Developments in our understanding of domestic violence and its criminalisation have led some probation areas in the UK to adopt pro-feminist offender groupwork programmes as a means of rehabilitating these offenders. The renaissance of the rehabilitative ideal within probation areas has been followed by the need to prove its effectiveness. This article discusses the justifications of providing rehabilitation for this category of offender, outlines the pro-feminist approach and provides a guide to conducting well designed evaluations within a probation context in light of earlier British evaluations. It concludes by calling for further well designed evaluations to be conducted.
Social identity is an important part of our self-concept and our perception of social identity comes from our associations with specific in-groups over other out-groups. Adults with learning disabilities are assumed to associate with the learning disability minority group, and previous studies have focused on the stigma attached to this label. Many of these studies though have ignored this label’s role on establishing access to some services and provisions and have also only used qualitative data. In this study we set out to gather quantitative data about the level of in-group identification people with learning disabilities have with this group, using an established in-group identification scale, adapted for use by people with learning disabilities. We hypothesised that the level of in-group identification would be affected by perceived threat to the in-group, and this was supported by our results in this small scale study. The relationship with perceived threat may show that people appreciate the negative associations with the label, and participants with low in-group identification may well be trying to dis-identify with the learning disability group.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.