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Domestic abuse and intimate partner violence: the role of digital by design

Katie MacLure (Independent Research Consultant, Aberdeen, UK)
Ali Jones (Service Design, Scottish Government, Edinburgh, UK)

The Journal of Adult Protection

ISSN: 1466-8203

Article publication date: 16 July 2021

Issue publication date: 19 October 2021

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Abstract

Purpose

Domestic abuse or intimate partner violence is a term that describes a pattern of abusive behaviours, often experienced concurrently and linked to gender-based violence. This study aims to explore through the literature the potential to design effective digital services that work for victims, survivors and those who provide domestic abuse support services.

Design/methodology/approach

This study is based on a systems or service design thinking methodology which was adopted during a Scottish Government-funded Technology Enabled Care (TEC) pathfinder project on domestic abuse. This methodology is the basis for the Scottish Approach to Service Design which is based on the Design Council Double Diamond. During the first phase, known as the discovery phase, desk-based research is conducted by the service design team to inform their approach to the later phases (the second half of the first diamond is define whilst design and deliver form the second diamond). Time is spent during discovery to unpack the complexity whilst the approach takes a pragmatic worldview.

Findings

Technology has yet to be shown to provide an effective solution to any aspect of the victim or survivors’ experience or support services albeit these are often over-stretched and under-funded even without the Covid-19 pandemic. Digital abuse is increasing with perpetrators adapting new technologies. Digital developments should be grounded on ethical design principles.

Research limitations/implications

This study is the result of the desk-based research during a TEC project considering the potential role of technology in tackling domestic abuse. Limitations include only including evidence from the literature; interviews were conducted but are not reported here. Another limitation is the pragmatic rather than academic nature of the approach; it was to be a foundation for service re-design. So hopefully useful for new practitioners to immerse themselves in the topic area but with no claims to be reproducible as would be the case in a formal review.

Practical implications

All the evidence shows the authors need to keep trying different approaches, different forms of engagement and ways to empower survivors. Could technology support health-care practitioners to consistently use sensitive routine enquiry? Perhaps enable independent domestic violence advisors to attend more multidisciplinary team meetings in local community settings? Meanwhile, digital abuse is increasing with perpetrators adapting new technologies. Technology has not yet provided a digital solution which is practical and meets the needs of the broad intersectional population affected by domestic abuse nor those who provide support. If the future is to be based on digital developments it must be grounded on ethical design principles.

Originality/value

This desk-based review collates the current national and international policy and research literature whilst focusing on digital developments which support those affected by domestic abuse.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the members of Aberdeen Council of Voluntary Organisations Third Sector Interface and Aberdeen Health and Social Care Partnership who designed the original ScottishGovernment-funded project.Funding: This work was part of a Scottish Government, funded TEC Pathfinder projectconducted in partnership with ACVO TSI and Aberdeen Health and Social Care Partnership.Conflicts of interest: The authors have noconflicts of interest to declare.

Citation

MacLure, K. and Jones, A. (2021), "Domestic abuse and intimate partner violence: the role of digital by design", The Journal of Adult Protection, Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 282-301. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAP-03-2021-0009

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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