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UT’s Department of Theatre &
Film create video for Lucas County
Juvenile Court
The Lucas County Court of Common Pleas
Juvenile Division is utilizing a video shot and edited by UT
film students and featuring actors from the University’s Theatre
program. The court’s Family Violence Intervention Project
Coordinator, Deborah Lipson Kaplan, developed the project
with funds from the federal stimulus program and the
Stop Violence Against Women
Act.
According to Judge Denise Navarre Cubbon, Administrative
Judge, Lucas County Juvenile Court, the number of
Lucas County youth charged with
domestic violence offenses has
increased dramatically in the last ten years. In 2008, over 650
cases were filed by parents who were threatened or physically
assaulted by their own children.
The Lucas County Juvenile Court
Family Violence Intervention Project is a
victim-focused program aimed at increasing safety and security
in the home. This program provides information, tools, and
training to families to learn
and develop techniques to communicate safely and effectively
with family members in their homes.
The goal of the project is to decrease and to work toward
elimination of youth perpetrated family violence.
The purpose of the video is to demonstrate a strategy families
can use to help keep conflicts from becoming violent. It is
shown to all youth charged with domestic violence against a
family member and to the parents and/or guardians of these
youth. Student and faculty actors from the University portrayed
two scenes, one in which an ordinary family conflict escalates
into violence and a second scene with a family employing the
strategy to resolve conflict peacefully.
“We really wanted the role playing to be authentic,” Kaplan
said. “We met with some youth in detention and got some of the
exact language that they have used during conflicts at home.”
Kaplan added that the staff, the parents and even the youth are
impressed with the role-playing scenes in the video. They said
that the fight between the mother and the daughter in the video
is very realistic. “The parents and kids are saying that this is
exactly what happens in the home.”
The second scene, showing a youth using the strategy for
de-escalating conflict has had a real impact on our families.
“Some said they had never used anything like that at home and
really appreciated having something like that to use. Some of
the kids, especially the first time offenders, have returned to
court and reported that they have employed this strategy the
next time they became angry and that it worked to prevent
conflict. So we know we have a really good tool,” Kaplan said.
Kaplan said she is hoping to work with the Theatre & Film
Department again in the future on similar projects. “I was
really impressed with the professional level of the work and
would love to work with them again.”
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