,
Open chat
×
a man with cap and his head down sat at the top of a staircase which is outdoors

The Drive Programme

Working together to break patterns of high-risk abuse.

Working together to break patterns of high-risk abuse.

Drive is aimed at perpetrators of domestic abuse who pose a serious risk of harm to those they are in relationships with.

Through a mixture of approaches, our team assertively reach out to perpetrators and disrupt patterns of abuse.

 

This work is part of the national Drive Project which aims to change systems so that perpetrators can no longer escape punishment for abusive behaviours and can access the help they need to stop.

Drive is about changing the conversation from ‘Why doesn’t she leave?’ to ‘Why doesn’t he stop?’


How does it work?

For Drive, we can only accept referrals through the Perpetrator Panels that are linked to Multi Agency Risk Assessment Conferences (MARACs) in Manchester, Salford, Bury and Rochdale, Greater Manchester.

Potential participants must be identified as high-risk or high-harm and must have a partner or ex-partner already receiving support from an Independent Domestic Violence Advisor (IDVA).

Once a referral has been made, we take a needs-led approach, which means responding to individuals and families based on the specific levels of risk and external factors. We work with perpetrators and their families for up to 10 months, conducting one-to-one case work, reducing risk and working with the police and social services to disrupt patterns of abusive and harmful behaviour.

Our aims are to:

  • Reduce the number of repeat and new victims
  • Reduce the harm caused to victims and children
  • Reduce the number of serial perpetrators of domestic abuse
  • Intervene earlier to protect families living with domestic abuse

 

The Drive Partnership is made up of Respect, SafeLives and Social Finance.

 

For the first time, someone’s holding him to account, it’s not just me.
Survivor of domestic abuse
two people hands touch in the centre of the table

Make a Change

A community response to preventing domestic abuse

a man stood in the middle of the street wearing a red and black striped t-shirt

Individual Programme

Behaviour change support for men who identify as LGBTQ+ or speak English as a second language

someone lay down with their face out of the picture searching for something on their phone

Get in touch

If you are interested in working with us to deliver domestic abuse services in your area, please contact us

Contact us

Funding for Drive

TLC: Talk, Listen, Change to deliver over £1M of Domestic Abuse Prevention Services

Growing Our Work

Growing our Domestic Abuse Programmes: Our CEO presents our journey so far