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2011 press releases

9 Mar Forward Together Lecture (public service announcement)
11 Mar Talking Fresh 9 to celebrate Saskatchewan Poets
11 Mar Luther Bach Choir presents "Spring Returns: An evening of Madrigals"
24 Mar Forward Together Lecture
13 Jun Luther College researcher receives $1 million grant for intimate partner violence research
23 Jun Thrivent Fellowship awarded to Luther College professor
11 Jul Members of Walk4Justice 2011 to arrive in Regina
14 Jul U of R announces President's Chairs for Academic Excellence
12 Sep 2011 Luther Lecture
22 Sep Senator Lillian Dyck to give 36th Luther Lecture
1 Oct Luther Bach Choir presents "Music in Celebration"
3 Oct LUSA presents "Cupcakces for Breast Cancer" fundraiser
26 Sept  Groundbreaking study of Canadian English newspapers reveals ongoing racism
29 Oct Luther Bach Choir presents "Music for Reformation"
20 Nov Luther Bach Choir presents "Reign of Christ" performance
23-24 Nov "Cupcakes for Prostate Cancer" fundraiser at Luther College

 

News stories

Research seeks to reduce intimate partner violence

13 June 2011

Intimate partner violence happens in rural and northern communities just as it does in cities, but little is known about the number of incidents or the supports those communities provide for victims. 

In Saskatchewan, intimate partner violence is a serious social problem. Saskatchewan experiences the highest rates of sexual assault in Canada, the highest rates of spousal homicide, and higher than average rates of intimate partner violence. 

The little Canadian research that exists suggests there is a higher rate of domestic homicides in rural and northern communities. This is especially relevant to Saskatchewan which is a highly rural province: 36 per cent of Saskatchewan is considered rural compared to the Canadian average of 20 per cent.

Luther College at the University of Regina psychology professor Mary Hampton, together with a large team of academic and community research partners from the Prairie provinces and Northwest Territories, will investigate this issue under a new $1 million, five-year research grant awarded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).  The grant was awarded through SSHRC's Community-University Research Alliance (CURA). This program supports research collaborations between post-secondary institutions and community organisations that work together to achieve results that can have immediate impact.

Hampton says one of the first steps will be collecting data on shelter visits and incidents of intimate partner violence reported to the justice system, then using geographic information system (GIS) mapping to compare incidents and supports.  Researchers will interview service providers and justice workers in selected rural and northern communities, as well as develop in-depth profiles of how the issue has been handled in these communities.

Using these profiles, the research team will develop a strategy that outlines the steps an individual or organisation can take when a problem arises.  "I think a lot of people don't know what to do when they know about intimate partner abuse happening in their communities," she says.

This research builds on what Hampton and other team members learned in a recently completed project on intimate partner violence, also with support from CURA.  The Healing Journey research involved following more than 600 women across the Prairie provinces who had been victims of abuse, on their journey to recovery.  Hampton says the missing piece in this research was the rural and northern experience.

This project will be led by a team from RESOLVE (Research and Education for Solutions to Violence and Abuse).  RESOLVE has offices in the three Prairie provinces and Hampton is Saskatchewan's academic research coordinator. The full research team consists of 18 academic researchers and 15 community partners from across the Prairie provinces and Northwest Territories.

 

Listen to Mary Hampton speaking on CBC Radio's Blue Sky on 13 June.

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