Perpetrator accountability is often discussed in DFV practice, but its meaning and application can vary in everyday work. This blog explores what perpetrator accountability is, how it operates across the system, and what it looks like in practice for different roles.
Read MoreThis post explores what choice-centred practice can look like in domestic and family violence work, and why meaningful options matter in contexts shaped by coercive control, trauma responses, and system pressure. It considers how choice can narrow unintentionally through workload, risk aversion, or limited service environments, and how transparency and collaboration can help practitioners hold both safety and agency in view.
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