This edited collection speaks to what can be done to effectively intervene to end violence in families. Including contributions from both researchers and practitioners, chapters describe service innovations across systems in large urban and remote rural contexts, aimed at majority and minority populations, and that utilize a range of theoretical perspectives to understand and promote change in violence and victimization. Reflecting this range, contributions to this volume are organized into four sections: intervention with men who have perpetrated domestic violence, responses to women who have experienced domestic violence, legal responses to domestic violence, and integrating intervention for domestic violence across systems.