December 10, 2018

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Report shows tragic patterns in domestic homicides

Credit: Paul Mayne//Western News
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Credit: Paul Mayne//Western News

A new report from the Canadian Domestic Homicide Prevention Initiative with Vulnerable Populations (CDHPIVP) is a painful reminder that domestic violence is a major social, criminal and public health issue that affects thousands of Canadians every day.

The report, titled "One is Too Many: Trends and Patterns in Domestic Homicides in Canada 2010-2015," is based on work from a Social Science and Humanities Research Council grant developed jointly by Myrna Dawson, Director of University of Guelph's Centre for the Study of Social and Legal Responses to Violence, and Peter Jaffe, Academic Director of Western University's Centre for Research & Education on Violence against Women & Children (CREVAWC).

It explores hundreds of domestic homicides using public-records information available from court decisions and media reports.

Specifically, the new report focuses on four vulnerable populations at greater risk of domestic due to historical oppression and/or lack of access to resources because of isolation through various factors such as geography, language, culture, age and poverty. They are:

"Each of these populations experience factors that greatly enhance their vulnerability to domestic violence and homicide and exacerbate the negative mental and physical health consequences of violence," said Dawson, who serves as CDHPIVP Co-Director. "These groups face greater challenges in finding services and safety."

Key statistics and findings from the report include:

Demographics of victims and accused:

Relationship between victim and accused:

Crimes and charges:

Future CDHPIVP reports will help identify and inform priorities for future practice, policy, and research while the overall mission of CDHPIVP is to develop and implement more nuanced and appropriate population-specific, culturally-informed practices and policies.

"Our growing knowledge base needs to be translated into action in the field to support victims and service providers to assess and manage risk as well as promote safety planning," said Jaffe, who also serves as CDHPIVP Co-Director. "The challenge across the country is realizing these goals for vulnerable populations in a manner that addresses existing inequities and increases access to resources and services."

More information: One is Too Many: Trends and Patterns in Domestic Homicides in Canada 2010-2015: cdhpi.ca/sites/cdhpi.ca/files/ … RTDEC2_DEC_FINAL.pdf

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