When Financial Abuse Goes Digital and Domestic Violence: What Judges Need to Know

This webinar is presented free of charge to judges after acceptance of a $199 scholarship.

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Days & Times

8 a.m. Hawaii / 10 a.m. Alaska / Noon Pacific / 1 p.m. Mountain / 2 p.m. Central / 3 p.m. Eastern
Duration: 75 minutes

Course Location

Online

Course Fees

This webinar is presented free of charge to judges after acceptance of a $199 scholarship.

$0

Online

June 28, 2023

Abuse has gone digital.

This was true before the pandemic - and is even further amplified today. The shift to virtual work, education and interaction has created new safety risks and expanded opportunities to impair a survivor’s financial security. Now, more than ever, building wealth and financial security requires that survivors are physically, financially and DIGITALLY safe. A survivor’s financial security - banking, payment apps, loans, credit, financial assistance, compensation and more - is tied to the Internet.

If a victim cannot access their technology safely, then they are not financially safe. In order to help them survive and thrive, it is now critical that organizations working with survivors of gender-based violence be able to anticipate, prevent and respond to modern financial abuse.

Tuition

This webinar is presented free of charge to judges after acceptance of a $199 scholarship. $0

What will I learn?

During this course, you will learn to:

  • Explain 3 ways tech-enabled intimate partner violence directly and indirectly impacts a survivor’s financial security,
  • Identify 3 common forms of tech-enabled financial abuse,
  • Recommend 3 tech safety planning measures that address existing threats and mitigate future attacks

Faculty is Adam Dodge

Register Now.

This was true before the pandemic - and is even further amplified today. The shift to virtual work, education and interaction has created new safety risks and expanded opportunities to impair a survivor’s financial security. Now, more than ever, building wealth and financial security requires that survivors are physically, financially and DIGITALLY safe. A survivor’s financial security - banking, payment apps, loans, credit, financial assistance, compensation and more - is tied to the Internet.

If a victim cannot access their technology safely, then they are not financially safe. In order to help them survive and thrive, it is now critical that organizations working with survivors of gender-based violence be able to anticipate, prevent and respond to modern financial abuse.

Register
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