Oregon Administrative Rules
Chapter 137 - DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Division 87 - BATTERER INTERVENTION PROGRAM RULES
Section 137-087-0045 - Intervention Strategies
Universal Citation: OR Admin Rules 137-087-0045
Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
(1) Appropriate Intervention Strategies. A BIP's intervention strategies shall include, but are not limited to, the following:
(a) Using a culturally specific curriculum
whenever possible;
(b) Increasing
the participant's understanding of the causes, types and effects of his
battering behavior;
(c) Identifying
beliefs that support battering;
(d)
Using respectful confrontation that encourages participants to challenge and
change their beliefs and behaviors;
(e) Addressing tactics used to justify
battering such as denial, victim blaming, and minimizing; increasing
participant recognition of the criminal aspect of his thoughts and behavior;
and reinforcing participant identification and acceptance of personal
responsibility and accountability for such tactics;
(f) Reinforcing appropriate respectful
beliefs and behavioral alternatives;
(g) Promoting participant recognition of and
accountability for patterns of controlling and abusive behaviors and their
impacts, and participant responsibility for becoming non-controlling and
non-abusive; and
(h) Ensuring that
the impact of battering on victims, partners and children, including their
safety and their right to be treated respectfully as individuals, remains in
the forefront of intervention work.
(2) Inappropriate Intervention Strategies. The following intervention strategies are inappropriate and inconsistent with these standards because each compromises victim safety:
(a) Blaming the participant's decision to
batter on the victim's qualities or behaviors;
(b) Coercing, mandating, requiring or
encouraging victim or partner disclosure of information or participation in the
intervention with the participant;
(c) Offering, supporting, recommending or
using couples, marriage or family counseling or mediation as appropriate
intervention for battering;
(d)
Identifying any of the following as a primary cause of battering or a basis for
batterer intervention: poor impulse control, anger, past experience,
unconscious motivations, substance use or abuse, low self-esteem, or mental
health problems of either participant or victim;
(e) Using ventilation techniques such as
punching pillows or encouraging the expression of rage;
(f) Viewing battering as a bi-directional
process with responsibility shared by the victim;
(g) Viewing battering as an addiction and the
victim as enabling or co-dependent in the battering; or
(h) Using actions or attitudes of moral
superiority, or controlling or abusive behaviors toward participants.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 180.070 - 180.710
Stats. Implemented: ORS 180.070 - 180.710
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Oregon may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy and
Terms of Service apply.