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NMCADV Speaking Of Podcast

Author: New Mexico Coalition Against Domestic Violence

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SPEAKING OF is a podcast for people who are directly and indirectly involved in the movement to end domestic violence, intimate partner violence, and in particular; men’s violence against women.

Join David Garvin, NMCADV's Director of Abuse Intervention and Systems Response to focus both on the rich history of battering and abuse intervention work as well as the current innovations that are taking place now.

If you love these conversations, please be sure to subscribe, rate, and share our podcast. Please feel free to send questions or comments to: dgarvin@nmcadv.org
36 Episodes
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This week we are speaking with Dominique Waltower, motivational speaker and Violence Prevention Advocate. Dom will share his personal story of perpetration of domestic violence as well as his rich history of his work with other men to end their domestic violence.My name is Dominique Waltower, I am a motivational speaker and Violence Prevention Advocate. I have been speaking/training publicly for over 9 years and I specialize inpresenting in an engaging and thought-provoking manner. I have trained on a variety of topics including Sexual Assault/Sexual Harassment, Domestic Abuse, Child Abuse,Anger Management, Stress Management, The Process of Change, Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation for Change and De-escalation.I have worked in multiple areas of Human Service Field for over 25 years. I have experience in Child Welfare, Probation, Drug Treatment, Dropout Prevention, Continuing Education and Domestic Violence/ Sexual Assault. I hold a bachelor’sdegree in Sociology/Psychology from CSU Bakersfield.I am currently a contracted speaker/facilitator with Camp Pendelton Marine Base, UC Davis Continuing Education and A Call to Men.I have spoken at several conferences and trainings on this and other topics. Please have a look at some of my past events:1. 2015, 2016,2107, 2018, 2019 San Diego County DV Essentials Training2. 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, CRC 40 Hr. DV Training, Encinitas Ca.3. 2017, 2019 Keynote Speaker, US Marines MCAS Miramar San Diego Ca.4. 2018, Keynote Speaker, Indigenous Stop DomesticViolence Conference, Brisbane, Australia5. 2018, Keynote Speaker, DV/ SH 32nd Street Naval Base, San Diego Ca.6. 2018, Keynote Speaker, Southern Indian Health Council, Barona Ca.7. 2019, DV/SA/SH Training US Marines Camp Pendleton, San Diego, Ca.8. 2019 Workshop Presenter, Shifting the Lens Conference Los Angeles9. 2019, Fort Hood Military Police Brigade, Killeen Texas10. 2019, Keynote Speaker, US Air Force Presenter Scotts Air Force Base,11. 2019, Trainer, Option House 40 HR DV Training12. 2019, DV Training, Center Against Sexual Assault of Southwest Riverside County13. 2020, Keynote Speaker, New Jersey Judicial Council, New Jersey14. 2020, Shifting the Lens Conference, Keynote Speaker, Virtual15. 2020, DV/ SH Training Army Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Seattle, WA.16. 2021, Keynote Speaker, California Partnership to End Domestic Violence Annual Conference, Los Angeles, Ca.17. 2022, Keynote, National Council OF Juvenile and Family Court Judges, Reno NV18. 2023, Consultant, Gila River Indian Community, Phoenix Arizona19. 2023, Keynote Speaker, MCAS Miramar, San Diego Ca.20. 2023, Keynote Speaker, Fresno State Football, Fresno Ca.21. 2024, IVAT workshop presenter, San Diego Ca.22. 2024, Keynote Speaker, Fresno State Football, Fresno Ca,23. 2024, keynote Speaker, Oregon Judicial Conference, Sunriver OregonMentioned during the interview:Dominique Waltower website: https://www.dwaltower.com/Will2Change: https://www.will2change.org/ 
This week we are speaking with Paul Bukovec. Paul will share his rich history of his work in the movement to end domestic violence, the development of early intervention programming, and more!Paul Bukovec, LSW, was the Director of Menergy, a counseling center for men which he founded in 1994. In this capacity he served as chief clinician for a practice that specialized in the treatment of perpetrators of domestic abuse. As head of this treatment program for wife and partner abusers, he was responsible for programming, clinical supervision and the coordination of all direct service, including individual and group evaluation and treatment for offenders, and training and outreach presentations on domestic violence in a wide variety of settings. He served as a consultant and trainer for local and state wide domestic violence agencies and coalitions. To the service community-at-large, Mr. Bukovec served as a case consultant for domestic violence cases involving victims and perpetrators. He spoke at many national and regional professional conferences and was featured as a guest on local television and radio on numerous occasions. He was featured with his program on the ABC-TV news show "20/20," December 1987. In 1984, Mr. Bukovec became the founder and director of Project RAP for Family Service of Philadelphia, designing the first abuser treatment program in the Philadelphia area. During his ten year tenure, Bukovec organized and chaired The Brown Bag Forum, a monthly professional training series featuring local experts speaking on a variety of subjects relating to family violence, which served hundreds of clinicians locally. In 1988, Mr. Bukovec coordinated and chaired a major two-day national conference: Violence in the Family, hosting over 400 professionals from around the U.S. An active member of the state-wide Batterers Intervention Network, Mr. Bukovec was a co-author of Standards for Batterers Programs promulgated by the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Domestic Violence. He also wrote a monograph, Psychotherapy for The Male Batterer published in The Renfrew Perspective.Mr. Bukovec was a full time assistant professor for four and one-half years in the Child Care Department of Temple University, and a part time instructor for Community College of Philadelphia for several years. He has also been a field supervisor for graduate social work students from Smith College, Bryn Mawr School of Social Work and Social Research, the University of Pennsylvania, Allegheny University, Rutgers University, and Temple University. He guest lectured at most of the local colleges and graduate clinical programs.Paul retired in December of 2013. He now spends his time cooking, writing, camping and hanging out with family.Crusty Bits of Scrapple: Sketches, Scuffles and Tough Tales from Philly by Paul Bukovec
Jackson Katz, Ph.D., is an educator, author, and scholar-activist who has long been a major figure in the growing global movement of men working to promote gender equity and prevent gender-based violence. He is co-founder of Mentors in Violence Prevention, one of the longest-running and most widely influential gender violence prevention programs in North America and beyond. The multiracial, mixed-gender MVP program was the first system-wide prevention initiative in the college and professional sports culture in North America, as well as in all branches of the US military. MVP introduced "bystander" training to the gender violence prevention field; Katz is one of the early architects of this now broadly popular approach. He is also a journalist and author who has published numerous popular as well as academic articles on a range of cultural and political topics, along with three books, the classic Macho Paradox: Why Some Men Hurt Women and How All Men Can Help, and the award-winning Man Enough: Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, and the Politics of Presidential Masculinity. His new book is entitled Every Man: Why Violence Against Women Is a Men's Issue, published in February by Penguin Random House UK. The American version is due out in September from Bloomsbury Publishing. Katz is also a regular contributor to Ms. Magazine, where he writes about masculinities, sex, violence, and politics. He is the creator of numerous educational documentaries, including the classic Tough Guise series, as well as The Man Card: 50 Years of Gender, Power, and the American Presidency, released last fall. He is co-founder of the Young Men Research Project, which explores better ways of engaging young men politically. His TEDx talk -- about violence against women as a men's issue, has been translated into 27 languages and has over 5.5 million views. Katz is an acclaimed lecturer who has delivered thousands of speeches and conducted leadership trainings in all fifty U.S. states, eight Canadian provinces, and every continent except Antarctica. Jackson Katz, Ph.D.Founder & PresidentMVP Strategieshttps://jacksonkatz.substack.com/https://www.jacksonkatz.com/https://mvpstrat.com/For Jackson's talk at TEDxWomen:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTvSfeCRxe8
JERRY TELLO Jerry Tello is an internationally recognized authority in family strengthening, therapeutic healing, cross-cultural issues, and motivational speaking. Over the last forty years as a noted therapist, author, performer and program developer, Mr. Tello has incorporated his real life experience, together with research-based knowledge, and indigenous, culturally-based teachings, to engage all in a reality-based healing and growth-inspiring experience. Mr. Tello is the author of children's books, professional publications, culturally-based curricula, motivational CD's and other media. Mr. Tello has received numerous awards including the Ambassador of Peace Award and Presidential Crime Victims Service Award. Jerry Tello is a father, grandfather, son, brother and relative of many. He is from a family of Mexican, Texan and Coahuiltecan roots, and was raised in the South Central/Compton areas of Los Angeles. Over the last 40 years, he has dedicated himself to the service of individuals, families, communities. He has done so by speaking to over half of a million people, and training thousands of service providers across the nation. Mr. Tello is considered an international expert in the areas of: transformational healing, men and boys of color, racial justice, and community peace and mobilization. He is co-founder of the National Compadres Network and is currently Director of Training and Capacity Building. He has authored numerous articles, videos, and curricula addressing fatherhood, youth “rites of passage,” culturally-based family strengthening, and healing the healer. He is the author of Recovering Your Sacredness, A Father’s Love, a series of children’s books, coeditor of Family Violence and Men of Color, has served as a principal consultant for Scholastic Books on International Bilingual Literacy curriculum, and has published a series of motivational health and healing CDs. He has appeared in Time, Newsweek, Latina and Lowrider magazines. He is the recipient of numerous awards, which include the 2016 Maria Shriver’s Annual Advocate for Change award, the 2015 White House Champions of Change award, two California Governor’s Awards, the Ambassador of Peace Award presented by Rotary International, and the 2012 Presidential Crime Victims Service award, presented by President Bill Clinton and Attorney General Janet Reno. Finally, in collaboration with the American G.I. Forum, Mr. Tello was part of an effort providing domestic violence awareness, healing, and support services to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Persian Gulf veterans and their spouses. Presently, he continues to serve families and communities directly at the Sacred Circles Center in Whittier, California and is a member of the Sacred Circles performance group, a group dedicated to community peace and healing. He is the proud father of three children: Marcos, Renee, and Emilio; and grandfather of Amara, Naiya, Greyson, Harrison, Vivienne and Elias. Maestro Jerro Tello: https://www.jerrytello.com/
This week we are speaking with Rhea Almeida. Rhea will share the rich history of her work in the movement to end domestic violence.Rhea V. Almeida, MS, Ph.D., founder of Institute for family services, is a family therapist, trainer and educator. Creator of a Liberation Based Healing Perspective in family therapy, Dr. Almeida is the author of numerous journal articles and four books: Expansions of Feminist Theory Through Diversity (1994), Transformations in Gender and Race: Family and Developmental Perspectives (1998) and co-author of Transformative Family Therapy: Just Families in a Just Society (2008) & Liberation Based Healing Practices (2018).She is Founder of the national Liberation Based Healing Conference currently in its 20th year!In 2005 she received the American Family Therapy Academy Distinguished Award for Innovative Contributions to Family Therapy. She has been profiled in the Los Angeles Times, NPR, CNN, MSNBC, Pure Oxygen, Family Therapy NetworkerDr. Almeida is an AAMFT Approved Supervisor. She grew up in Uganda and London before coming to the U.S.https://www.instituteforfamilyservices.com/
This week we are speaking with Eric Mankowski. Eric will share his rich history of his work in the movement to end domestic violence by focusing his research and work with those who perpetrate the intimate partner abuse.Eric S. Mankowski (he/him), Ph.D., is Professor of Psychology and Affiliate Faculty in Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies at Portland State University. His research, teaching, and consultation practice address gendered forms of violence in its social ecological and structural contexts, with particular focus on the social construction and transformation of masculinity. His recent work with doctoral students examines restorative justice processes in surrogate IPV victim impact panels, and the relationship between masculinity ideology and desire for power in abusive male partners. He developed the Battering Intervention Program Proximal Outcomes survey, which is used to evaluate programs throughout the U.S. and world. As co-chair of the Oregon Department of Justice Batterer Intervention Programs Advisory Committee, he has studied the implementation of legal standards for partner abuse intervention program throughout the United States.https://www.biscmi.org/the-archives/https://www.biscmi.org/do-battering-intervention-programs-work/https://www.doj.state.or.us/crime-victims/advisory-committees-task-forces/batterer-intervention-program-bip-advisory-committee/https://sites.google.com/view/genderandviolencepdx/home?authuser=0https://workplacesrespond.org
This week we are speaking with Dan Saunders. Dan will share his rich history of his work in the movement to end domestic violence by focusing his research and work with those who perpetrate the intimate partner abuse.Daniel G. SaundersProfessor Emeritus of Social WorkDaniel Saunders, professor of social work, established one of the first intervention programs for men who batter and helped to establish crisis and advocacy programs for battered women in the 1970s. His research, teaching, and service center on the problems of dating and domestic violence. His specific studies focus on offender program evaluation, the traumatic effects of victimization, and the response of professionals and the public to dating and domestic violence. His research has been funded by the Centers for Disease Control, the National Institute of Mental Health, and the National Institute of Justice. In addition, he was awarded a Fulbright Scholars grant to conduct research at the Te Awatea Violence Research Centre, University of Canterbury, New Zealand. Professor Saunders' most recent projects involve an evaluation of supervised visitation programs for the children of battered women and a survey of child custody evaluators regarding their beliefs about domestic violence. Based on his publication record, a 2019 report listed him in the top 100 most influential contemporary social work faculty. In 2024, the analytics company Elsevier listed him among the world's top 2% of scientists.Research Interests/FocusDomestic and dating violence, direct practice, program evaluation.Curriculum Vitae: https://ssw.umich.edu/sites/default/files/documents/faculty/cvs/saunddan_cv.pdfList of Publications: https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=L5uCO3AAAAAJ
This week we are speaking with Dr. Trish Singh is the owner and Clinical Director of A New Awakening in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Trish will share her rich history of her work the movement to end domestic violence.Dr. Trish Singh, Ph.D., LPCCDr. Trish Singh is the owner and Clinical Director of A New Awakening in Albuquerque, New Mexico. There, she leads comprehensive outpatient treatment programs specializing in mental health and substance abuse recovery. With over twenty years of experience, Dr. Singh has dedicated her career to implementing evidence-based interventions that address the complex needs of individuals and families affected by behavioral health challenges.A dedicated advocate in the domestic violence intervention field, Dr. Singh has been instrumental in designing and implementing programming aimed at breaking cycles of abuse, supporting offender rehabilitation, and fostering long-term behavioral change. Her expertise in trauma-informed care and court-mandated treatment programs has positioned her as a trusted resource for community partners, including the criminal justice system, social service agencies, and advocacy groups.At A New Awakening, Dr. Singh continues to expand access to quality behavioral health services, ensuring that individuals receive the support, counseling, and resources needed for lasting recovery and personal growth.A New Awakening, Inc. https://anewawakening.com/
Description: This week, we are speaking with Barbara Hart. Barbara will share the rich history of her work in the movement to end domestic violence.Full bio available here1988 Manual Safety for Women A Collection of Writings By Barbara J. Hart2004 Manual Safety for WomenFuture Directions for BIPs: Examining the Power of Male Peer Support and Building Alternative Support Communities Statement on AccountabilityBarbara J. Hart, JD: Brief Chronology of Work with Men’s Movement to End Violence AgainstWomen in Pennsylvania
Join us this week for - Speaking Of: Etiony Aldarondo will share his rich history of his work as a researcher, educator, and practitioner in the movement to end domestic violence.Etiony Aldarondo, Ph.D.Dr. Aldarondo is a clinical psychologist with over 30 years of experience in domestic violence research and advocacy, mental health services, community partnerships, and higher education administration. His academic trajectory includes appointments in the Family Violence Research Program at the University of New Hampshire, Harvard Medical School’s Cambridge Hospital, The Philadelphia Child Guidance Clinic, Boston College, the University of Miami (UM), and Albizu University. The recipient of various recognitions for educational excellence and community involvement, Dr. Aldarondo’s scholarship focuses on positive development of ethnic minority and immigrant youth, domestic violence, and social justice-oriented clinical practices. His publications include the books Advancing Social Justice through Clinical Practice (Routledge), Programs for men who batter: Intervention and prevention strategies in a diverse society (Civic Research Institute with Fernando Mederos, Ed.D.), and Neurosciences, Health and Community Well-Being (San Luís, Nueva Editorial Universitaria with Dr. Enrique Saforcada and Mauro Muñoz). Dr. Aldarondo has a long history of involvement with grassroots advocacy organizations. He was Founding Executive Director of the National Latino Alliance for the Elimination of Domestic Violence as well as Founding Director of the Community and Educational Well-Being Research Center at UM. He is Past Executive Director of The Council on Contemporary Families and is on the board of directors for The National Resource Center on Domestic Violence.The Melissa Institute Resources:https://melissainstitute.org/scientific-articles-subject/The Melissa Institute YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@themelissainstitute
This week we are speaking with Rich Tolman. Rich will share his rich history of his work in the movement to end domestic violence by focusing his research and work with those who perpetrate intimate partner abuse.Rich TolmanRichard M. Tolman is the Sheldon D. Rose Collegiate Professor of Social Work at the University of Michigan and an American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare Fellow. He is currently a steering committee member of the National Battering Intervention Program Network and co-chairs the NBIPN Research committee. Rich's life work focuses on prevention and intervention to end gender-based violence (GBV). He began this work as a practitioner in a battering intervention program in Anchorage Alaska in 1980. Subsequently he worked in BIPs in Minnesota, Illinois and Michigan. He helped to set BIP standards in both Illinois and Michigan. He was an author of one of the earliest books on battering intervention- Edleson, J. L., & Tolman, R. M. (1992). Intervention for men who batter: An ecological approach. Sage Publications, Inc.His contributions to the domestic violence literature include the development of a widely used measure of psychological maltreatment of women, demonstrating the accuracy of survivors’ predictions of future abuse, research on how intimate partner violence impacts low-income women’s economic, physical and psychological well-being, and adolescent intimate partner violence. Rich co-led a research team that conducted a series of global studies on men’s involvement in prevention of GBV.His current projects include research on survivors' perspectives on the effectiveness of battering intervention, campus sexual assault prevention, the prevention of abuse during pregnancy, and relatedly, on supporting men to be positive partners and parents.Safety For Women: Monitoring Batterers’ Program by Barbara J. HartRichard M. Tolman, Sheldon D. Rose Collegiate Professor of Social Work, School of Social WorkShon Hart’s Website: ⁠⁠https://www.shonhart.com/ ⁠
This week we are speaking with Jeff Edleson. Jeff will share his rich history of his work in the movement to end domesticviolence by focusing his research and work with those who perpetrate the intimate partner abuse. Jeff L. EdlesonJeffrey L. Edleson is a Distinguished Professor of theGraduate School in the School of Social Welfare at the University of California, Berkeley. He was appointed to the Harry & Riva Specht Chair in Publicly Supported Social Services in 2016 and served as Dean from August 1,2012, to September 1, 2019. He spent 29 years on the faculty of the University of Minnesota School of Social Work and was Founding Director of the Minnesota Center Against Violence & Abuse (MINCAVA). Edleson is ranked as one of the world’s five top scholars studying domestic violence with a focus on children exposed to domestic violence. He has published over 130 articles and 12 books on domestic violence, groupwork, and program evaluation. He has conducted intervention research and provided technical assistance to programs across North America as well as in numerous countries including Australia, Argentina, Hong Kong, India, Israel, Japan, Korea and Singapore. He was a member of the U.S. National Advisory Council on Violence Against Women and of the Institute of Medicine’s Forum on Global Violence Prevention workshop planning committee. He was also a member of the National Academy of Sciences’ Panel on Research on Violence Against Women and served as a consultant to the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Prof. Edleson is an Associate Editor of the journal Violence Against Women and has served on numerous editorial boards. He is Co-Editor of the Oxford University Press book series on Interpersonal Violence and the Sage book series on Violence Against Women. He is the co-author with the late Susan Schechter of Effective Intervention in Domestic Violence and Child Maltreatment Cases: Guidelines for Policy and Practice (1999, co-authoredwith Susan Schechter, NCJFCJ), better known as the “Greenbook”. His own books include:·        Working with Children and Adolescents in Groups (1987, with Sheldon D. Rose , Jossey-Bass);·        Intervention for Men who Batter: An Ecological Approach (1992, with Richard M. Tolman, Sage);·        Ending the Cycle of Violence: Community Responses to Children of Battered Women (1995, co-editors  Einat Peled and Peter G. Jaffe, Sage);·        Future Interventions with Battered Women and Their Families (1996, co-editor Zvi Eisikovits, Sage);·        Evaluating Domestic Violence Programs (1997, Domestic Abuse Project);·        Domestic Violence in the Lives of Children: The Future of Research, Intervention, and Social Policy (2001, co-editor Sandra Graham-Bermann, APA Books);·        Parenting by Men Who Batterer Women: New Directions in Assessment and Intervention (2007, co-edited withOliver J. Williams, Oxford University Press);·        The Encyclopedia of Interpersonal Violence (2008, co-editor Claire Renzetti,  Sage Reference);·        Companion Reader on Violence Against Women (2011,co-editors Claire Renzetti and Raquel Bergen, Sage)·        Battered Women, Their Children, and International Law: The Unintended Consequences of the Hague Child Abduction Convention (2012, with Taryn Lindhorst, Northeastern University Press); and·        The Sourcebook on Violence Against Women (2018,3rd Edition, co-editors Claire Renzetti and Raquel Kennedy Bergen, Sage) Prof. Edleson is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of California at Berkeley and received his Masters and Ph.D. in Social Work from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He has practiced in elementary and secondary schools and in several domestic violence agencies. School of Social Welfare                                           University of California                                              120 Haviland Hall #7400                                           Berkeley, CA 94720-7400Phone: (510) 643-6664Email:jedleson@berkeley.eduHomepage:https://www.jedleson.com/Referenced during the interview:Group Treatment for Men Who Batter (1985)Internet Archive Wayback Machine:https://web.archive.org/MINCAVA in the Wayback Machine:https://web.archive.org/web/20250101091458/https://ssw.umn.edu/mincavaVAWNET in the Wayback Machine:https://web.archive.org/web/20120724114902/http://dvam.vawnet.org/
This week we are speaking with Bea Coté, Executive Director of the Domestic Abuse Intervention Programs. Bea will share her rich history of her work the movement to end domestic violence.Bea Coté M.Ed., LCSW, LMFTBea Coté is a therapist and advocate who has worked exclusively with abusers for over 24 years. Prior to that, her focus was on child and family mental health and safety.She is the founder of IMPACT+ Abuse Prevention Services, which provides access to DVIP/Battering Intervention services, supports programs like Legacy, and spreads a message of prevention of domestic violence throughout the Carolinas. The IMPACT DVIP is the only such program certified by the State in Gaston, Lincoln, Cleveland and Union counties and also serves Mecklenburg County.Bea trains and consults regionally, nationally and internationally on all facets of domestic violence/intimate partner abuse and has developed an expertise in an overlooked DV demographic: the abuser. She especially enjoys training therapists and family law attorneys.She reminds the community that #OnlyAbusersCanStopAbuse and #InterventionISPrevention and that anytime there is a discussion about domestic violence in your community, those who work with the abusers must be at the table. Bea reminds us that IMPACT+ is rebranding. Find them at www.impactdv.org. "Thank you to our Board, our partners, our advisors and volunteers."(We are rebranding! Find us at www.stepuptofamilysafety.org and on Charity Navigator; or for our IMPACT program referrals, www.impactdv.org) Thank you to Belmont’s Queen of the Apostles Catholic Church for providing us a Gaston County place to meet!Referenced during this podcast episode:A Call For Change Helpline: https://acallforchangehelpline.org/Battering Intervention Programs article by Bea Coté M.Ed., LCSW, LMFThttps://www.biscmi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Bea-Cote-FA-47-2-Fall24-Cote.pdf
This week we are speaking with Scott Miller, Executive Director of the Domestic Abuse Intervention Programs. Scott will share his rich history of his work the movement to end domestic violence. Scott Miller Scott Miller is the Executive Director for the Domestic Abuse Intervention Programs and has worked for the DAIP since 2000. Scott coordinates Duluth’s coordinated community response to domestic violence by managing the system change efforts, the Duluth Family Visitation Center and men’s nonviolence program. Scott trains nationally and internationally on the Duluth Model method of organizing. He also develops specific community interventions using the Duluth Model and creates new resource materials and curricula for use in communities working to end violence against women. Scott has also co-authored the latest edition of DAIP men’s nonviolence curriculum Creating a Process of Change for Men Who Batter. Scott works independently as an expert witness in criminal and civil trials to explain how the tactics of abusers and the associated risks generated by battering are linked to the counterintuitive behaviors of victims. Scott has testified more than 40 times in state district courts and federal/military court. In 2021, Scott was hired by the Minnesota Child Welfare Training Academy through the University of Minnesota School of Social Work in partnership with the Minnesota Department of Human Services. Scott will provide domestic violence training to child protection workers across the state of Minnesota. From 2001 to 2015, Scott was a contract trainer and forensic interviewer for First Witness Child Abuse Resource Center in Duluth, MN. Scott was responsible for conducting forensically sound interviews of children suspected of being physically or sexually abused as part of a criminal investigation. Scott also trained nationally on how to conduct interviews with children and work from a multidisciplinary team approach in the investigation of child abuse. Scott Miller has been working in the women’s movement since 1985.
This week we are speaking with Dr. Oliver Williams, social justice educator, activist and writer. Oliver will share his rich history of his work in social justice. Oliver Williams, Ph.D. Dr. Williams is a Professor of School of Social Work at the University of Minnesota, in St. Paul, MN. From June 1994 to September 2017 he was the Executive Director of the Institute on Domestic Violence in the African American Community (IDVAAC). He has also served as the Director of the Safe Return Initiative that addresses the issues of prisoner reentry and domestic violence from 2003-2016 and the Director of the African American Domestic Peace Project (AADPP) that works with community leaders in 10 cities across the United States to address domestic violence from 2010 to 2021. He has worked in the field of domestic violence for more than forty years. Dr. Williams is a clinical practitioner; working in mental health, family therapy, substance abuse, child welfare, delinquency, and sexual assault programs. He has worked in battered women’s shelters, developed curricula for batterers’ intervention programs and facilitated counseling groups in these programs. He has provided training across the United States and abroad on research and service-delivery surrounding partner abuse. Dr. Williams has been appointed to several national advisory committees and task forces from the Center for Disease Control, U.S. Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women, U.S. Office on Women’s Health, and the U.S. Department of Education. He has been a board member of various domestic violence and human service organization, including the early days of the National Domestic Violence Hotline 1999-2000 and the National Family Justice Center Alliance Advisory Board, 2006 to 2016. In 2000, he was appointed to the National Advisory Council on Domestic Violence by the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and U.S. Attorney General. In 2010 he hosted a roundtable on youth and violence for the U.S. Attorney General and participated in a roundtable with the U.S. Attorney General on issues related to fatherhood and participated in a Whitehouse Roundtable on Fatherhood and Domestic Violence. He has conducted training for the U.S. Military Family Advocacy programs in the U.S. and abroad. He has presented on numerous Family Violence, Research, and Practice organizations in the United States, Kenya, South Africa, Brazil, Canada, Virgin Islands, United Kingdom, and Germany. In 2015 Dr. Williams was invited to speak at the United Nations about domestic violence among Africans in the United States and in Africa. His research and publications in scholarly journals, books, reports and videos have centered on creating service delivery strategies to reduce violent behavior and support victims of abuse. He has consulted with the NFL, MLB, and NBA on issues related to domestic violence. Dr. Williams has received many awards, among them include an award from the American Psychological Association; an International “Telly Award” for his documentary work; the National “Shelia Wellstone Institute Award” The Alliance for Hope from the International Family Justice Center related to his National work on Domestic Violence; and a Distinguish Alumni Award from the University of Pittsburgh, School of Social Work. Dr. Williams received a bachelor’s degree in social work from Michigan State University; a Masters in Social Work from Western Michigan University; a Masters in Public Health and a Ph.D. in Social Work both from the University of Pittsburgh. Will 2 Change: https://www.will2change.org/
This week we are speaking with Fr. Chuck Dahm. Da Fr. Chuck will share his rich history of his work in the movement to end domestic violence by focusing his efforts within the faith community.Charles W. Dahm, O.P.is a Dominican priest and the Director of the Archdiocese of Chicago Domestic Violence Outreach.While pastor at St. Pius V parish, a large Hispanic parish in Chicago, for 21 years, Fr. Chuck developed the largest parish-based domestic violence program in the U.S., with seven full-time counselors. After retiring as pastor, he was named Director of Archdiocese of Chicago Domestic Violence Outreach where he has preached about domestic violence at all weekend Masses at 180 parishes and developed approximately 100 parish ministry teams to raise awareness about domestic violence and respond to the needs of victims.Fr. Chuck holds M.A.s in theology and philosophy from Aquinas Institute and a PhD in political science from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He was co-founder of the 8th Day Center for Justice, a Catholic peace and justice center in Chicago, where he served for twelve years. During this period, Fr Chuck helped found and support several organizations, such as Illinois Citizens for Better Care, a nursing home advocacy organization, and the Chicago Religious Task Force on Central America, an organization working for an end to war and promote defense of human rights.While pastor at St. Pius V parish, Fr. Chuck co-founded and is currently Board president of The Resurrection Project, an economic development corporation and community organization, which has created 600 affordable rental units and over $700 million worth of investment in Hispanic neighborhoods. He co-founded and is a board member of The Chicago Workers Collaborative, an advocacy organization for day laborers. He served for 20 years as a board member of San Jose Obrero Mission, a men’s and women's interim shelter. He also helped found and is currently a board member of Parenting for Non-Violence, which helps parents in violence ridden areas parent their children effectively.He is the author of two books: Power and Authority in the Catholic Church, Cardinal Cody in Chicago, and Parish Ministry in a Hispanic Community.Website:https://www.domesticviolenceoutreach.com/When I Call for Help: A Pastoral Response to Domestic Violence Against Women:https://www.usccb.org/topics/marriage-and-family-life-ministries/when-i-call-help-pastoral-response-domestic-violence
This week we are speaking with Craig Norberg-Bohm, social justice educator, activist and writer. Craig will share his rich history of his work in social justice. Craig Norberg-Bohm Craig Norberg-Bohm, is a senior member of our field, starting off in 1977, when he first attended the 3rd National Conference on Men and Masculinity. Life changed. And Craig has been an inventor, mentor and leader in our field ever since. Craig recently retired from 15 years working with Jane Doe Inc., The Massachusetts Coalition Against Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence. where he was founder and past director of Jane Doe Inc.’s Massachusetts White Ribbon Day Campaign. In 1978, Craig was one of the founders of RAVEN (Rape and Violence End Now) in St. Louis, Missouri, one of the earliest men's centers in the U.S. established to engage men to end men's violence against women. Craig is a founder and past co-chairperson for the North American MenEngage Network, a chapter of The Global MenEngage Alliance. He is also past president of Community Works, a fundraising federation made up of cooperating social justice organizations across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Craig is the Operations Manager for MERGE for Equality, currently offering training on Developing Healthy Boys for Early Childhood Educators. In addition, Craig consults with organizations on strategy for engaging men and boys and pursues mentorship and coaching for individuals entering the field. I am the father of a now 30-year-old son who suffers major mental illness. As a result I participate with a support group for care givers. I love music, golf, dance and a good beer now and then. I am always looking forward to participating in this ongoing collaboration. Other web references: • https://www.mergeforequality.org/ • https://namen.menengage.org/ • https://nurturingfathers.com/ • https://www.janedoe.org/whiteribbonday/ • https://www.whiteribbon.ca/ • https://whiteribbon.org.au/ • https://www.janedoe.org/ Books: Ronald Levant: https://drronaldlevant.com/ Craig mentioned Ronald Levant's work, where a quick search will find a good number of publications, including the rather famed Male Role Norms Scale. His newest book is a memoir. Craig also likes his earlier title "Masculinity Reconstructed". Men's Work, Paul Kivel End of Manhood, John Stoltenberg Real Boys, William Pollack
Join us this week for - Speaking Of: Penelope Morrison will share her rich history of her work as a research practitioner in the movement to end domestic violence. Penelope Morrison, Ph.D. Dr. Morrison holds a Ph.D. in Medical Anthropology and a Master’s Degree in Public Health from the University of Pittsburgh. Prior to arriving at Penn State New Kensington, she served as a co-investigator and senior research associate at Magee-Women’s Research Institute where she developed interdisciplinary collaborations with investigators at RAND, Veterans Affairs Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion and the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Morrison has also served as a qualitative methodological expert on projects related to veteran’s health, PTSD, informed consent, maternal to child transmission of HIV/AIDS, LGBTQ youth and substance use, telemedicine, and patient-provider substance use communication. Dr. Morrison’s own research interests are focused on addressing health disparities for underserved populations of women and children. Her most recent research utilizes traditional ethnographic methods to investigate what intervention practices work best for promoting long term behavioral change among men who perpetrate violence against women, and how to best stem the epidemic of intimate partner violence in the United States. Publications: https://newkensington.psu.edu/person/penelope-morrison
This week we are speaking with Ed Gondolf. Ed will share his rich history of his work in the movement to end domestic violence by focusing his research and work with those who perpetrate the intimate partner abuse.Curriculum VitaEdward W. Gondolf, EdD, MPH is the former director of Research for the Mid-Atlantic Addiction Research and Training Institute (MARTI; 1990-2011), where he conducted grant-funded research on the response of the courts, mental health practitioners, alcohol treatment clinicians, and batterer programs to domestic violence. He is best known as the lead investigator of the multi-site evaluation of batterer intervention programs funded by the Centers for Disease Control from 1994 to 2001. In 2005, he completed a four-year clinical trial of specialized counseling for African-American men arrested for domestic violence, under a grant from the National Institute of Justice, and a comparison study of case management with similar men under a grant from the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency. He most recently evaluated the effectiveness of supplemental mental health treatment for domestic violence offenders under a four-year NIJ grant.Gondolf is also professor emeritus of Sociology at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. During 1991 to 1994, he was the founding president of the Domestic Abuse Counseling Center in Pittsburgh. From 1988 to 1992, Gondolf served as a research fellow at the Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh Medical School, and as clinical consultant to the Domestic Relations Clinic, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Pittsburgh. He was research consultant to the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in 1993-96, and other current research projects.Gondolf has authored 10 books on wife abuse, including Men Who Batter: An Integrated Approach to Stopping Wife Abuse (Learning Publications, 1985), Battered Women as Survivors: An Alternative to Treating Learned Helplessness (Lexington Books, 1988), Psychiatric Response to Family Violence: Identifying and Confronting neglected Danger (Lexington Books, 1990), Assessing Woman Battering in Mental Health Services (Sage Publications, 1998), and Batterer Intervention Systems: Issues, Outcomes and Recommendations (Sage Publications, 2002), as well as over 140 research and clinical articles on men who batter, domestic violence in general, and community development.His most recent books are the critical research review The Future of Batterer Programs: Reassessing Evidence-Based Practice (Northeastern University Press, 2012), and a qualitative summary of practitioner perspectives on the field, Gender-Based Perspectives on Batterer Programs: Program Leaders on History, Approach, Research, and Development (Lexington Books, 2015).Gondolf has achieved a national reputation in the field of domestic violence that has brought numerous invitations for research, writing, and guest lectures. He has presented numerous invited lectures on the effectiveness of batterer programs, and been quoted or cited in a variety of prominent national newspapers and magazines: Scientific American, Esquire, Psychiatric News, USA Today, New York Times Magazine, Chicago Tribune, L.A. Times, Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, Pittsburgh Press, Philadelphia Inquirer, Seattle Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Dallas Morning News, Time Magazine, Ms. Magazine, Bride's Magazine, Mademoiselle Magazine, and Changes Magazine.Books by Edward W. GondolfArticles referenced during the interview:The Case Against Anger Control for BatterersEvaluating batterer counseling programs: A difficult taskshowing some effects and implicationsThe Evidence-Based Practice Movement:Contributions,Controversies, and RecommendationsResearch Evidence on Batterer Program EffectivenessThe weak evidence for batterer program alternatives
This week on Speaking Of, we are speaking with Lisa Nitsch. Lisa will share the rich history of her work in the movement to end domestic violence by working with those who perpetrate the violence and his experience being a part of the development of the Coordinated Community Response.Lisa Nitsch, MSWChief Operating OfficerHouse of Ruth MarylandCommunity Engagement Center2521 North Charles StreetBaltimore, Maryland 21218lisanitsch@hruthmd.org, (443) 569-0449 Lisa is responsible for House of Ruth Maryland’s intervention services for abusive partners, the Training Institute, which coordinates professional development for staff, external community education, and professional technical assistance, as well as agency-wide initiatives. She has been with House of Ruth Maryland since 1998 and has advanced through a variety of positions, including overseeing the agency’s Clinical Services for survivors and their children, the Teen Initiative, and the Developmental Childcare Center.Lisa is Vice-Chair of Baltimore City’s Domestic Violence Coordinating Council, a member of the City’s Domestic Violence High Risk Task Force, and an appointed member of the Maryland Governor’s Family Violence Council. For several years, she was on the Board of the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence, served as Vice President of the national organization, Women in Fatherhood, and as Co-Chair of Maryland’s Abuse Intervention Collaborative. Lisa has been on training teams for notable organizations such as Futures Without Violence, Battered Women’s Justice Project, Women of Color Network, Institute on Domestic Violence in the African American Community, and the National District Attorneys Association. She has served as an advisor to the United States White House, the National Institutes of Health, the United States Department of Justice’s Office on Violence Against Women, and the United States Department of Health & Human Services’ Administration for Children & Families.Lisa is most proud of being recognized as a field leader in Ed Gondolf’s 2015 book, “Gender-Based Perspectives on Batterer Programs”, her 2013 award from the Center for Urban Families for her “years of dedication in serving Baltimore City’s most vulnerable citizens”, and the Special Day of Honor designated for her by Mayor Nagin in 2007, for “promoting positive outcomes and providing support to the fathers of New Orleans” following the devastation of hurricane Katrina.Her current, but ever-changing, interests include developing programs for abusive partners within disinvested communities that address the dual experience of both holding privilege and being oppressed, increasing access to learning tools for service providers globally, and exploring community-based accountability models that function outside of the criminal legal system. Lisa’s roots run deep in her hometown of Baltimore City, Maryland, where she has helped raise two of her nieces and continues to proudly live with her husband of more than 20 years.
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