<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
      <oai_dc:dc xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/">
      <dc:title>Process Evaluation of a Domestic Abuse Reduction Team in Clinton County, New York, 1998-2000     </dc:title>
		
      		<dc:creator>Ames, Lynda</dc:creator>
      	
		
      		<dc:subject>criminal justice programs</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>domestic violence</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>intervention</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>offenders</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>probation</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>process evaluation</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>prosecution</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>rural areas</dc:subject>
      	
		
      		<dc:subject>ICPSR.XVII.E</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>NACJD.VI</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>NACJD.XIII</dc:subject>
      	
      	<dc:description>This study was a process evaluation of a criminal justice
 program responding to intimate partner violence. The program consisted
 of an effort by the probation office, the district attorney's office,
 and local advocates for battered women to coordinate prosecution of
 offenders and then to effectively supervise them under probation. The
 Domestic Abuse Reduction Team (DART), as the program was called, was
 formed in 1996 and consisted of a domestic violence case coordinator
 in the district attorney's office, a probation officer dedicated to a
 domestic violence caseload, a legal advocate from the STOP Domestic
 Violence program, and a domestic violence task force coordinator
 housed in probation. This study documented the achievements of and
 difficulties encountered by the interagency team in a largely rural
 county in upstate New York. Such programs are relatively new in the
 United States, and very new to rural areas. The focus of this process
 evaluation was how the program functioned and the issues it addressed,
 rather than outcome measures such as recidivism after
 intervention. Data were collected from domestic incident reports
 (DIRs) and the district attorney's mainframe database. The DIRs were
 mandatory reports filed by police for each domestic violence incident
 to which they responded. The district attorney's database contained
 information about cases that were prosecuted, such as the name of the
 court, the initial charges, and the sentences. Data were gathered from
 these case files to describe the demographic characteristics of
 victims and offenders and to describe offenses. Part 1 contains data
 for all cases in Clinton County that stemmed from a DIR from 1998 to
 2000. Part 2 contains a subset of these DIR cases for which there was
 an identified male offender and a female intimate partner as a victim
 that could be matched to the district attorney's database. This subset
 allowed the principal investigators to pinpoint the official domestic
 violence cases that were prosecuted. Variables in Parts 1 and 2
 consist of the police agency filing the report, the date of the
 incident, whether there was an arrest, the sex, race, and birth date
 of both the victim and the offender, the relationship of the victim to
 the offender, the charges filed, the court in which the case was
heard, the pleas offered, and the sentence given.</dc:description>
		
      	<dc:date>2003-04-03</dc:date>
	    
      		<dc:type>administrative records data</dc:type>
      	
      	<dc:identifier>3423</dc:identifier>
      	<dc:identifier>10.3886/ICPSR03423.v1</dc:identifier>
    	
      		<dc:source>domestic incident reports filed by police and data from
the district attorney's mainframe database.</dc:source>
      	
    	
      		<dc:coverage>United States</dc:coverage>
      	
      		<dc:coverage>New York</dc:coverage>
      	
		
      		<dc:coverage>1998--2000</dc:coverage>
      	
      	<dc:rights> ICPSR metadata records are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 
        3.0 United States License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/).</dc:rights>
      </oai_dc:dc>
