Brazil’s Maria da Penha domestic violence police patrols: A second-response innovation in preventing re-victimization
View/ Open
Main article (93.55Kb)
Download
Publication date
2021Author
Macaulay, FionaKeyword
Domestic violenceFeminicide
Second-response policing
Brazil
Maria da Penha domestic violence police patrols
Rights
© 2021 The Authors. Published by Sage. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Peer-Reviewed
yesOpen Access status
Open AccessAccepted for publication
2021-06-30
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This article examines an innovative domestic violence intervention: some 300 ‘second-response’ police patrols set up since 2015 by military police forces and municipal guards in cities around Brazil. They enforce court-issued protection orders by paying repeat visits to women at high risk, referring them to support services, and ensuring abusers stay away. Drawing on interviews with officers who founded or now lead these patrols, and on local-level police data and studies, the article analyses their origins and modus operandi, and evaluates their impacts on victims, abusers, the community, and internal police force culture. Available evidence shows that victims enrolled in these programmes are much less likely to suffer repeated assault or feminicide than those who are not. The article examines how this intervention fits with the other elements of local protection networks and compares these patrols to second-response police interventions developed elsewhereVersion
Accepted manuscriptCitation
Macaulay F (2021) Brazil’s Maria da Penha domestic violence police patrols: A second-response innovation in preventing re-victimization. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice. Accepted for publication.Link to Version of Record
https://doi.org/10.1177/10439862211038439Type
Articleae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1177/10439862211038439