TY - BOOK AU - Tarrant, Stella ED - Australia's National Research Organisation for Women's Safety (ANROWS) TI - Women who kill abusive partners: understandings of intimate partner violence in the context of self-defence. Key findings and future directions CY - Sydney, NSW : PB - Australia's National Research Organisation for Women's Safety, , 2019 KW - ABUSED WOMEN KW - DOMESTIC VIOLENCE KW - HOMICIDE KW - INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE KW - JUSTICE KW - LAW KW - WOMEN'S USE OF VIOLENCE KW - AUSTRALIA N1 - ANROWS Research to policy and practice, Issue 03, June 2019 N2 - ANROWS Research to policy and practice papers are concise papers that summarise key findings of research on violence against women and their children, including research produced under ANROWS’s research program, and provide advice on the implications for policy and practice. This is an edited summary of key findings from ANROWS research RP.17.10 Transforming Legal Understandings of Intimate Partner Violence (#6417), The full report is described below. This research examines homicide trials in which self-defence is raised by women who have killed an abusive intimate partner, focussing on the recent case of Western Australia v. Liyanage. This report examines how and why changes to the law of self-defence have not had their intended effects. It explores how legal professionals and experts understand IPV, influencing which facts are selected and presented as relevant in the criminal process and the meaning made of those facts. This report demonstrates that the model of IPV relied on by prosecutors, expert witnesses, judges and others can have the effect either of revealing the violence a woman claims to have acted in self-defence against, or of undercutting that claim. It suggests that the current models of IPV used in the criminal justice system prepackage a defendant’s defensive actions in response to IPV as unreasonable. This report has been written to be an educational and training resource for law students, police, prosecution and defence lawyers, expert witnesses, and judges. Note: This research report contains descriptions of physical and sexual violence, and child abuse. (From the website). Read the full report or the 16-page research summary. Record #7638 UR - https://d2rn9gno7zhxqg.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/26034237/RP.17.10_RtPP_Women-who-kill-abusive-partners.pdf UR - https://www.anrows.org.au/publication/women-who-kill-abusive-partners-understandings-of-intimate-partner-violence-in-the-context-of-self-defence-key-findings-and-future-directions/ ER -