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Model for a Coordinated Community Response

Model for Coordinated Community Response for Battered Immigrant Women

This model details the roles and responsibilities of individual agencies in facilitating identification and referral of services to immigrant victims of domestic violence. Agencies involved include but are not limited to: victim services, legal services, law enforcement, justice system, social services, faith-based organizations, and immigration law enforcement entities.

This model contains:

  • Sections detailing specific roles and responsibilities of victim services, law enforcement, courts and basic services
  • Training materials, handouts, templates and resources to support coordinated community response
  • Public awareness videos

Click on an agency in the model below to learn more about their role in the model, or use the menu to the right.

Can't see the image above? Choose from the links to the right.

Quick Links

  • Community Tool Kit: Protocol for a Coordinated Response
  • Rural PATHS Project
  • Upcoming Training Opportunities

CCR Model Links

  • Victim, Legal, Consular Services
  • Justice System
  • Dept of Homeland Security
  • Basic Services
  • Informal Networks
  • Training
  • Public Awareness
  • Targeted Outreach

Local Taskforces

  • Cochise County (Rural PATHS)
  • Graham/Greenlee Counties (Rural PATHS)
  • Pima County
  • Pinal County
  • Santa Cruz County (Rural PATHS)
  • Yuma County

BIWP Contacts

D. Jean McClelland
Program Director for Community Based Health Information Resources Health Promotion Sciences, Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health
520-626-8228
jmcc@email.arizona.edu

Maia Ingram
Program Director for Community Based Evaluation Projects Health Promotion Sciences, Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health
520-626-2267
maiai@email.arizona.edu

Montserrat Caballero
pimataskforce@yahoo.com

John Raeder
Southern Arizona Battered Immigrant Women Program Administrator, Governor Brewer's Office for Children, Youth and Families Division for Women
602-542-1705
jraeder@az.gov


The Southern Arizona Battered Immigrant Women Project (BIWP) and the Rural PATHS (Partners in Transformation for Health and Safety) – Southern Arizona Rural VAWA Project was supported by Grant No. 2008-WR-AX-0036 awarded by the Office on Violence Against Women, U.S. Department of Justice. The opinions, findings, conclusions, and recommendations expressed in this publication/program/exhibition are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women.

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Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health
1295 N. Martin Ave. - P.O. Box 245163
Tucson, Arizona 85724
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