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Meta-evaluation of existing interagency partnerships, collaboration, coordination and/or integrated interventions and service responses to violence against women : state of knowledge paper Jan Breckenridge, Susan Rees, Kylie Valentine and Samantha Murray

By: Breckenridge, Jan.
Contributor(s): Rees, Susan | Valentine, Kylie | Murray, Samantha.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: ANROWS Landscapes.Publisher: Sydney, NSW : ANROWS, 2015Description: electronic document (v, 78 pages); PDF file: 4.79 MB.ISSN: 2204-9665 (online).Subject(s): DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | INTERAGENCY COLLABORATION | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | LITERATURE REVIEWS | SOCIAL SERVICES | SUPPORT SERVICES | AUSTRALIA | FAMILY VIOLENCE | SEXUAL VIOLENCEOnline resources: Click here to access online ANROWS Landscapes, Issue 11, September 2015Summary: This state of knowledge paper presents a preliminary overview of the literature on the partnerships, collaborations and integrated interventions in relation to domestic and family violence and sexual assault in the international and Australian context. The paper finds that the current Australian policy context prioritises integration and multi-sectoral responses to address the limitations of traditional service delivery and the negative consequences of fragmentation and disconnection. Despite the significant challenges to integrated responses, and the limited evidence base on effective responses (which is improving with a growing number of evaluation studies in Australia and internationally), the anecdotal and empirically derived potential benefits appear to outweigh the alternatives. (from the website). Record #4867
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ANROWS Landscapes, Issue 11, September 2015

This state of knowledge paper presents a preliminary overview of the literature on the partnerships, collaborations and integrated interventions in relation to domestic and family violence and sexual assault in the international and Australian context.

The paper finds that the current Australian policy context prioritises integration and multi-sectoral responses to address the limitations of traditional service delivery and the negative consequences of fragmentation and disconnection. Despite the significant challenges to integrated responses, and the limited evidence base on effective responses (which is improving with a growing number of evaluation studies in Australia and internationally), the anecdotal and empirically derived potential benefits appear to outweigh the alternatives. (from the website). Record #4867