Program Goals
EVOLVE is a court-mandated, post-conviction intensive batterer intervention for men at high-risk for committing violence acts against their family. The primary goal of EVOLVE is to decrease family violence by focusing on the impact of violence for victims and children, interrelationship and communication skills, responsible parenting/fatherhood skills, and behavior change. Completion of EVOLVE is typically part of an individual’s sentence.
Program Components/Target Population
Under legislation enacted in 1986, Connecticut Judicial Branch is required to provide family violence interventions for batterers (Cox and Rivolta 2019). Three interventions are offered, and the most intensive is EVOLVE. The EVOLVE program, which operates in four separate Connecticut courts, includes participants that have already participated in Connecticut’s other two family violence program, and/or are the highest risk male batterers.
As a part of the program, participants are required to complete a 26-week program (comprised of two 2-hour long sessions per week), for a total of 52 sessions and 104 hours. Using cognitive behavioral therapy, EVOLVE is a classroom-based educational program broken into three components: orientation sessions, ongoing education sessions, and change group sessions.
The orientation sessions are designed to establish rules, allow participants to familiarize themselves with one another, promote accountability, and lay the groundwork for teaching the fundamentals of non-violent and non-abusive behaviors. The ongoing education modules provide the core curriculum, covering the following topics: 1) what kind of man do I want to be; 2) managing my feelings; 3) the effects of violence on victims; 4) communication and listening skills; 5) fatherhood and domestic violence; 6) sexuality, violence and aggression; 7) aggressiveness, passiveness, and assertiveness; 8) current topics and money; and 9) compromising about difficult issues. These sessions are delivered through a variety of formats, such as lessons, videos, exercises, discussions, and role-plays/scenarios. The goal of the ongoing education modules is to provide the foundation for men to establish non-violent and non-abusive behaviors in their intimate relationships. Each ongoing education session is paralleled with a change group session, which predominately focuses on practical application. In the change group sessions not only do men review homework that was assigned in the ongoing education sessions, they apply the topics that were learned in those sessions to real life situations; thus, reinforcing and promoting behavior change.