Back to All Events

Waypoint Talks Fall Series: Improving prediction of intimate partner violence by identifying coercive controlling behaviours in police reports

Join us on October 10, 2024, from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm EST to learn about research in New Zealand exploring revictimization and the predictive ability of controlling behaviours.

Speaker: Dr. Apriel Joliffe Simpson

Dr. Apriel D. Jolliffe Simpson is a Lecturer at Te Puna Haumaru New Zealand Institute for Security of Crime Science (NZISCS), University of Waikato. Dr. Jolliffe Simpson conducts research on family and whānau (extended family) violence, including decision-making, coercive control, risk assessment, and case management by family violence practitioners. She is one of the few researchers internationally to have researched the relationship between controlling behaviour and intimate partner violence revictimization, as well as studying risk assessments by police officers and family violence practitioners. Dr. Jolliffe Simpson is an emerging scholar, having received her PhD. From the University of Waikato, New Zealand, in 2022.

Click here to register.

Previous
Previous
September 30

Waypoint Talks Fall Series: Responding to coercive control in the UK - What have we learned?

Next
Next
October 21

Waypoint Talks Fall Series: Assessing and addressing the hidden crime of stalking - Implications for coercive control