Domestic Abuse Related Death Reviews (DARDR)
A Domestic Abuse Related Death Review (DARDR), formerly known as Domestic Homicide Reviews (DHR), is carried out where a person has died as a result of abuse, violence or neglect by a relative, intimate partner or member of the same household
DARDRs were established on a statutory basis under Section 9 of the Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act (2004).
DARDRs are carried out by Community Safety Partnerships to ensure that lessons are learnt when a person has died as a result of domestic abuse, either by homicide or suicide. The purpose of a DARDR is to:
- Establish what lessons can be learned from the homicide regarding the way in which local professionals and organisations work individually and together to safeguard victims
- Identify clearly what those lessons are both within and between agencies, how and within what timescales they will be acted on, and what is expected to change as a result
- Apply those lessons to service responses including changes to policies and procedures as appropriate
- Prevent domestic abuse and domestic homicides and suicides, and improve service responses for all domestic abuse victims and their children through improved intra and inter-agency working.
Family members, friends and colleagues of the victim are important to the DARDR process.
An independent chair is appointed and will aim to make contact with friends and family, to enable them to inform the review and build a complete picture of the circumstances leading up to the homicide.
The Home Office has published guidance on when a domestic homicide review needs to be carried out and how to do this.
Find out more about our local approach by viewing our DHR protocol below.
Published Domestic Homicide Reviews (DHR)
The Safer Westminster Partnership (SWP) is required to publish a final, anonymised set of recommendations, overview report, and executive summary once approved by the Home Office Quality Assurance Panel. Where relevant, these can be found below.
DHR Case A 2021
Report into the murders of Elizabeth and Ash, August 2021