National Center on Domestic and Sexual Violence
E-Newsletter of the National Center
on Domestic and Sexual Violence
February 2012

Make a Donation
In This Issue
Order Today for Your Valentine!
Teen Dating Violence Awareness Month
Register Soon for the 2nd World Conference of Women's Shelters
DoD Announces Two New Policies
Sexual Assault Awareness Month
VAWA Needs 20 More Senate Sponsors!
In Memoriam ~ Ellen Pence
Apply for the National Law Enforcement Training
Order Today for Your Valentine!
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Flowers are the ideal way to remember your Valentine. Order from Touched by Flowers and 50% of the profits benefit the National Center! Thank you!




One in three young people experience some form of dating abuse. Get the facts this February!



Registration ends February 17!  Join the more than 1,400 advocates from over 95 countries who will be convening in Washington, DC.     
 
DoD Announces Two New Policies Supporting Victims of Sexual Assault
Recently, the U.S. Department of Defense announced two new policies supporting victims of sexual assault. 
  • The first on expedited transfers, service members who have been the victim of sexual assault have have filed an Unrestricted report now have the option to request an expedited transfer from their unit and / or installation. The service member must receive a response to the transfer from the unit commander within 72 hours, and can request a review of any denied requested.
  • The second new policy standardizes the retention periods or sexual assault records across the military services.  In unrestricted cases, specified documents will be retained for 50 years and in restricted cases, for five years, to ensure victims have extended access to documents related to the sexual assault.  

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April 3, 2012 is the national Day of Action.  This year, proclaim "It's time...to talk about it" by using social media to join the conversation.  By changing your profile pictures and focusing your status updates, tweets, and blog posts on Sexual Assault Awareness Month and the Day of Action, you can engage online communities in sexual violence prevention.hat action, if any, do you want your members to take? Add a "Find out more" link to additional information that you may have hosted on your website.
VAWA Needs 20 More Senate Sponsors!

According to the National Task Force on to End Sexual and Domestic Violence Against Women, here's the challenge ~ bring on 8 sponsors by Valentine's Day, 10 by March 1, and the last two by March 20. 

Senators Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and Mike Crapo (R-ID) want to bring the Violence Against Women Act (S. 1925) to the Senate Floor for a vote before April 1 in order to avoid the fray of budget/appropriations/campaign politics.  Right now, VAWA has 38 sponsors, including 5 Republicans.  BUT, we'll need 60 votes to filibuster and secure a floor vote and passage. Click here to see who needs to hear from us.

 

In January, briefings were conducted to educate Congressional members and their staff about VAWA reauthorization. The National Center joined hundreds of other organizations around the country urging House members to support VAWA reauthorization (read letter).   

 

Resources
  • Follow progress and other activities related to VAWA reauthorization at http://4vawa.org/ 
In Memoriam ~ Ellen Pence, Longtime Leader in the Movement to End Violence Against Women

 

"No one has done more to end violence against women than Ellen Pence.  She has been a teacher, mentor, friend and sister to countless women and men across the world.  We at DAIP join hearts with Ellen's friends and family to grieve the loss and celebrate her amazing life." - Linda Riddle, DAIP Executive Director

 

 

Ellen Pence (1948-2012) was a scholar and a social activist. She co-founded the Duluth Domestic Abuse Intervention Project, an inter-agency collaboration model used in all 50 states in the U.S. and more than 17 countries.  A leader in both the battered women's movement and the emerging field of institutional ethnography, she was the recipient of numerous awards including the 2008 Society for the Study of Social Problems Dorothy E. Smith Scholar Activist Award for significant contributions in a career of activist research.

 

Known for her generosity, quick wit and sense of humor, Ellen learned from battered women and has worked with and trained thousands of professionals in the domestic violence field. Her work with men who batter is the basis of DAIP's Creating a Process of Change for Men Who Batter.

 

Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Pence graduated from St. Scholastica in Duluth with a BA She was active in institutional change work for battered women since 1975, and helped found the Domestic Abuse Intervention Project in 1980.

 

She is credited with creating the Duluth Model of intervention in domestic violence cases, Coordinated Community Response (CCR), which uses an interagency collaborative approach involving police, probation, courts and human services in response to domestic abuse. The primary goal of CCR is to protect victims from ongoing abuse.

 

Pence received her PhD in Sociology from the University of Toronto in 1996. She used institutional ethnography as a method of organizing community groups to analyze problems created by institutional intervention in families.

 

She founded Praxis International in 1998 and was the chief author and architect of the Praxis Institutional Audit, a method of identifying, analyzing and correcting institutional failures to protect people drawn into legal and human service systems because of violence and poverty.

 

Ellen died of breast cancer on January 6, 2012.

 

Check out the collection of wheels from the power and control model and a video from Ellen explaining their development. We appreciated Casey Gwinn with the Family Justice Center Alliance capturing Ellen's intelligence and humor in an interview, as well as his In Memory of Ellen Pence. 

 
Apply for the National Law Enforcement First-Line Supervisor Training on Violence Against Women


The International Association of Chiefs of Police National Leadership Institute on Violence Against Women is an unprecedented opportunity for top law enforcement executives from across the country to explore innovative approaches for investigating crimes of violence against women, specifically domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking and human trafficking.  In an interactive learning environment, Institute participants examine an assess their agency's current response to these crimes, focus on developing and communicating priorities, network with colleagues to share challenges and solutions, and design practice action plans to maximize agency and community effort to end violence against women, assist victims and hold perpetrators accountable.  Application.

 

 


 
Thank you for your ongoing support. 

 
DDT_Sig_FirstNameOnly_Small               
                
Debby Tucker                          Christina Walsh
National Center on Domestic and Sexual Violence

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