Priority Topics
Gender-based Violence
Recognizing the severe impact of gender-based violence on individuals and communities, and the need for coordinated approaches to prevention and rehabilitation, CEP established the Expert Group on Gender-based Violence in the Probation field to strengthen cooperation, share good practices, and support effective offender management across Europe.
Upcoming Events
Stay informed about our upcoming events and opportunities for professional development. Join us at workshops and conferences to connect with experts and peers in the field of probation.
Registration deadline: 29-09-2025
Conference
15th CEP General Assembly and CEP International Conference on Gender-Based Violence
14 Oct 2025
16 Oct 2025
Vienna, Austria
We’re pleased to announce that the 15th CEP General Assembly will take place on 15 October 2025 in Vienna, Austria.
The event will begin the evening before, on 14 October at 19:00 CET, with a welcome reception at the Ministry of Justice in Vienna. The General Assembly itself will start on 15 October at 09:00 CET.
Immediately after the Assembly, we will host a two-day public conference, “Gender- Based Violence in Probation: Challenges and Lessons Learned,” organised in partnership with our Austrian member Neustart and dedicated to one of the most pressing and complex issues facing probation systems today: Gender-Based Violence (GBV). Experts, practitioners, and policymakers from across Europe will gather to explore innovative responses, share good practices, and discuss the challenges of addressing GBV within probation frameworks.
Registration deadline: 29-09-2025

Past Events
Stay informed about our upcoming events and opportunities for professional development. Join us at workshops and conferences to connect with experts and peers in the field of probation.
Gender-based Violence
According to the Council of Europe definition, Gender-based violence is violence directed against a person or group of people because of their factual or perceived sex, gender, sexual orientation and/or gender identity and that affects persons of a particular gender disproportionately (mainly women and girls but it can affect also men and boys). Gender-based violence can be sexual, physical, verbal, psychological (emotional), or socio-economic and it can take many forms, from verbal violence and hate speech on the Internet, to rape or murder. It can be perpetrated by anyone: a current or former spouse/partner, a family member, a colleague from work, schoolmates, friends, an unknown person, or people who act on behalf of cultural, religious, state, or intra-state institutions. Although women and girls are the main victims of GBV, it also causes severe harm to families and communities.

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