RT Article T1 Unpacking Multiagency Structured Professional Judgment Risk Assessments for Family Violence JF Journal of interpersonal violence VO 38 IS 11/12 SP 7702 OP 7727 A1 Jolliffe Simpson, Apriel D. A2 Joshi, Chaitanya A2 Polaschek, Devon L. L. LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1845803671 AB Assessing the risk for future harm is a crucial task for agencies managing Family Violence (FV) cases. The Integrated Safety Response (ISR) is a multiagency collaboration of such agencies operating in two areas of New Zealand, and one of the first steps in their process is to perform a risk assessment. However, in these assessments, it is unclear whether the factors ISR triage team members select are the basis for their overall risk categorization (low, medium, or high), and if those factors are risk factors (i.e., empirical predictors of outcomes). Therefore, in this study we documented the factors ISR triage teams recorded during their risk assessments for 842 FV cases and examined the relationship of those factors with the risk categories. We then investigated whether those factors and the risk categories were indeed capable of predicting FV-related outcomes (recurrence and physical recurrence). We found most of the triage teams’ recorded factors were associated with the risk categories, but fewer than half of the factors were associated with FV-related outcomes. Moreover, the risk categories predicted FV-related outcomes better than chance, but their predictive ability varied across subgroups, performing poorly for aggressors who were Māori or women, and for non-intimate partner cases. We concluded that the ISR triage teams’ risk assessment protocol may benefit from increased structure and validation. K1 risk triage K1 field validity K1 Responsivity K1 Risk Factors K1 Intimate Partner Violence K1 Family Violence DO 10.1177/08862605221147069