 to 2022 to £25 million and are
working to publish the Domestic Abuse Strategy in the coming
months.
Our landmark Domestic Abuse Act will strengthen our protection to
victims and pursue perpetrators. It includes the first legal
definition of domestic abuse, improved support for victims in the
courts, new offences and strengthened legislation around cruel
acts of controlling or coercive behaviour.
The successful bids are listed below.
|
Organisation
|
Funding amount
|
Aim of funding
|
|
Reconnect Services Ltd
|
£52,251.65
|
This study aims to improve understanding of what works for
preventing re-offending by measuring associations between
the working alliance that facilitators form with Domestic
Abuse Perpetrator Programme group members, and the
motivational interviewing skills of those facilitators.
|
|
SafeLives
|
£57,481.00
|
This research seeks to explore why and how young people
begin to use abusive behaviours in their relationships. To
better understand what it means to be on the ‘verge of
harming’ and to explore what support for young people who
harm should look like.
|
|
Liverpool John Moores
|
£50,908.95
|
This research will examine the profiles of DA perpetrators
with the aim of understanding what predicts increased
severity and repeat DA offending.
|
|
University of Essex
|
£52,991.00
|
A study to understand domestic abuse perpetrators using
quantitative analysis to develop perpetrator profiles and
exploring their implications for targeted intervention and
risk assessment.
|
|
Opcit Research (trading name of KM Research and Consultancy
Ltd.
|
£62,200.00
|
The study will create evidence-informed, young
person-centred operating principles for intervention with
young people affected by gangs and other high-risk
extrafamilial contexts, to support them to end and avoid
violent and abusive behaviour towards intimate partners.
|
|
Reconnect Services
|
£53,487.70
|
This study explores the relationship between poor
mentalisation (capacity to think about thoughts and
feelings) across different forms of abusive behaviour.
|
|
Advocacy After Fatal Domestic Abuse
|
£64,631.72
|
The project will gather and comprehensively analyse the
commissioning, contexts and finding of Domestic Homicide
Reviews (DHRs) in cases of domestic abuse-related suicide.
|
|
University of Gloucestershire
|
£56,869.43
|
This study will gather data on perpetrators of domestic
abuse and practitioner interventions, from what are called
‘near-miss’ cases.
|
|
National Centre for Social Research
|
£56,935.00
|
A study focusing on how social workers identify
perpetrators, how they assess risk, and how they respond to
this risk.
|
|
UCL Consultants
|
£76,166.67
|
The research will seek to improve understanding of the
causes, drivers, and aggravating factors of domestic abuse
by establishing a rigorous and scientific evidence base for
risk and protective factors for domestic abuse
perpetration.
|
|
University of Central Lancashire
|
£51,970.00
|
This project will explore temporality of typology
membership, individual offender risk and trajectory, and
offending behaviour in terms of Child to Parent Domestic
Abuse, as well as wider violence towards intimate partners
and non-family victims.
|
|
Centre for Justice Innovation
|
£52,310.00
|
A study that explores the co-occurrence of substance misuse
and perpetration of domestic abuse, and/or the
co-occurrence of experience of trauma and perpetration of
domestic abuse.
|
|
Crest Advisory
|
£143,263.00
|
Research to improve the understanding of how to identify
perpetrators of domestic abuse, and the relationship
between domestic abuse-related offending and general
offending.
|
|
University of West London
|
£58,134.76
|
Research into identifying factors predictive of domestic
violence and abuse (DVA) perpetration: secondary analysis
of national data from perpetrator programmes in England and
Wales.
|
|
ESRO Ltd
|
£63,165.00
|
Research exploring the drivers and perceptions of early
abusive behaviour, including how these behaviours develop.
|
|
The Police and Crime Commissioner West Midlands
|
£60,178.00
|
Research exploring whether the perpetration of certain
forms of abuse are more likely to lead to suicide and
consider the relationship between suicide and Forced
Marriage/Honour Based Violence.
|
|
South London and Maudsley NHS
|
£52,344.35
|
This research aims to improve the standards and outcomes of
risk assessment for domestic abuse cases through exploring
the links with mental health risk assessments.
|
|
University of Durham
|
£85,600.92
|
This study will provide evidence on the profiles and
characteristics of perpetrators of domestic abuse (DA)
against older adults (aged 60 and over); causes of domestic
abuse against older adults; and professional responses,
including how risk of abuse/abusers are identified and how
risk is assessed and managed.
|
|
University of Durham
|
£80,861.77
|
Research focusing on perpetrators coming from minoritized
communities of race and/or targeting minoritized
victim/survivors because of their sexuality and/or (trans)
gender identity.
|
|
London Southbank University
|
£115,046.00
|
A feasibility study to test the viability of Natural
Language Processing and Machine Learning techniques as
tools to identify and risk assess alleged perpetrators of
Technology Facilitated Coercive Control, including those in
adolescent relationships.
|
|
Cordis Bright
|
£124,406.00
|
Research exploring whether certain data can be used to
demonstrate the impact of Domestic Abuse perpetrator
programmes , and support the early identification of DA
perpetrators based on demographic and criminal histories.
|