It's through a court order. Therapy must have conditions, as is the case for drugs or alcohol when people are released. People who have been released can be required, on 48 hours' notice, to undergo a urine test to determine whether they have been using intoxicating substances. The system will have to have similar checks.
I mentioned earlier that 50% of men didn't comply with their conditions, meaning that there will have to be a way of ensuring that they do. Otherwise, the justice system will have to make the consequences clear. What's the point of imposing strict conditions if there are no consequences for failing to meet them?
And yet, that's the situation right now. The judges are doing their work. They have been imposing strict conditions. Once the accused leave the courthouse, no one is dealing with them. The only person doing so is the victim, because she will continue to be browbeaten and harassed. The only person dealing with the perpetrator is the victim.
If we want to take violence against women and release conditions seriously, the system will have to have a follow‑up mechanism. At the moment, there is none.