The Impact of Forced Separations Between Women and Their Pets in Domestic Violence Situations and the Effectiveness of Crisis Response: Protocol for a Conceptual Framework
Jasmine Montgomery, Janice Lloyd, Zhanming Liang

TL;DR
This study explores how separating women from their pets during domestic violence affects them and aims to create better support frameworks.
Contribution
The paper introduces a conceptual framework to guide research on improving support for women and pets in domestic violence situations.
Findings
Forced separation from pets increases trauma and stress for women fleeing domestic violence.
Current Australian services lack national frameworks to support both women and their pets in crisis.
A four-study approach will inform policy improvements for domestic violence response.
Abstract
Women are at high risk of experiencing trauma, guilt, and stress when forced to separate from their companion animals when fleeing domestic violence. Where little support is available for women and pets to stay together, women may be forced to delay leaving the abusive relationship or leave the pet with the abuser. Forced separation places both women and pets at substantial risk, where pets may be used as a coercive control measure. However, little evidence exists regarding the extent to which Australian services or policies offer support in these circumstances. This research aims to increase the understanding and the impacts of forced separation between women and their pets in domestic violence situations. The research will investigate the effectiveness of service responses for both women and animals, aiming to develop a policy framework that guides service improvement with the goal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman-Animal Interaction Studies · Geographies of human-animal interactions · Psychology of Social Influence
