Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Sunday, May 23, 2010

5 Recently Published Books Domestic Violence Programs Should Have on Their Shelves

If you have been a reader of this blog for any length of time you know well how I feel about sharing information with all staff and volunteers and ensuring materials and learning opportunities are readily available. Hopefully every DV program has a reference library for staff members. Hopefully every DV program keeps materials updated and is receptive to suggestions in growing and enhancing your knowledge hub.

Along with the classics such as  Getting Free: You Can End Abuse and Take Back Your Life (New Leaf)
by Ginny NiCarthy, some newer books that should be included  and available to staff and volunteers are:

Trauma Stewardship: An Everyday Guide to Caring for Self While Caring for Others
by Laura van Dernoot Lipsky – If you can only afford to purchase one item for the library this year, this is the book it should be. Written with humor and grace by a long time advocate, social worker and educator who understands the effects of doing advocacy work, both obvious and unseen. I cannot say enough about this helpful book ( a full review will be in a future post) and, if possible, more than one copy should be ordered.

Time's Up: How to Escape Abusive and Stalking Relationships Guide
 by Susan Murphy Milano – Full of step –by – step tools to assist victims escaping violence. See review HERE.

 Judging Victims: Why We Stigmatize Survivors, and How They Reclaim Respect
by Jennifer L. Dunn – from Amazon.com: 'Why didn't she resist?' 'Why is he telling us only now?' 'Why can't she move on?' Unpacking the questions that cast victims as deviants, Jennifer Dunn critically examines why we stigmatize survivors of rape, battering, incest, and clergy abuse - and how they reclaim their identities. Dunn explores the shifting perceptions over time of victims as blameworthy, blameless, pathetic, or heroic figures. She also links those images to their real-world consequences, demonstrating that they dominate the ways in which people think about intimate violence and individual responsibility.


Dangerous Exits: Escaping Abusive Relationships in Rural America (Critical Issues in Crime and Society)
 by Walter S. DeKeseredy and Martin D. Schwartz -  highlights the often under-researched, over neglected area of how battered women living in rural areas leave abusive relationships


 Dream Big: A Simple, Complicated Idea to Stop Family Violence
by Casey Gwinn with contributions by Gael Strack - "Casey Gwinn's work with women and families that are survivors of domestic abuse is nothing short of extraordinary. I have been inspired by his vision and dedication to ending the cycle of violence against women in this country and I hope Dream Big will inspire others as well."
-- Reese Witherspoon, Actress, Avon Global Ambassador

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Advocate's Book Review: TIME'S UP by Susan Murphy-Milano



“Been there, done that…” Susan Murphy- Milano has turned a tired phrase into demonstrable realism through the gift of her newly published book, TIME'S UP: A GUIDE ON HOW TO LEAVE AND SURVIVE ABUSIVE AND STALKING RELATIONSHIPS. Susan’s writing is based on doing. It is based on the irrefutable credential of experience, both as a residual victim of interpersonal violence and a tireless advocate for others who suffer. This book is born from working in the trenches for twenty years and the necessity of crafting working solutions to help ensure individual safety from batters and stalkers.

TIMES UP is a comprehensive guide for women in danger. Every advocate owes it to those they work to assist to obtain this book.The contents provide specific steps towards safety and addresses issues that a person who is stressed and in fear may not think of. This guide can provide structure in the midst of chaos.

Among the tools and forms is the original idea of an “Abuse Affidavit”, a sworn statement detailing the facts of an individual’s victimization, preserving the specifics so they are not lost even if the victim is. It is difficult to think about speaking from the grave but no different than any life insurance policy obtained in consideration for those left behind.

An “Abuse Affidavit” has the additional psychological benefit of being forced face reality and admit that the potential for the ultimate kind of violence exists…and that if it occurs the perpetrator will be held accountable.

Purchase and read TIMES UP as an advocate to continue to learn and practice informed advocacy. Give TIMES UP to concerned friends or family members looking for solutions for a loved one who is in danger. Most of all, find a way to share this valuable guide with the domestic violence and stalking victims you know and work with. It has all the information and tools to empower a crime victim to save her own life.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Sexual Assault Victims Right to Privacy - Downloadable Resource

OVC has a new booklet available which is only available on-line.
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/VictimsRightToPrivacy/welcome.html

Sunday, March 8, 2009

New Book -Backs Against the Wall: Battered Women's Resistance Strategies

Backs Against the Wall: Battered Women's Resistance Strategies
Review
AN INCREDIBLY IMPORTANT ADDITION to the scholarly discourse around women's use of violence in abusive relationships. . . . EXTREMELY WELL WRITTEN AND THOUGHTFUL about the issues rather than polemic. . . . A particularly outstanding chapter is the thought-provoking, in-depth analysis of black battered women arrested for IPV by Carolyn West. This wonderful addition uses a combination of literature review and case study to present the many complexities and challenges for African American abused women and makes the reader think beyond statistics and dichotomies. Placing violent and other behavior used by women in abusive relationships in the context of resistance and making the reader think hard about what it means for intervention and policy is the major accomplishment of this compilation. -- Jacquelyn C. Campbell, PhD, RN, FAAN, Anna D. Wolf Chair, Professor, Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing

STUDENTS AND FACULTY ALIKE WILL FIND THIS BOOK TO BE A VALUABLE RESOURCE, one that will be widely read and cited by leading experts in the field for years to come. All of the chapters . . . are equally important and compel us to develop new empirical and theoretical means of understanding one of the world's most significant social problems. Still, this collection is much more than an academic enterprise. . . . Will also help progressive scholars, activists, and practitioners challenge highly problematic claims such as 'women are as violent as men.' As a feminist scholar and activist, I commend the editors and contributors for providing us with AN IMPORTANT TOOL that can be used to help counter the ever changing and ongoing anti-feminist backlash that contributes too much pain in suffering. -- Walter S. DeKeseredy, PhD, Professor of Criminology, Justice and Policy Studies, University of Ontario Institute of Technology --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Description
"Backs Against the Wall: Battered Women's Resistance Strategies" tackles several controversial aspects involved with intimate partner violence (IPV) - namely the approaches many victims use when resisting their oppressors. This sensitive and sensible feminist perspective concerning battered women's use of different resistance strategies, and the reasons why they use them, also focuses on ways to support victims through intervention and prevention strategies. Leading experts provide current research, revealing viewpoints, and convincing assertions about the victims of IPV.This book powerfully refutes the sweeping assertions made by today's antifeminist-based mindset that women are as violent as men in cases of IPV perpetration. This insightful source provides strong evidence of the different resistance strategies that battered women use in response to multiple oppressions, including IPV, in the case against the gender parity argument - that may very well be politically motivated. The text provides extensive references and several figures and tables to clearly present data. This book is a valuable resource for activists, educators, students, health providers, justice system workers, advocates, and researchers. This book was published as a special issue of the "Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment and Trauma".



Backs Against the Wall: Battered Women's Resistance Strategies

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Sources of Free, Downloadable or Low Cost Publications for Advocates

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