Partnered with a Survivor: David Mandel and Ruth Reymundo Mandel Podcast Por Ruth Reymundo Mandel & David Mandel arte de portada

Partnered with a Survivor: David Mandel and Ruth Reymundo Mandel

Partnered with a Survivor: David Mandel and Ruth Reymundo Mandel

De: Ruth Reymundo Mandel & David Mandel
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Partnered with a Survivor is a professional-focused podcast created and produced by Ruth Reymundo and hosted by the Safe & Together Institute. What began as intimate conversations between Ruth and David Mandel—founder of the Institute and creator of the Safe & Together Model—about violence, relationships, abuse, and the systems that respond to them has grown into a global conversation about systems and culture change.


Hosted by Ruth and co-hosted by David, the podcast features in-depth, professionally grounded discussions about how institutions respond to domestic abuse, gender-based violence, and child maltreatment. Many episodes also feature global leaders working across fields such as child safety, men and masculinity, perpetrator accountability, fatherhood, and partnering with survivors.

Together, these conversations examine how systems often fail adult and child survivors, how societal narratives about masculinity and violence shape professional practice, and how intersectional realities—including cultural and religious beliefs, racialised identities, LGBTQ+ experiences, immigration status, disability, and other structural vulnerabilities—shape responses to abuse and violence.


The podcast offers an insider lens into how professionals navigate systems not only as practitioners, but also as parents and partners. Through candid dialogue and critical reflection, Ruth and David challenge the assumptions and structures that limit meaningful accountability, safety, and healing. The goal is collective movement across systems, cultures, and families toward greater safety, nurturance, and sustained change.


Disclaimer: Episodes contain sensitive topics and occasional mature language that may be difficult for some listeners. The views and opinions expressed by podcast guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Safe & Together Institute or its staff.

© 2026 Partnered with a Survivor: David Mandel and Ruth Reymundo Mandel
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Episodios
  • Season 7, Episode 8: Safe & Together In Japan with Professor Kanako Masui
    Apr 3 2026

    We’re recording from Okayama, Japan, and the shift you’re about to hear is bigger than language. Professor Kanako Masui of Nihon Fukushi University joins us to explain why so many domestic violence and child protection systems get stuck asking the wrong questions and how the Safe & Together Model helps professionals see what’s been in front of them all along.

    Kanako shares her journey as both a former practitioner and a researcher who has interviewed domestic violence survivors, including adults who grew up with domestic abuse in childhood. That experience led her to a hard truth: when we focus on “why she didn’t leave” or “why she didn’t protect the kids,” we blur accountability and miss the survivor’s real, often invisible protective efforts. We dig into how a perpetrator’s pattern of behaviours as a parent drives harm to children, how to document those choices clearly, and how to work with survivors with dignity and respect while keeping child safety at the center.

    We also talk about what implementation looks like on the ground in Japan, from cross-agency collaboration with Child Guidance Centers and Women’s Support Centers to large seminars reaching hundreds of practitioners, plus the intensive work of translating the Safe & Together material and David's book into Japanese so teams can share a common model and common language. Kanako closes with a message to helpers who feel isolated and a direct message to survivors: you are not to be blamed.

    If you want practical, domestic abuse and trauma-informed ways to improve domestic violence intervention, child welfare decision-making, and perpetrator accountability, listen now. Subscribe, share this with a colleague, and leave a review telling us what language you want to change first.

    Send us Fan Mail

    Check out David Mandel's new book Stop Blaming Mothers and Ignoring Fathers: How to Transform the Way We Keep Children Safe from Domestic Violence.

    Visit the Safe & Together Institute website.

    Start taking Safe & Together Institute courses.

    Check out Safe & Together Institute upcoming events.

    Más Menos
    22 m
  • Season 7, Episode 7: Coercive Control and Children: What Systems Miss | Conference Wrap-Up (Australia 2025)
    Mar 23 2026

    The most useful conference debriefs aren’t about highlights, they’re about what shifts in you when you listen closely. From the Sydney coast, we wrap up a three-and-a-half-week Asia-Pacific tour and talk through the moments that changed the temperature in the room at our Coercive Control and Children’s Conference. We start with gratitude, acknowledgement of unceded Aboriginal land, and the reality that building safer systems means showing up with humility, not just expertise.

    One of the biggest breakthroughs we share is our commitment to localized training and culturally responsive practice. We premiered a new Australia-based training film designed to teach coercive control as a pattern over time, centered in a perinatal scenario that follows a family before and after a child is born. With Australian actors, filmmakers, consultation from cultural experts, and survivor input, the film is built to help professionals recognize subtle tactics, see cumulative harm, and respond in ways that strengthen child safety and survivor safety rather than repeating harmful system habits.

    We also get into the harder conversations that practitioners can’t avoid: men’s health, masculinity, and accountability. We talk about why supporting men and boys can’t come at the cost of women and children, and why we have to operationalize that promise instead of offering lip service. In the Australian context, we connect family violence practice with the impacts of colonization, racism, intergenerational trauma, and family separation, while staying clear that healing requires stopping abusive behavior. Along the way, we reflect on survivor voices, workforce wellbeing, and the need for non-extractive organizational cultures.

    Finally, we dig into the practical lever that can change outcomes in family law: pattern-based documentation. We share why judicial leaders describe this kind of documentation as “gold,” and how the Safety Nexus tool supports workers with coaching, mapping, and better notes when stakes are life-or-death. If you care about coercive control, domestic violence response, child protection, and safer systems, this conversation gives you language you can use tomorrow. Subscribe, share with a colleague, and leave a review so more practitioners can find the work.

    Send us Fan Mail

    Now available! Mapping the Perpetrator’s Pattern: A Practitioner’s Tool for Improving Assessment, Intervention, and Outcomes The web-based Perpetrator Pattern Mapping Tool is a virtual practice tool for improving assessment, intervention, and outcomes through a perpetrator pattern-based approach. The tool allows practitioners to apply the Model’s critical concepts and principles to their current case load in real

    Check out David Mandel's new book Stop Blaming Mothers and Ignoring Fathers: How to Transform the Way We Keep Children Safe from Domestic Violence.

    Visit the Safe & Together Institute website.

    Start taking Safe & Together Institute courses.

    Check out Safe & Together Institute upcoming events.

    Más Menos
    29 m
  • Season 7 Episode 6: Domestic Abuse in Queer Relationships
    Mar 16 2026

    Domestic abuse gets dangerously easy to miss when our systems can only imagine one story about who victims are and what abuse looks like. We sit down with Luke Martin, a UK-based domestic abuse trainer, consultant, and independent victim advocate, to talk about the people most likely to be misunderstood in plain sight: LGBTQ+ survivors, including those in same-sex relationships, who face bias and system failures when seeking assistance for intimate partner violence.

    We dig into why an incident-based approach can flatten the reality of coercive control, especially when LGBTQ+ survivors fear the very systems they’re told to rely on—for good reason. Luke connects the dots between familial abuse, child maltreatment, conversion practices, homelessness, and the long shadow those experiences cast over adult relationships. We also talk about isolation in queer communities, chosen family, shared friend groups, and the real-world barriers to leaving when leaving means losing identity, housing, or every safe connection you have.

    Along the way, we challenge gender stereotypes that lead professionals to arrest the “more masculine” partner, ignore violence in lesbian relationships, or assume men cannot be afraid. We explore consent, kink, and chemsex risks, and we offer practical ways to ask better questions: how someone describes their gender, relationship, and sexuality and how to keep that door open over time without pressure.

    If you care about domestic abuse–informed, trauma-informed practice, domestic violence services, survivor-centred safety planning, and LGBTQ-inclusive responses, listen through and share it with a colleague.

    Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: What is the biggest change you want to see in domestic abuse systems?

    Send a text

    Now available! Mapping the Perpetrator’s Pattern: A Practitioner’s Tool for Improving Assessment, Intervention, and Outcomes The web-based Perpetrator Pattern Mapping Tool is a virtual practice tool for improving assessment, intervention, and outcomes through a perpetrator pattern-based approach. The tool allows practitioners to apply the Model’s critical concepts and principles to their current case load in real

    Check out David Mandel's new book Stop Blaming Mothers and Ignoring Fathers: How to Transform the Way We Keep Children Safe from Domestic Violence.

    Visit the Safe & Together Institute website.

    Start taking Safe & Together Institute courses.

    Check out Safe & Together Institute upcoming events.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 5 m
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