“…First, they are predominantly either victim-perimetric, whereby the victim is a secondary consideration, or victimcentric, in which victims are actively sought out and integrated into the agency's practices. RF programs that require victim consent and cooperation (Erez et al, 2004) have greater opportunity to be victim-centric, while technological shifts with secondgeneration (Paterson, 2022) GPS create programs that diverge in a victim-perimetric direction. Second, GPS for DV programs adopt varying "surveillance styles," such that they may be (a) oriented toward crime control and victim protection; (b) focused primarily on offender accountability, intervention, and rehabilitation; or (c) emphasize defendants' due process rights and maintain a more neutral stance (see Ibarra et al, 2014), reflecting various degrees of "tightness" (Hucklesby et al, 2021).…”