Understanding Systemic Coercive Control: Becoming Response-able in Family Violence Work
This course is for anyone responding in the context of family violence. It will build on reflective practice by bringing more awareness to our mahi. You will deepen your understanding of family violence as a social problem and the importance of our responses.
Description
ECLIPSE's Becoming Response-able in Family Violence Work course is practice-based. It translates core family violence concepts such as social entrapment theory, the wider pattern of coercive control, and systems abuse into a guide for your practice. To enable safe and dignified responses that mitigate against harmful responses, i.e., Becoming Response-able.
Through attending this course you'll:
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Develop a solid understanding of what harmful responses are in the context of family violence.
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Understand the practice of Social Entrapment theory, coercive control and systemic abuse.
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Develop insight into identifying the Predominant Aggressor and the Primary Victim.
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Understand institutional systems abuse and how to mitigate against perpetrator exploitation.
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Learn about benefits of reflective and collaborative practices that safeguard against harmful response.
ECLIPSE training courses align with the principles of Te Aorerekura: National Strategy to Eliminate Family Violence and Sexual Violence.