In the Media

Waypoint worker's research helps determine domestic violence risk

Locally-made tool has helped define intimate partner violence risk assessment for decades, with online training teaching over 1,800 police and others since 2023. By Derek Howard, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Apr 28, 2024 1:30 PM

Read more here



Q-and-A: Researcher at Penetanguishene’s Waypoint Centre led development of risk assessment tool used around the world

Dr. Zoe Hilton’s domestic violence risk assessment tool used by more than 1,000 organizations

By Ian Adams, Midland Mirror

https://www.simcoe.com/news/q-and-a-researcher-at-penetanguishenes-waypoint-centre-led-development-of-risk-assessment-tool-used/article_cbb836f5-7c45-51d6-8476-054469d6f281.html

Zoe Hilton spoke to local media about her mentorship of a Georgian College psychology student studying perceptions of victim blaming in cases of intimate partner violence while completing her internship at Waypoint.

Click here to read more!



Zoe Hilton discussed the Celia IPV project with Ramraajh Sharvendiran on CBC Radio’s Ontario Morning on September 12, 2023.

Click here to listen!


Mike Farwell had a conversation with Zoe Hilton about defunding and refunding police in the context of of academic/police partnership on The Mike Farwell Show, Monday September 11th, 2023


Zoe Hilton in conversation with Shaye Ganam, September 6, 2023, click here to listen.


Article by N. Zoe Hilton and Sandy Jung published in “The Conversation”, September 04, 2023

Police-academic partnerships could help tackle the crime of coercive control

Research collaboration between police forces and academics could go a long way to ensuring federal legislation aimed at fighting coercive control in intimate relationships is effective. (Shutterstock)
N. Zoe Hilton, University of Toronto and Sandy Jung, MacEwan University

In 2020, calls to defund the police echoed a longstanding argument in critical criminology in favour of police abolition.

Academics who support abolition promote activism over collaboration. But as calls for “defund the police” pivot to “refund the police” in priority areas — in particular mental health, issues faced by marginalized people and intimate partner violence — police-researcher partnerships are needed more than ever.

When faced with shifting priorities, police forces may lack the research capacity to evaluate existing policies. Most police officers and supervisors don’t often read academic research that could point them to current evidence-based practices.

Collaborating with independent researchers provides access to needed skills and may bolster public trust and perceived legitimacy of their work and efforts.

Academics who forgo working with police are losing out on opportunities for critical data access and effective knowledge mobilization. Researchers who seek to understand and evaluate policing practice need access to large-scale, timely and highly sensitive data on police operations.

Furthermore, if police participate in designing studies and interpreting findings, they may more readily acknowledge the need for change in light of unfavourable results — or adopt new practices that show positive effects.

Intimate partner violence

Academics who actively exclude the very people they seek to influence by their research are unlikely to be successful in that goal. Fortunately, many scholars now see co-operation and collaboration as the best way to conduct research in criminal justice.

Intimate partner violence is one priority area that has seen the benefits of police-academic partnership. Beginning in the 1980s, researchers collaborated with police organizations to evaluate the effects of arrest for domestic assault in the United States and Canada. Studies showed that arrest reduced subsequent violence, but the impact varied according to an individual’s history of violence and other risk factors.

More recently, an academic team initiated a partnership with police and other services to conduct research with the shared goal of preventing intimate partner homicide.

We have been part of such partnerships over the course of our respective careers, from the creation of the first actuarial risk assessment tool for intimate partner violence to the testing of that tool in routine police practice.

Our current collaborators include researchers who have studied how officers use such tools and assess risk when responding to violent and non-violent incidents involving intimate partners.

Coercive control

Recognition of non-physically violent but coercive and controlling forms of abuse has grown rapidly in recent years, especially with the increase in coercive control incidents during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Coercive control involves repeated, systematic acts of isolation, intimidation and violation that undermine the partner and trap them in the abusive relationship. It’s a pattern of behaviour over time, making it challenging for police to identify because officers’ conventional understanding of intimate partner violence focus on overt acts of violence.

Coercive control is considered a risk factor for intimate partner femicide, and is believed to have played a role in the apparent murder of a four-year-old Toronto girl, Keira Kagan, by her father in 2020.

Four men carry a white casket, one openly weeping.
People carry the casket at the funeral for four-year-old Keira Kagan in Toronto in February 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

Researchers and activists have urged governments to make changes in how the criminal justice system responds to intimate partner violence in order to reflect coercive control.

Coercive control is now outlawed in the United Kingdom and Australia, and similar legislation has been passed or considered in several American states.

In Canada, Bill C-332 seeks to criminalize coercive control, and the justice minister recently expressed the government’s openness to creating a new offence in the Criminal Code. Keira’s Law, which passed the Senate on Aug. 17, 2023, is set to mandate coercive control training for judges.

How best to address coercive control?

But research suggests that criminalizing coercive control is fraught with challenges, including potential racial bias and the difficulty of defining, detecting and documenting the behaviour.

Police-academic partnerships can help answer crucial questions, including how police officers investigate coercive control, what the most effectual training methods are and whether policies are effective and equitable when implemented.

We are now collaborating with police to identify a common language for intimate partner violence risk appraisal. The CELIA IPV project for intimate partner violence research is studying how police can recognize and respond to non-physical, coercive and controlling behaviours.

An expressed goal of our collaboration is to expand formal partnerships between researchers with expertise in intimate partner violence and policing services across Canada and to address research gaps in evidence-based policing for intimate partner violence.

We have so far established partnerships with the Edmonton Police Service, the Ontario Provincial Police and the Saint John Police Force in New Brunswick.

Evidence-based policing

We’ll also examine risk-assessment approaches for people engaging in intimate partner violence across diverse gender and sexual identities, extending our partnerships and enhancing the potential for improving evidence-based policing whenever officers respond to a domestic call.

Police-academic partnerships are not just about the academic search for knowledge, and not just about the evaluation of policing practice.

They are about the creation of relationships with the potential to transform how each partner understands and interacts with the other. Collaboration is the essence of knowledge mobilization and will be fundamental to the success of anti-coercive control legislation.

N. Zoe Hilton, Professor, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto and Sandy Jung, Professor, Department of Psychology, MacEwan University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Media Release from August 31, 2023


Waypoint researchers launch cross-Canada project to address intimate partner violence

 

Waypoint researchers have embarked on a pioneering nationwide endeavour, partnering with police services and universities in Alberta, New Brunswick and Ontario to study and share evidence-based approaches for assessing risk of intimate partner violence (IPV).

 Intimate partner violence has increased since the pandemic and remains a pervasive concern, affecting individuals across society. Recognizing the urgent need for a unified response strategy, this collaborative initiative led by Waypoint Senior Research Scientist Dr. N. Zoe Hilton seeks to establish a common language for assessing and discussing IPV risks that transcend municipal and provincial police services and other criminal justice stakeholders.

 “We plan to create a standardized approach to interpreting IPV risk, and test the approach across men, women, and individuals with diverse gender identities,” says Dr. Hilton, who is also a Professor of Psychiatry in the Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto.

 Already underway, the Edmonton Police Service, the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) and the Saint John Police Force are gathering data on IPV incidents to support the project’s objectives. Spearheading this interdisciplinary research are experts Dr. Angela Eke (OPP), Dr. Mary Ann Campbell (University of New Brunswick), Dr. Sandy Jung (MacEwan University) and Dr. Karl Hanson (Society for the Advancement of Actuarial Risk Need Assessment). Complementing this distinguished group are Waypoint’s Elke Ham, Dr. Meghan Weissflog and Dr. Soyeon Kim.

 Risk assessment is an indispensable tool for risk management, making it possible for police to intervene quickly and effectively to prevent further violence. However, recent events such as the 2022 triple femicide of Anastasia Kuzyk, Nathalie Warmerdam and Carol Culleton in Ontario have highlighted the need for a consistent way to communicate and respond to high-risk cases.

 To share their ongoing research and contribute to broader uptake of their findings, the team has launched a comprehensive website (celiaproject.squarespace.com). The website not only presents their research results but also delves into related work on coercive control – an area intricately linked to IPV.

 “Studies show that coercive control is related to intimate partner femicide,” says Dr. Hilton. “If we overlook the danger signs by ignoring coercive control, we could be missing opportunities to save lives,” adds Dr. Hilton. “Our collaborative efforts with police organizations will focus on equipping police to recognize and respond to non-physical, coercive and controlling behaviours when assessing IPV risk.”

 By spearheading this transformative research, Waypoint researchers and their esteemed collaborators are pioneering a comprehensive approach to intimate partner violence assessment that promises to improve the safety and well-being of countless individuals across Canada and beyond.

 This project is supported in part by funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.