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Shifting the Lens has been generously sponsored by:


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Keynote Panel

Dayna Barrios, Kiara Lee, Tina Rodriguez and Dr. Walters


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Keynote Announcement

Marissa Williams


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Keynote Announcement

Amanda Gibson, LCSW


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Keynote Announcement

Dr. Beth Richie


2021 Virtual Conference Registration is now open!

Shifting the Lens will be taking place virtually, November 1st - November 3rd.
Stay tuned for details on keynote speakers and workshop offerings!


About Shifting the Lens

In November 2020, we convened over 660 advocates to ask how we could shift our movement’s lens and broaden our focus to address survivors and their families fundamentally within our domestic violence responses in California. We tackled many relevant issues that were occurring such as providing services during a pandemic and the racial justice uprising and the impact of that movement on our work in examining racism and anti-blackness. In the months since, we have made intentional efforts in continuing to move forward through those difficult but needed conversations from Shifting the Lens.

In November 2021, we will continue to broaden the focus and engage a larger community to find answers to pressing questions that impact survivors, families and communities. What happens when we shift the lens and look at domestic violence with a broader view that includes discussions with opposing and unified viewpoints?

Victim safety and holding those who harmed accountable have been central figures in the domestic violence field over the last few decades. As a result, we’ve seen significant expansion in crisis responses and legal interventions. When we look at a snapshot depicting our statewide response to domestic violence, these crisis responses and legal interventions appear as the predominant images in our picture.

This expansion has also become part of culturally responsive prevention efforts. Evidence has shown that working collaboratively leads to more effective and sustainable solutions. Collaborative efforts that bring community partners together have a greater impact across communities. Recognizing that domestic violence is one of many interconnected forms of systemic oppression, we must work together across multiple systems and social justice movements.

While our crisis responses and legal interventions typically look like victims leaving and those who harmed going to jail, what could happen when we refocus the lens so that our intervention and prevention efforts focus on:

  • crisis response and legal intervention that focus on the needs of whole families, particularly those families already marginalized and underrepresented?

  • approaches that shift the way we serve families from the silo of DV to collaborating with other movements to address client’s intersections with housing justice, racial justice, economic justice, environmental justice, and restorative justice?

  • maintaining our humanity and approaching our work from a place of justice and love?

  • informed and inspirational risks we are willing to take to serve families within these contexts?

The  California Partnership to End Domestic Violence believes that by  sharing expertise, advocates, preventionists and legislators can end  domestic violence. Every day we inspire, inform and connect all those  concerned with this issue, because together we’re stronger.


“We are at a place in the movement that is requiring us to expand our vision of accountability and rather than excluding harm doers from the healing process, we are open to alternatives to justice that includes people that commit harm in the healing process.”
— Tina Rodriguez, Program Manager, Community Action Partnership Of Madera County