Responding to abusive litigation : Short v Short
Toy-Cronin, Bridgette A.
Responding to abusive litigation : Short v Short Bridgette Toy-Cronin - LexisNexis, 2022 - New Zealand Women's Law Journal - Te Aho Kawe Kaupapa Ture a ngā Wāhine .
New Zealand Women's Law Journal - Te Aho Kawe Kaupapa Ture a ngā Wāhine, 2022, 7: 64-76
Short v Short raises important issues about how the court should conceptualise and prevent psychological abuse where the method of abuse is the court’s own proceedings. If it is a form of violence, as the Court found in Short v Short, is a protection order the correct response or are civil procedural
remedies best placed to restrain it? This case note discusses the concept of abusive litigation and the Family Court’s and High Court’s analysis, which frame the father as a misguided LiP. It argues that abusive litigation should be analysed as violence, not as vexatious litigation. It also argues that courts
should maintain a coercive control lens when deciding cases of this nature, so that the courts will be better equipped to recognise and respond to this form of abuse. (From the introduction). Record 8215
ABUSED WOMEN
COERCIVE CONTROL
EVIDENCE
FAMILY COURT
FAMILY LAW
HIGH COURT
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
JUSTICE
PERPETRATORS
PROTECTION ORDERS
PSYCHOLOGICAL ABUSE
VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
NEW ZEALAND
Responding to abusive litigation : Short v Short Bridgette Toy-Cronin - LexisNexis, 2022 - New Zealand Women's Law Journal - Te Aho Kawe Kaupapa Ture a ngā Wāhine .
New Zealand Women's Law Journal - Te Aho Kawe Kaupapa Ture a ngā Wāhine, 2022, 7: 64-76
Short v Short raises important issues about how the court should conceptualise and prevent psychological abuse where the method of abuse is the court’s own proceedings. If it is a form of violence, as the Court found in Short v Short, is a protection order the correct response or are civil procedural
remedies best placed to restrain it? This case note discusses the concept of abusive litigation and the Family Court’s and High Court’s analysis, which frame the father as a misguided LiP. It argues that abusive litigation should be analysed as violence, not as vexatious litigation. It also argues that courts
should maintain a coercive control lens when deciding cases of this nature, so that the courts will be better equipped to recognise and respond to this form of abuse. (From the introduction). Record 8215
ABUSED WOMEN
COERCIVE CONTROL
EVIDENCE
FAMILY COURT
FAMILY LAW
HIGH COURT
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
JUSTICE
PERPETRATORS
PROTECTION ORDERS
PSYCHOLOGICAL ABUSE
VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
NEW ZEALAND