Justice for Victims. Justice for All.
Office for Victims of Crime

Library & Multimedia

Grantee Publications

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OVC program funding for assisting and enhancing the field of victim services has resulted in useful educational and informational materials. Many of these materials are produced by the grantees themselves, and are featured in this OVC area designated as Grantee Publications. To order or inquire about these materials, please contact the organizations directly.

Most Recent Additions:

Outreach to Underserved Teen Victims of Crime (2012)
The National Crime Prevention Council (NCPC) and the National Center for Victims of Crime (National Center), with funding from OVC, produced this guidebook and accompanying Web-based resources to provide an overview of the challenges faced in conducting outreach to underserved teen victims of crime. The materials highlight examples of the various projects and resources developed and implemented in local communities through the Underserved Teen Victims Initiative.

Violence is Preventable: A Best Practices Guide for Launching & Sustaining a Hospital-based Program to Break the Cycle of Violence (2011)
This OVC-funded replication guide, available from National Network of Hospital-based Violence Intervention Programs, supports the development of programs in medical facilities across the country to engage patients in targeted services during their recovery to interrupt the cycle of violence.

Voice of the Victim: A Perspectives Spotlight Issue (2012)
Through OVC support, this special edition of the American Probation and Parole Association’s Perspectives provides a collection of informative, thought-provoking articles to support community corrections professionals in incorporating victims’ rights and services into daily practice. This resource (NCJ 238382) teaches readers that victims’ rights to information, notification, restitution, and participation are an integral component of community corrections. PDF (4.5 mb; 100 pages)

2 Media Guides from Justice Solutions
(1) Media Guide for Victim Service Providers (September 2009)
This media guide is intended to help victim service providers advise victims in their dealings with the media and serve the entire spectrum of the victim services field, from professionals who are branded new to their role as "victim media advisor" to those with decades of experience.

(2) A Guide for Journalists Who Report on Crime and Crime Victims (September 2009)
This guide is designed to advise and assist journalists who seek to cover crime and victimization in a way that is sensitive to crime victims, yet still allows them to fulfill their role and responsibilities to the public as reporters.

Child Physical and Sexual Abuse: Guidelines for Treatment (Revised Report: April 2004)
Developed by the National Crime Victims Research and Treatment Center at the Medical University of South Carolina and the Center for Sexual Assault and Traumatic Stress at the Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington, with funding by OVC, these new guidelines recommend specific mental health treatment protocols—based on sound theory and clinical-anecdotal literature—to improve the treatment of child physical and sexual abuse. This document is available electronically from the National Crime Victims Research and Treatment Center Web site. PDF (430 kb)

Consumer Rights Screening Tool for Domestic Violence Advocates and Lawyers (2011)
Professionals who serve domestic violence survivors must understand the consumer law problems survivors face. This screening tool (NCJ 236432) provides an overview of consumer issues survivors face and discusses how to identify these issues in the course of one’s client work. PDF (1.5 mb; 20 pages)

Elder Abuse Fatality Review Teams: A Replication Manual (June 2005)
Developed by the American Bar Association and funded by OVC, this publication provides guidance to communities interested in establishing similar teams. Elder abuse fatality review teams review deaths caused by or related to elder abuse and can improve the response of community agencies to elder abuse victims. This document is available electronically from ABA’s Commission on Law and Aging. PDF (2.3 mb)

Helping Sexual Assault Survivors with Multiple Victimizations and Needs: A Guide for Agencies Serving Sexual Assault Survivors (July 2007)
Developed under an OVC grant to the University of Iowa’s School of Social Work, this publication strives to identify issues and considerations unique to survivors who have experienced multiple victimizations and outlines what advocacy might be appropriate for them. Developed for advocates in rape crisis centers and in criminal justice system agencies, the Guide offers practical strategies for assessing and enhancing responses to this specific population. This document is available electronically.
PDF (1 mb)

Identifying and Responding to Domestic Violence: Consensus Recommendations For Child and Adolescent Health (September 2002)
This document (NCJ 197220) is designed to assist health care providers from the pediatric and family health settings in addressing adult domestic violence victimization and childhood exposure to domestic violence through screening, assessment, documentation, intervention, and referrals. This OVC grantee-developed document is available electronically from the Family Violence Prevention Fund’s Web site. PDF (1 mb)

Nursing Response to Elder Mistreatment Curriculum
Developed by the International Association of Forensic Nurses with funding from OVC, the goal of this online curriculum is to help nurses acquire essential knowledge and skills to appropriately respond to elder mistreatment. This 24-hour course contains 12 modules and prepares nurses to integrate nursing and forensic sciences into the care of vulnerable older adults who have been mistreated or are at high risk for mistreatment by trusted others.

Reaching and Serving Teen Victims: A Practical Handbook (September 2005)
This handbook provides guidance for working more effectively with teenage victims of crime and understanding the way that victimization affects teens uniquely. It is designed for victim advocates, law enforcement officers, educators, counselors, youth workers, and other professionals who come into contact with teen crime victims. Produced as part of the YOVA project, a partnership between the National Crime Prevention Council and the National Center for Victims of Crime, funded by the Office for Victims of Crime, to support youth-adult teams in designing and implementing youth-led outreach campaigns on teen victimization topics. Available in PDF (1 mb) and in print from McGruff’s Bookshelf at NCPC.org, 1-800-627-2911.

Responding to People Who Have Been Victimized by Individuals with Mental Illnesses (PDF 540 kb; September 2008). “Not guilty by reason of insanity” may pose challenges to implementing and enforcing crime victims’ rights. This issue brief reports on these and other barriers, current policies and practices, and the action items that policymakers, advocates, mental health professional and others can take to protect the rights and safety of these crime victims. A companion Guide explores the possible responses to address the adaptations to crime victims’ policies in Mental Health Courts that are contributing factors limiting victims’ rights. See A Guide to the Role of Crime Victims in Mental Health Courts (PDF 635 kb; September 2008).

The Council of State Governments Justice Center wrote these two guides with a grant from the Office for Victims of Crime and is making them available off their Consensus Project on Criminal Justice and Mental Health Web site.

Serving Survivors of Homicide Victims During Cold Case Investigation (August 2011)
Through funding from OVC, the National Sheriffs’ Association, Justice Solutions, and the National Organization of Parents Of Murdered Children, Inc., developed this publication (NCJ 235999) that identifies and discusses how law enforcement agencies can develop protocols for best serving survivors of homicide during cold case investigation. PDF (1.1 mb; 55 pages)

Standards for Victim Assistance Programs and Providers Standards Kit (May 2003) (PDF 450 kb)
This kit, compiled by the National Victim Assistance Standards Consortium, includes program, competency, and ethical standards for victim assistance providers; a compendium of promising practices in professional development; directories of credentialing programs and related standards; and a list of professional development resources. For printed copies, contact The Center for Child & Family Studies.

Tomando Acción. Las Historias de Tres Mujeres (2010)

Taking Action. The Stories of Three Women (not available in English)
This Spanish language publication is a FotoNovela, photo and dialog-based stories in a pamphlet format, that describes domestic violence and provides victims with information about the legal hotline services, shelter services, and victim advocacy available to them within their communities. The FotoNovela was developed by the Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence (FCADV) in collaboration with Florida Legal Services, Inc. and the Rural Women’s Health Project with funding from OVC.
This document is available electronically from FCADV’s Web site. PDF (3 mb)

A Victim-Centered Approach to Crimes Against American Indian and Alaska Native Children (PDF 1.3 mb; August 2008)
This Resource Guide is intended to give the legal drafting committees of tribal governments an overview of comparative federal, tribal, and state statutory provisions for the drafting of new or amended tribal child protection laws. These include what are generally known as criminal laws, rules of court, and rules of evidence. The 223-page Guide also includes illustrative examples and commentary and exercises for use by the drafting committees. This 223-page, workbook and guide is available from the Tribal Court Clearinghouse Website.

Victims’ Rights Laws in the States Print and Online Statutory Guide (2006)
This guidebook, published by National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) with funding support from OVC, describes laws related to crime victims’ rights in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and American Samoa through 2004. The online statutory guide offers all of the guide’s content, charts, tables, state summaries, in a searchable web-based format.

NCSL, with funding from OVC, worked on the State Legislators’ Victim Education project and produced resources on victims’ rights and services, primarily for state legislators, but also useful for victim advocates, criminal justice practitioners, and other allied professionals. See also the Victims’ Rights and Services: An Overview for New Legislators Audio CD.

Victims’ Rights and Services: An Overview for New Legislators Audio CD (May 2007)
This audio program from the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) highlights key areas of victims’ rights and services law and how actions of state legislatures continue to improve, expand and enforce these laws. It provides members new to criminal justice or judiciary committees—and others—with the basic tenets of victims’ law. It draws from the discussions of legislators, agency heads and other criminal justice system officials at various NCSL forums, as well as from NCSL research, to describe basic victims’ measures in the states.
Online version of audio program (available in multiple mp3 files)
PDF version of the CD booklet (PDF 430 kb)

NCSL, with funding from OVC, worked on the State Legislators’ Victim Education project and produced resources on victims’ rights and services, primarily for state legislators, but also useful for victim advocates, criminal justice practitioners, and other allied professionals. See also the statutory guide on Victims’ Rights Laws in the States.

The opinions, findings, and conclusions expressed in these publications are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice.
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