General Enquiries

GET IT TOUCH

Professional Enquiries

We are currently maintaining a pool of associates who may be interested in working with South Asian communities using harmful behaviours. We are particularly interested in hearing from people of South Asian heritage, as this group is underrepresented in this field.

Lunch & Learn

Are you currently working with south Asian families impacted by domestic abuse in Leicester and Bradford?

  • Would you like to know more about our Changing Harmful Attitudes & behaviour (CHAB) Programme for those using harmful behaviours in their relationships?
  • Are you interested in learning about the referral criteria?
  • Would you like to meet members of the team running this pilot?

You can join us for a Lunch and Learn on Friday 25th April 2025 at 12-1pm on Zoom. Register here and a confirmation link will then be sent to you.

To attend the in-person launch event in Leicester on Friday 9th May 10-12pm please book here.

To attend the in-person launch event in Bradford on Monday 19th May 12-2pm please book here

Any issues with booking please email enquries@chab.org.uk. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

About CHAB

CHAB is led by H.O.P.E Training & Leadership CIC in partnership with Sikh Women's Aid and Halo Project.

The CHAB project is supported by The Drive Partnership. This was established by Respect, SafeLives, and Social Finance in 2015, and is working to end domestic abuse and protect victim-survivors by disrupting, challenging, and changing the behaviour of those who are causing harm.   The Drive Partnership does this through the development of innovative responses to those causing harm and advocating for systems and policy change to develop sustainable, national systems that respond more effectively to all those causing harm to increase the safety and freedom of all adult and child victim-survivors.

The CHAB programme comes under the The Drive Partnership’s National Systems Change programme which seeks to address systemic gaps in responses to domestic abuse by bringing together the insights of victim-survivors, service users, experts by experience, practitioners, specialist organisations, researchers and policy makers to build solutions. The Drive Partnership’s National Systems Change work is currently focused on improving the responses to domestic abuse across children’s social care, housing, racialised communities and LGBT+ communities. Thanks to further funding from the National Lottery Community Fund, The Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, and Treebeard Trust for funding this work.