"PREVENTION IS THE CURE: EVERY VOICE COUNTS"
2010 Symposium to Prevent Domestic Abuse
Made possible in part by a grant from
St. Luke's Health Initiatives
Talk, Learn, Inspire, Act
This inaugural symposium will explore an overall goal of deep community engagement with 6 breakout session themes focused on primary or secondary prevention. Each session is
designed to educate, engage and encourage
dialogue and collective action.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Glendale Civic Center
5750 West Glenn Drive
Glendale, AZ 85301
SCHEDULE
7:00-8:00 AM Registration & Networking
8:00 AM-9:00 AM Plenary Session
9:15 AM- 11:15 AM Morning Sessions
11:30 AM-1:00 PM Purple Ribbon Awards Luncheon
1:15 PM-3:15 PM Afternoon Sessions
3:30 PM-4:00 PM Closing Session and Wrap-Up
TRACK THEMES & SESSIONS:
Track 1: Positive Parenting: The First Step in Primary Prevention This workshop is approved for 5.5 CEU contact hours from the AZ Chapter of NASW. Certification #1647
Presented by:
Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill, MSW and Tom Merrill, Ph.D.
Co-Authors of “Settle for More” & “Parachutes for Parents”
Designed for anyone who interacts
with children including parents, day care providers, teachers, school counselors, social
workers, and psychologists. Learn how to raise a child without getting angry and without using violence (spanking) to coerce a child into listening.
Track 2: Interrupting & Preventing Teen Dating Abuse
Presented by:
Jennifer Rauhouse, Peer Solutions
Sharyn Logue, MADE Coalition & Love Is Not Abuse Facilitator
(Note: Dr. Jill Murray will not be participating due to funding.)
Designed
for anyone who interacts with teens including parents, teachers, school
counselors, social workers, psychologists, parole officers, police
officers, advocates, emergency room staff and others. This track will
educate on the etiology of
teen dating abuse, teach how to recognize and respond to the red flags,
and discuss the seriousness of teen dating abuse and its link to
relationship abuse later in life.
Track 3: Voice of the Faith-Based Community in Prevention
Facilitated by:
James Curley, CPT, C.Ht. Satori Institute
Donna Bartos, Purple Ribbon Council
Designed for outreach ministers, faith-based leaders and others connected to communities of faith. This 2-part facilitated dialogue will inspire ideas for prevention within the faith-based community and plans for action.The first part of this workshop will provide clergy and other religious and lay leaders with the appropriate training to recognize warning signs of domestic abuse and patterns. Part two of this workshop will follow the Everyday Democracy model for open and honest dialogue with the goal of inspiring ideas for prevention and plans for collaborative action among the faith-based community and others.
Track 4: Forum 411 Theory v. Practice: Are We On the Right Track?
Presented by:
Dr. Richard Toon & William Hart
Arizona State University Morrison Institute for Public Policy
Designed
for system advocates, shelter providers, community members, issue
stakeholders, prevention specialists, researchers, social workers and
others, this interactive session will inspire meaningful conversation
on theories versus actual prevention practices. Richard Toon and Bill Hart are the authors of two influential reports on domestic violence in Arizona: System Alert: The Criminal Justice System Response to Domestic Violence (2007) and Layers of Meaning: Domestic Violence and Law Enforcement Attitudes in Arizona (2005). During this session, Richard and Bill will lead a discussion of their latest report, Domestic Violence in Arizona: Old Problems, New Possibilities (2010).
Track 5: Prevention Through the Government Sector Lens
Panel Moderated by:
Judge Mary Helen Maley
Santa Cruz County, AZ
Panelists include:
Judge Finn, Glendale
Judge Segal, Pima County Justice Court
Judge Vildosola, Douglas Justice Court
Kathy Waters, AOC
Nicol Green, Deputy Pima County Attorney
Charlene Laplant, Deputy Santa Cruz County Attorney
Gary Kula, Phoenix Public Defender
Detective Raul Rodriguez, County Attorney’s Office
Paul Cunningham, Pima County Juvenile Probation Officer
Glynn Thomas, Maricopa County Probation Department
Panelists for this interactive session
include prosecutors, judges, court advocates and probation officers who
will share with their colleagues existing prevention models and inspire
discussion on ways the criminal justice system can aid in prevention.
Track 6: Profits, Personnel & Prevention: The Business Sector’s Stake
Founded in August 2006, Purple Ribbon Council’s mission is to raise awareness and engage everyday people in the prevention of domestic abuse.
We meet this mission through community engagement, prevention education and training, restorative interventions, and cause marketing partnerships that Break the Silence, Break the Cycle, Save Lives.
Purple Ribbon Council’s programs and services complement existing institutional prevention methods by going deep into communities to leverage front-line “natural helpers” in grassroots prevention, advocacy and outreach that supports, benefits and empowers the most silent victims such as those who do not seek shelter and children orphaned by domestic violence.
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