Domestic violence (also called family violence) is a pattern of behavior and a
method of control. One person dominates other household members by physical violence
and/or psychological abuse.
Domestic Violence Examples
Does your partner:
- Hit? Slap? Choke? Kick? Bite? Push? Use, or threaten to use, a weapon?
Prevent you from leaving?
- Call you degrading names? Threaten to harm you or your family? Torture
your pet? Destroy your property?
- Keep you from seeing your friends or family? Prohibit you from using a
vehicle?
- Force you to engage in sexual acts against your will?
- Discourage or forbid you to work? Withhold the family's financial
information from you?
- Control all the family finances and accounts?
- Fail to provide care or medical treatment that results in injury or
damages your health and safety?
- If you have answered "yes" to one or more of the above questions, you may
be in an abusive relationship.
Domestic Violence Prevention Services
Domestic Violence programs are federal and state funded public or private,
non-profit agencies that provide services to survivors of domestic violence
and their children. Local domestic violence agencies and programs provide for
the safety of battered adults and their children through the provision of emergency
housing, crisis intervention, peer counseling, support, advocacy and public
awareness. Funding also supports the statewide, 24-hour toll-free Family Violence
hotline number which may be reached by dialing (800) 838-8238.
At the state level, the functions of the Domestic Violence Prevention program
are to:
- Allocate funding through a request for proposal (RFP) process to local
domestic violence agencies
- Promote interagency cooperation for service delivery, technical assistance
and data collection
- Promote domestic violence services in unserved and underserved localities
- Promote public awareness of domestic violence, its prevention and services
to survivors
- Maintain and disseminate statistical and program information
- Provide information to the legislature and other interested parties
- Provide technical assistance to local domestic violence agencies
The Domestic Violence Program identifies, mobilizes and monitors resources
for victims of domestic violence. Close to 60,000 women and their children are
served yearly.
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