Authors of Response Based Practice include; Dr Allan Wade, Dr Linda Coates, Dr Cathy Richardson & Dr Shelly Bonnah.
Key Ideas
DIGNITY IS CENTRAL TO SOCIAL LIFE Social life is organized largely around the according and preserving of dignity. Even small and inadvertent slights to dignity can incite intense responses, some open and direct, some subtle and disguised. Violence is an affront to dignity. Even in the most extreme conditions, victims work to retain and reassert their basic human dignity.
VIOLENT ACTS ARE UNILATERAL AND SOCIAL Violence is unilateral – not mutual - in that it entails actions by one person against the will and well-being of another. When it comes to violence, it does not “take two to tango”. Violence is social in that it is committed in social situations and involves at least two people. The smallest and most subtle actions can be used to threaten and humiliate or to resist and maintain safety and dignity.
VIOLENCE IS DELIBERATE Persons who commit violence anticipate, and take deliberate steps to suppress, victims’ resistance. Even so-called "explosive" or "out of control" acts of violence involve control and choice.
RESISTANCE IS EVER-PRESENT Individuals respond to and resist violence and other forms of oppression. Resistance is an embodied and social response. However, open defiance is the least common form of resistance (Scott, 1990). In extreme circumstances, resistance may be realised solely in the privacy of the mind/spirit. (Linda Coates, Nick Todd, & Allan Wade, 2000).
HUMANS ARE RESPONSIVE AND ACTIVE Humans orient to one another as spirited and embodied beings with the capacity to respond. It is more useful to understand humans as responding agents than as affected objects. Resistance is a response to violence, not an effect or impact of violence.
SOCIAL RESPONSES ARE CRUCIAL The quality of social responses from social networks and public institutions is closely tied to the level of victim distress and the likelihood the offender will desist. Our collective goal is to improve the quality of social responses at all points of intervention in violence and other forms of social injustice.
Areas of work that Response-Based Practice Cover
Response-based practice supports a social justice perspective in the human services field.
The scope of practice is very wide including; working with domestic violence, sexualized violence, workplace bullying, legal & justice system such as family court, child protection workers, counselling, social work, advocacy, police, probation services, stopping violence organisations, city councils, first responders… just to name a few.
Mana-Informed Response Based Practice is Indigenous centred, systemic and rooted in social justice. It finds meaning in social interactions and the way people use or respond to all forms of violence, both seen and unseen. It honours the sacred fire that burns within, the spiritual power and desire for wholeness, connection and healing.