| Original language | English (Ireland) |
|---|---|
| Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2017 |
| Event | 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017 - Duration: 6 Sep 2017 → … |
Conference
| Conference | 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017 |
|---|---|
| Period | 6/09/17 → … |
Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)
- Authors
- Declan Coogan
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Coogan, D. (2017). She felt so held Support, strength and solidarity: Practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) with child to parent violence and abuse in Ireland: Child-to-parent violence and abuse (CPVA) involves parents who live in fear of their child under the age of 18 years. This interactive workshop explores practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) as a response to the problem of CPVA in Ireland. NVR is evidence based, non-blaming, systemic and relatively short-term intervention model that empowers parents and practitioners to take action in response to CPVA while respecting and protecting children and adults. Inter-active methods will encourage participants in the workshop to think through the implications of the NVR model for practice and research (focusing on the Support Network). There will also be a question and answer section where the facilitator and workshop participants discuss research intervention methods and dilemmas that emerged during the earlier parts of the workshop.. Paper presented at 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017.
Coogan, Declan. / She felt so held Support, strength and solidarity: Practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) with child to parent violence and abuse in Ireland : Child-to-parent violence and abuse (CPVA) involves parents who live in fear of their child under the age of 18 years. This interactive workshop explores practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) as a response to the problem of CPVA in Ireland. NVR is evidence based, non-blaming, systemic and relatively short-term intervention model that empowers parents and practitioners to take action in response to CPVA while respecting and protecting children and adults. Inter-active methods will encourage participants in the workshop to think through the implications of the NVR model for practice and research (focusing on the Support Network). There will also be a question and answer section where the facilitator and workshop participants discuss research intervention methods and dilemmas that emerged during the earlier parts of the workshop. Paper presented at 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017.
@conference{2ec9eb2182d246dabd6248eaaec2d0d9,
title = " She felt so held Support, strength and solidarity: Practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) with child to parent violence and abuse in Ireland: Child-to-parent violence and abuse (CPVA) involves parents who live in fear of their child under the age of 18 years. This interactive workshop explores practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) as a response to the problem of CPVA in Ireland. NVR is evidence based, non-blaming, systemic and relatively short-term intervention model that empowers parents and practitioners to take action in response to CPVA while respecting and protecting children and adults. Inter-active methods will encourage participants in the workshop to think through the implications of the NVR model for practice and research (focusing on the Support Network). There will also be a question and answer section where the facilitator and workshop participants discuss research intervention methods and dilemmas that emerged during the earlier parts of the workshop.",
author = "Declan Coogan",
year = "2017",
month = jan,
day = "1",
language = "English (Ireland)",
note = "2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017 ; Conference date: 06-09-2017",
}
Coogan, D 2017, ' She felt so held Support, strength and solidarity: Practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) with child to parent violence and abuse in Ireland: Child-to-parent violence and abuse (CPVA) involves parents who live in fear of their child under the age of 18 years. This interactive workshop explores practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) as a response to the problem of CPVA in Ireland. NVR is evidence based, non-blaming, systemic and relatively short-term intervention model that empowers parents and practitioners to take action in response to CPVA while respecting and protecting children and adults. Inter-active methods will encourage participants in the workshop to think through the implications of the NVR model for practice and research (focusing on the Support Network). There will also be a question and answer section where the facilitator and workshop participants discuss research intervention methods and dilemmas that emerged during the earlier parts of the workshop.', Paper presented at 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017, 6/09/17.
She felt so held Support, strength and solidarity: Practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) with child to parent violence and abuse in Ireland: Child-to-parent violence and abuse (CPVA) involves parents who live in fear of their child under the age of 18 years. This interactive workshop explores practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) as a response to the problem of CPVA in Ireland. NVR is evidence based, non-blaming, systemic and relatively short-term intervention model that empowers parents and practitioners to take action in response to CPVA while respecting and protecting children and adults. Inter-active methods will encourage participants in the workshop to think through the implications of the NVR model for practice and research (focusing on the Support Network). There will also be a question and answer section where the facilitator and workshop participants discuss research intervention methods and dilemmas that emerged during the earlier parts of the workshop. / Coogan, Declan.
2017. Paper presented at 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017.
2017. Paper presented at 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017.
Research output: Contribution to conference (Published) › Paper
TY - CONF
T1 - She felt so held Support, strength and solidarity: Practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) with child to parent violence and abuse in Ireland
T2 - 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017
AU - Coogan, Declan
PY - 2017/1/1
Y1 - 2017/1/1
M3 - Paper
Y2 - 6 September 2017
ER -
Coogan D. She felt so held Support, strength and solidarity: Practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) with child to parent violence and abuse in Ireland: Child-to-parent violence and abuse (CPVA) involves parents who live in fear of their child under the age of 18 years. This interactive workshop explores practitioners perceptions of Non Violent Resistance (NVR) as a response to the problem of CPVA in Ireland. NVR is evidence based, non-blaming, systemic and relatively short-term intervention model that empowers parents and practitioners to take action in response to CPVA while respecting and protecting children and adults. Inter-active methods will encourage participants in the workshop to think through the implications of the NVR model for practice and research (focusing on the Support Network). There will also be a question and answer section where the facilitator and workshop participants discuss research intervention methods and dilemmas that emerged during the earlier parts of the workshop.. 2017. Paper presented at 2nd European Conference on Domestic Violence. 2017.