This document was printed from the website of the California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare (CEBC), which you can access at http://www.cebc4cw.org/
Child Welfare Outcomes: Safety and child/family well-being.
Type of Maltreatment: Exposure to domestic violence
Target Population: Adult males who are both court-ordered (civil or criminal) and voluntary participants.
Brief Description:(The information in this program outline is provided by the program representative and edited by the CEBC staff.)
The Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) has been rated by the CEBC in the area of Domestic/Intimate Partner Violence: Batterer Intervention Programs. The DAIP was designed in 1981 as a Coordinated Community Response (CCR) and includes law enforcement, the criminal and civil courts, and human service providers working together to make communities safer for victims. The DAIP, located in Duluth, Minnesota, includes a 28-week education program for offenders. This model is commonly referred to as the "Duluth Model." The program uses the curriculum Creating a Process of Change for Men Who Batter, which was developed by the DAIP. Advocates at the DAIP contact the partners of men court-ordered to the program to offer advocacy, community resources, and education groups for women.
The DIAP has two distinct aspects: the Coordinated Community Response and the "Duluth Model" offender education program.
The Coordinated Community Response (CCR)
"The Duluth Model" offender education program
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) was designed to be conducted in a group.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) has not been tested for use in a group setting.
The recommended group size is: 10 to 20
Recommended intensity: Weekly 1.5 hour classes.
Recommended duration: 28 weeks though many programs around the country have extended this to 52 weeks.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) includes a homework component.
Description: Homework can vary depending on the program. It is rare to give written homework due to a number of factors. Homework is typically to act or reflect on the outcomes of a class. For example, the men might be asked to monitor their thinking when they walk in their home and report back on what they discovered. This assignment is usually given as a way to empathize with what it is like to live with them.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) is typically conducted in a(n): Community Agency.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) was designed with a Parent Component.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) addresses the following presenting problems and symptoms: Fathers who have been arrested for abusing their partners.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) was not designed with a Child Component.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) was not developed for children with developmental delays.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) has not been tested for children with developmental delays.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) does not have materials available in a language other than English.
There is a manual that describes how to implement this program.
There is training available for Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP).
Training contact: Contact Shelly Stoffel or Pat Bergquist at 218-722-2781
Number of days/hours: Trainings range from 2 to 3 days.
Training is obtained: Training is done either onsite or within individual communities.
There currently are not additional qualified resources for training.
The typical resources for implementing Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) are: A room with chairs. A relationship with the courts so there is access to police reports and accountability for men who re-offend and/or quit attending the men’s program; relationship with a battered women’s shelter for contact/advocacy for the victim.
Interest in working with men who batter, an ability to be an educator and an openness to be self-reflective regarding ones own struggle with privilege. Trained in the use of the program’s curriculum. There are no educational requirements for providers.
Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP) is rated a "3 - Promising Research Evidence" on the Scientific Rating Scale based on the published, peer-reviewed research available. The practice must have at least one study utilizing some form of control (e.g., untreated group, placebo group, matched wait list) establishing the practice's benefit over the placebo, or found it to be comparable to or better than an appropriate comparison practice. For more information on the rating of a “3 – Promising Research Evidence,” please see the Scientific Rating Scale.
Shepard, M. (1992). Predicting batterer recidivism five years after community intervention. Journal of Family Violence, 7(3), 167-178.
Type of Study: Long-term follow-up
Number of participants: 100 men
Population:
Location/Institution: Minnesota
Summary: (To include comparison groups, outcomes, measures, notable limitations) Researchers tracked court-mandated offenders who had been ordered to complete a 26-week education program over a 5-year period. Data was collected from agency records and questionnaires completed at the time of the intervention. Data on recidivism rates was collected from police data and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, as well as DAIP records. Forty percent were identified as recidivists. Men who had been any of the following: abusive for a shorter duration prior to the program, ordered to a chemical dependency program, in a chemical dependency program, abused as children, or previously convicted of other crimes were more likely to be recidivists. Variables related to the original intervention, such as the number of sessions attended, completion of the program, and type of court intervention (criminal or civil) did not significantly predict recidivism.
Length of post-intervention follow-up: 5 years after program participation.
Dobash, R. P., Dobash, R. E., Cavanagh, K., & Lewis, R. (1999). A research evaluation of British programmes for violent men. Journal of Social Policy, 28(2), 205-233.
Type of Study: Non-equivalent control groups.
Number of participants: 122 Men, 134 women partners
Population:
Location/Institution: United Kingdom
Summary: (To include comparison groups, outcomes, measures, notable limitations) Men ordered by the court to one of two British batterer intervention programs, including CHANGE, which is based on the DAIP, were compared with men given other sanctions such as probation, prison time, or fines in a nonequivalent control group design. Men self-reported violence on the Violence Assessment Index. Women partners self-reported injuries on the Injury Assessment Index. Assessments were taken at 3 and 12 months after a baseline interview. By the end of a year, 67 percent of men in batterer’s programs had not committed another act of reported violence in comparison with 30 percent of men in the comparison group. Although they did not differ at three months, at one year, women in the intervention group were also less likely to report that their partner used violence “frequently.” This report did not show results from the CHANGE program separately from the alternative intervention.
Length of post-intervention follow-up: 12 months after baseline
Taylor, B. G., Davis, R. C., & Maxwell, C. D. (2001). The effects of a group batterer treatment program: A randomized experiment in Brooklyn. Justice Quarterly, 18(1), 171–201.
Type of Study: Randomized controlled trial
Number of participants: 376 men
Population:
Location/Institution: Brooklyn, NY
Summary: (To include comparison groups, outcomes, measures, notable limitations) Men who agreed to undergo a batterer intervention program were randomly assigned to either a 40-hour DAIP- type program or to 40 hours of community service (custodial) that did not include a treatment component. Re-assault rates were assessed using official records, including arrests and complaints, and also interviews conducted with victims at intake, 6 months and 12 months. Those assigned to the intervention showed significantly lower levels of re-assault, based on official arrest and complaint records, and significantly longer periods until re-assault. However, reports by victims, using the Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS), showed no significant differences in rates of overall abuse or severe abuse during the 12-month follow-up period.
Length of post-intervention follow-up: 12 months after intake
Feder, L., & Dugan, L. (2002). A test of the efficacy of court-mandated counseling for domestic violence offenders: The Broward Experiment. Justice Quarterly, 19(2), 343-375.
Type of Study: Randomized controlled trial
Number of participants: 404 men
Population:
Location/Institution: Broward County, FL
Summary: (To include comparison groups, outcomes, measures, notable limitations) A randomized control design assigned men into an experimental Duluth-type program (one-year probation and court-mandated counseling) or a control (one-year probation only) condition. The study followed the men for 12 months collecting data on self-reported violence using the Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS), victims’ reports, and official records of re-arrests. Batterers were also surveyed concerning attitudes about abuse using the Inventory of Beliefs about Wife Beating Scale and the Attitudes Towards Women Scale. No significant differences were found in rates of severe and minor abuse, rates of re-arrest, or attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors regarding domestic violence. Further analysis indicated that greater age and employed status was associated with higher treatment attendance and lower rates of re-offending.
Length of post-intervention follow-up: 12 months after intake.
Gondolf, E. (2002). Batterer intervention systems: Issues, outcomes, and recommendations. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Pence, E. & Taylor, T. (2003). Building safety for battered women and their children into the child protection system, Retrieved August 31, 2009, from: http://www.thegreenbook.info/documents/buildingsafety.pdf
Contact name: Scott Miller
Affiliation/Agency: Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP)
Email: smiller@duluth-model.org
Phone: 218-722-2781 x121
Fax: 218-722-0779
Website: http://www.duluth-model.org