Transforming Supervision with Women: The Gender Informed Policies and Practices Assessment - Community Version

SESSION INFO

Tuesday, August 30, 2022
2:15 PM - 3:45 PM
Session Type: Workshop

The Gender Responsive Policy and Practices Assessment- Community Version (GRPPA-CV) is an assessment tool and process that guides agencies to examine services currently delivered to justice-involved women and explores how closely policies and practices align with the research and evidence-based practices with women. The National Institute of Corrections, in conjunction with the Center for Effective Public Policy, has developed a virtual training and coaching protocol to assist sites to implement the GRPPA-CV. This workshop will provide information on this dynamic tool, and how it can be used to ignite and advance implementation of gender responsive policies and practices. A panel of presenters will introduce the GRPPA-CV and its importance, including agency leaders and directly impacted women; and describe key elements and outcomes associated with the successful implementation of this tool. Participants will have the opportunity to ask questions about the process and reflect on how it can be used to advance work for women in their agencies.

SESSION PRESENTERS

Alyssa Benedict
Executive Director, CORE Associates, LLC


Alyssa Benedict has over 20 years of experience in justice and behavioral health and specializes in the design and implementation of gender responsive, trauma-informed, and culturally responsive policies and practices. She is the founder of CORE Associates, a psychology and justice consulting firm that provides training and technical assistance to government, private and non-profit organizations. Alyssa has served as a consultant and faculty member on various state and federal initiatives, and has also authored and co-authored various publications, models and tools designed to support practitioners, administrators, and policy makers in their efforts to implement gender responsive and trauma-informed approaches, and improve outcomes among women, girls, and staff throughout the justice continuum. These include comprehensive staff training curricula, organizational assessments designed to advance implementation of gender responsive and trauma-informed policies, and model approaches to building cultures of resilience and motivation. Alyssa has a sub-specialty in the neurobiology and ecology of trauma and resilience and co-authored Creating Regulation and Resilience (CR/2™), a gender responsive and trauma-informed staff communication model. She is co-chair of the APPA Women and Girls Committee, a founding partner of the National Resource Center for Justice Involved Women (NRCJIW), and co-founder of The Women’s Justice Institute (WJI).


Lorie Brisbin
Correctional Program Specialist, National Institute of Corrections

Dr. Marilyn Van Dieten
Senior Advisor, Center for Effective Public Policy


Dr. Van Dieten is a registered clinical psychologist with more than 35 years of experience in program implementation, training, and the design of evidence-based interventions for correctional populations and staff. As a co-founder of Orbis Partners, she spent over twenty years working to develop gender-responsive interventions that have demonstrated positive outcomes in changing women's lives. She recently joined the Center for Effective Public Policy as a Senior Advisor and the Director of the National Resource Center of Justice Involved Women. Dr. Van Dieten is the author of several gender-responsive programs and publications, including Moving On, Living Safely and Without Violence, and the Creating Calm Workbook for Women. Through a cooperative agreement initiated in 2006 by the National Institute of Corrections, Dr. Van Dieten, was selected to work with a national team of experts to design, implement and evaluate the Collaborative Case Work with Women Model (CCW-W, formerly known as the Women Offender Case Management Model- WOCMM). She also worked with a team of scholars to develop the Gender-Informed Practices Assessment (GIPA). A number of state agencies have used the GIPA to successfully implement evidence-based policies and practices that align with the available research on justice involved women.