Safe and Together is recognised within National Guidance for Child Protection 2021 as the Systematic response to Domestic Abuse and has been adopted within South Lanarkshire as a good practice model of response.
Safe and Together defines Domestic Abuse Informed Practice as a Perpetrator Pattern, Child Centred, Survivor Strength based approach to working with Domestic Abuse.
Domestic abuse considerations in safety planning:
Effective safety planning will depend on practitioner-applied awareness of
- The child’s trauma from abuse, and from seeing and hearing abuse
- physical, emotional, educational, developmental, social, behavioural impact on child
- the non-abusing parent’s need for a safe space to talk and a safe way of receiving information (away from perpetrator)
- the perpetrator’s pattern of coercive control
- multiple impact on income, housing, relationships, health
- how support for non-abusing parents will also support children
- when a non-abusing parent’s ability to parent has been compromised
- protective factors in the child’s world relevant to safety plans
- the children’s needs for advocates that they trust
- potentially heightened risk following separation
- multi-agency approaches that keep women’s and children’s needs at the centre