The Duluth model is a community based protocol for intimate partner violence (IPV).[1] The model is biased because it neglects women's violence, violence within same-sex relationships, bidirectional abuse, and was not created through academic study. [2][3][4][5] Academics prove it is an extreme, negative, and polarized model. [6]
It was purportedly devised to bring law enforcement, family law, and social work agencies together in a Coordinated Community Response to work together to reduce violence against women and rehabilitate perpetrators of domestic violence. It is named after Duluth, Minnesota, the city where it was developed by the Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (DAIP).[7][8] The model provides a method of coordinating community agencies to provide a consistent response to female victims of Intimate Partner Violence that has three primary goals:
Part of this model is the men's behavior change program Creating a Process of Change for Men who Batter: The Duluth Curriculum. The curriculum is the most common batterer intervention program used in the United States.[10] Advocates of the Duluth model claim it is successful because it is grounded in the experience of female victims, helps offenders and society change, and pulls the whole community together to respond.[11]
The Duluth Model Coordinated Community Response has received multiple awards for its grassroots efforts to end intimate partner violence,[12] including the World Future Council's Future Policy Award in 2014. [13] It has been criticized by mental health professionals who focus on individual behaviour and reject a social model of battering. Edward Gondolf critiques the narrow forms of evidence used to evaluate interventions, arguing that the biomedical research model is inappropriate for evaluating the effectiveness of psychosocial interventions.[14]