000 | 01953nab a22002897a 4500 | ||
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_c6203 _d6203 |
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005 | 20250625151507.0 | ||
008 | 190321s2019 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
040 | _aAFVC | ||
100 |
_aStewart, Sarah L. _98252 |
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245 |
_aEnacting entangled practice : _binteragency collaboration in domestic and family violence work _cSarah L. Stewart |
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_bSage, _c2019 |
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500 | _aViolence Against Women, 2019, Advance online publication, 11 March 2019 | ||
520 | _aInteragency collaboration in domestic and family violence (DFV) work is generally assumed to be good practice. This article questions this assumption, suggesting caution in adopting an uncritical pro-collaboration stance, arguing the need to trace the effects of working together on victims/survivors. Employing an innovative sociomaterial approach, this ethnographic study of interagency practice unravels its complexity, showing that not all ways of working together serve the interests of victims/survivors equally. Conceptualizing interagency DFV work as two distinctive, yet entangled, modes of collaboration, the findings have important implications for interagency DFV practice and policy. (Author's abstract). The fieldwork took place over 6 months in an outer metropolitan suburb of Sydney, Australia, where a local integrated DFV response had been operating for many years. Record #6203 | ||
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_aDOMESTIC VIOLENCE _9203 |
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650 |
_aFAMILY VIOLENCE _9252 |
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_aINTERAGENCY COLLABORATION _9396 |
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_aINTERVENTION _9326 |
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_aINTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE _9431 |
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_aPERPETRATORS _92644 |
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650 | 4 |
_aVICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE _9624 |
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651 | 4 |
_aAUSTRALIA _92597 |
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651 |
_aNEW SOUTH WALES _93273 |
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773 | 0 | _tViolence Against Women, 2019, Advance online publication, 11 March 2019 | |
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_aViolence Against Women _94609 |
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_uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/1077801219832125 _yRead abstract |
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_2ddc _cARTICLE |