Court‐Mandated Interventions for Individuals Convicted of Domestic Violence

This Campbell systematic review examined the effect of ordering violent partners to undergo treatment. The researchers summarized the best studies in this area and analyzed whether court‐mandated treatments prevent repeated assaults. The conclusion is that the current evidence raises doubts about ef...

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Main Authors: Lynette Feder, David B. Wilson, Sabrina Austin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2008-01-01
Series:Campbell Systematic Reviews
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4073/csr.2008.12
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language English
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author Lynette Feder
David B. Wilson
Sabrina Austin
spellingShingle Lynette Feder
David B. Wilson
Sabrina Austin
Court‐Mandated Interventions for Individuals Convicted of Domestic Violence
Campbell Systematic Reviews
author_facet Lynette Feder
David B. Wilson
Sabrina Austin
author_sort Lynette Feder
title Court‐Mandated Interventions for Individuals Convicted of Domestic Violence
title_short Court‐Mandated Interventions for Individuals Convicted of Domestic Violence
title_full Court‐Mandated Interventions for Individuals Convicted of Domestic Violence
title_fullStr Court‐Mandated Interventions for Individuals Convicted of Domestic Violence
title_full_unstemmed Court‐Mandated Interventions for Individuals Convicted of Domestic Violence
title_sort court‐mandated interventions for individuals convicted of domestic violence
publisher Wiley
series Campbell Systematic Reviews
issn 1891-1803
publishDate 2008-01-01
description This Campbell systematic review examined the effect of ordering violent partners to undergo treatment. The researchers summarized the best studies in this area and analyzed whether court‐mandated treatments prevent repeated assaults. The conclusion is that the current evidence raises doubts about effectiveness of court‐mandated treatment in reducing the probability of repeated domestic violence. Existing research can therefore not guarantee that court‐mandated treatments actually do more good than harm. The review emphasizes that even though there is an acute need for methods to stop and prevent repeated violence, forcing the violent offender to undergo treatment might not result in positive effects. All studies conducted between 1986 and 2003 that examine the effect of court mandated treatments were searched for in the review. The researchers' conclusions are based on ten studies that were assessed to be of sufficient high quality. The studies are all carried out in the USA and include a total of 3,614 participants. Abstract Background: Survey research and analysis of police records, hospital emergency rooms and women's shelters have clearly established the severity of the domestic violence problem and the need to find programs to address this issue. Today, court‐mandated batterer intervention programs (BIPs) are being implemented throughout the United States as one of the leading methods to address this problem. These programs emerged from the women's shelter movement and therefore contained a strong feminist orientation. They developed as group‐based programs, typically using psychoeductional methods. Their aim was to get men to take responsibility for their sexist beliefs and stop abusing their partners by teaching them alternative responses for handling their anger. Objectives: The aim of this systematic review is to assess the effects of post‐arrest court‐mandated interventions (including pre‐trial diversion programs) for domestic violence offenders that target, in part or exclusively, batterers with the aim of reducing their future likelihood of re‐assaulting above and beyond what would have been expected by routine legal procedures. Search Strategies: We searched numerous computerized databases and websites, bibliographies of published reviews of related literature and scrutiny of annotated bibliographies of related literature. Our goal was to identify all published and unpublished literature that met our selection criteria. Selection Criteria: We included experimental or rigorous quasi‐experimental evaluations of court‐mandated batterer intervention programs that measured official or victim reports of future domestic violent behavior. Rigorous quasi‐experimental designs were defined as those that either used matching or statistical controls to improve the comparability of the groups. Given their importance in the literature, we also included rigorous quasi‐experimental designs that used a treatment drop‐out comparison. Data Collection and Analysis: We coded characteristics of the treatment, sample, outcomes, and research methods. Findings were extracted in the form of an effect size and effect sizes were analyzed using the inverse‐variance method. Official report and victim report outcomes were analyzed separately as were the different design types (i.e., random, quasi‐experimental with a no treatment comparison, and quasi‐experimental with a treatment dropout comparison). Main Results: The mean effect for official reports of domestic violence from experimental studies showed modest benefit whereas the mean effect for victim reported outcomes was zero. Quasi‐experimental studies using a no‐treatment comparison had inconsistent findings indicating an overall small harmful effect. In contrast, quasi‐experimental studies using a treatment dropout design showed a large, positive mean effect on domestic violence outcomes. The latter studies suffer, we believe, from selection bias. Reviewer's Conclusions: The findings, we believe, raise doubts about the effectiveness of court‐mandated batterer intervention programs in reducing re‐assault among men convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence.
url https://doi.org/10.4073/csr.2008.12
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spelling doaj-79c6a6cdf7c24c0c90a72576915773662020-11-25T02:17:33ZengWileyCampbell Systematic Reviews1891-18032008-01-014114610.4073/csr.2008.12Court‐Mandated Interventions for Individuals Convicted of Domestic ViolenceLynette Feder0David B. Wilson1Sabrina Austin2Liberal Arts & SciencesPortland State UniversityPO Box 751PortlandOregon97207‐0751USAGeorge Mason University10900 University Blvd., MS 4F4ManassasVA20110USACriminology, Law & SocietyUniversity of CaliforniaIrvineCA92697‐7080USAThis Campbell systematic review examined the effect of ordering violent partners to undergo treatment. The researchers summarized the best studies in this area and analyzed whether court‐mandated treatments prevent repeated assaults. The conclusion is that the current evidence raises doubts about effectiveness of court‐mandated treatment in reducing the probability of repeated domestic violence. Existing research can therefore not guarantee that court‐mandated treatments actually do more good than harm. The review emphasizes that even though there is an acute need for methods to stop and prevent repeated violence, forcing the violent offender to undergo treatment might not result in positive effects. All studies conducted between 1986 and 2003 that examine the effect of court mandated treatments were searched for in the review. The researchers' conclusions are based on ten studies that were assessed to be of sufficient high quality. The studies are all carried out in the USA and include a total of 3,614 participants. Abstract Background: Survey research and analysis of police records, hospital emergency rooms and women's shelters have clearly established the severity of the domestic violence problem and the need to find programs to address this issue. Today, court‐mandated batterer intervention programs (BIPs) are being implemented throughout the United States as one of the leading methods to address this problem. These programs emerged from the women's shelter movement and therefore contained a strong feminist orientation. They developed as group‐based programs, typically using psychoeductional methods. Their aim was to get men to take responsibility for their sexist beliefs and stop abusing their partners by teaching them alternative responses for handling their anger. Objectives: The aim of this systematic review is to assess the effects of post‐arrest court‐mandated interventions (including pre‐trial diversion programs) for domestic violence offenders that target, in part or exclusively, batterers with the aim of reducing their future likelihood of re‐assaulting above and beyond what would have been expected by routine legal procedures. Search Strategies: We searched numerous computerized databases and websites, bibliographies of published reviews of related literature and scrutiny of annotated bibliographies of related literature. Our goal was to identify all published and unpublished literature that met our selection criteria. Selection Criteria: We included experimental or rigorous quasi‐experimental evaluations of court‐mandated batterer intervention programs that measured official or victim reports of future domestic violent behavior. Rigorous quasi‐experimental designs were defined as those that either used matching or statistical controls to improve the comparability of the groups. Given their importance in the literature, we also included rigorous quasi‐experimental designs that used a treatment drop‐out comparison. Data Collection and Analysis: We coded characteristics of the treatment, sample, outcomes, and research methods. Findings were extracted in the form of an effect size and effect sizes were analyzed using the inverse‐variance method. Official report and victim report outcomes were analyzed separately as were the different design types (i.e., random, quasi‐experimental with a no treatment comparison, and quasi‐experimental with a treatment dropout comparison). Main Results: The mean effect for official reports of domestic violence from experimental studies showed modest benefit whereas the mean effect for victim reported outcomes was zero. Quasi‐experimental studies using a no‐treatment comparison had inconsistent findings indicating an overall small harmful effect. In contrast, quasi‐experimental studies using a treatment dropout design showed a large, positive mean effect on domestic violence outcomes. The latter studies suffer, we believe, from selection bias. Reviewer's Conclusions: The findings, we believe, raise doubts about the effectiveness of court‐mandated batterer intervention programs in reducing re‐assault among men convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence.https://doi.org/10.4073/csr.2008.12