Last Updated: 28 February 1997
National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-SAFE
TDD for the Hearing Impaired: 1-800-787-3224
What Can Communities Do To Prevent Domestic Violence?
- Expand education and awareness efforts to increase positive attitudes toward
nonviolence and encourage individuals to report family violence.
- Form coordinating councils or tasks forces to assess the problem, develop an
action plan, and monitor progress
- Mandate training in domestic violence for all social services and criminal justice
professionals.
- Advocate laws and judicial procedures at the state and local levels that
support and protect battered women.
- Establish centers where visits between batterers and their children may be supervised, for
the children's safety.
- Fund shelters adequately.
- Recruit and train volunteers to staff hotlines, accompany victims to court,
and provide administrative support to shelters and victim services.
- Improve collection of child support.
- Establish medical protocols to help physicians and other health care personnel
indentify and help victims of domestic abuse.
- Provide legal representation for victims of domestic abuse.
- Advocate for the accessibility of services for all population groups, especially the
underserved populations which include immigrants and refugees, gays and lesbians, racial and
ethnic minorities and the disabled.
Adapted from: "Preventing Violence Against Women: Not Just A Women's Issue," the National
Crime Prevention Council, 1995.
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