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Men's stories about long-term transformative change: Sara Elinoff Acker on the early wave of a social movement

By: Acker, Sarah Elinoff.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Ending Men's Violence Against Women and Children: The No To Violence Journal.Publisher: No To Violence, 2014Subject(s): ABUSIVE MEN | ATTITUDES | BEHAVIOUR CHANGE | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | PERPETRATOR PROGRAMMES | PERPETRATORS | PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS | AUSTRALIA | UNITED STATESOnline resources: Purchase this journal In: Ending Men's Violence Against Women and Children: The No To Violence Journal, Spring 2014: 189-203Summary: In an interview with the author of Unclenching our fists: abusive men on the journey to nonviolence, published in the United States in 2013, NTV asks what the author learnt from the men's stories and how they connect with social movements towards transformative change. This book was written for a range of audiences including: victims, perpetrators, practitioners and funders. It profiles the long-term journeys of 11 men participating in perpetrator programmes with analytical chapters with implications for practice and concluding with reflections from victim-survivors and women's advocates. (from the abstract).
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Journal article Journal article Family Violence library
Journals Available FV15010014

Ending Men's Violence Against Women and Children: The No To Violence Journal, Spring 2014: 189-203

Record #4597

In an interview with the author of Unclenching our fists: abusive men on the journey to nonviolence, published in the United States in 2013, NTV asks what the author learnt from the men's stories and how they connect with social movements towards transformative change. This book was written for a range of audiences including: victims, perpetrators, practitioners and funders. It profiles the long-term journeys of 11 men participating in perpetrator programmes with analytical chapters with implications for practice and concluding with reflections from victim-survivors and women's advocates. (from the abstract).