Thank you for that very important question.
Electronic bracelets are not the only way to protect women. It's one of several options. Therapy for men is a way of protecting women. Aggressive men won't assault just one spouse, but two, three or four. There will be a series of victims. We therefore want to add a method that would achieve the desired result in perhaps 25%, 30%, or 40% of cases, but it's not a panacea that will eliminate all violence against women.
Let's talk about the work done by the police. Currently, women who report their abuser are not believed. They might be believed the first time, perhaps because they still have bruises. However, when the abuser bullies his victim repeatedly on social networks or through friends, at some point, the police stop believing the victim. When she says that her abuser had been on her doorstep, it's her word against his. The monitoring bracelet is an infallible way of confirming that the abuser was at a specific address at a specific time. So when there is a recognizance to keep the peace under section 810 of the Criminal Code, perhaps 80% or 90% of abusers will comply with the conditions, compared to the 50% who do so at the moment, because there will be a technological means of determining where the individual was at the time the victim said he was near her door.