000 04583nam a2200409Ia 4500
001 110437
005 20250625151240.0
008 110331s2001 eng
020 _a1877187739
040 _aWSS
_dAFV
245 _aSome criminal defences with particular reference to battered defendants
246 _aNZLC R73
260 _aWellington
_bLaw Commission
_c2001
300 _a116 p. ; computer file : PDF format (613Kb) ; computer file : World Wide Web
365 _a00
_b0
490 1 _vNZLC R73
500 _aAlso published as Parliamentary Paper E 3173
520 _aThis Law Commission report stems from criticism that the existing legal defences are failing to protect those who commit criminal offences as a reaction to domestic violence. The report summarises findings resulting from submissions to the Law Commission's Preliminary Paper 41, "Battered Defendants: Victims of Domestic Violence Who Offend", released as a discussion paper in 2000. It looks at the definition of 'domestic violence' according to the 1995 Act of that name, and 'battered woman syndrome'. It recommends that legal reference to 'syndromes', including that relating to battering relationships, be dropped in favour of reference to the nature, dynamics and effects of those relationships. The paper then discusses the way the law has previously dealt with such cases, emphasising the responsibility the judge has for clear direction relating to linkages in expert evidence of battering relationships, and the responsibility defence counsel has to explore issues of domestic violence and to call expert evidence when necessary. This is followed by a discussion of 'self-defence' and 'reasonable force', in which it is recommended that s48 of the Crimes Act (1961) be amended to clarify 'that fact' situations exist where force can be seen as reasonable where danger is not imminent, but is inevitable. It further recommends that a new subsection be added to s48 to the effect that the threshold for allowing 'self-defence', ie the question of 'reasonable force', go to the jury. The report very usefully clarifies and sets out the types of expert evidence relating to the social context, nature and dynamics of domestic violence that may be vital to a case, including: an understanding of why people remain in battering relationships; the dynamics of battering relationships; evidence on separation assault; defendants' experiences of seeking protection; the defendants' cultural group; the battered woman's ability to 'read' her partner and the danger signals; and the psychological effects of battering. The report then discusses a number of alternative proposed 'partial defence' concept options for battered defendants operating in other jurisdictions: 'excessive self-defence', 'self-preservation', an extended form of 'self-defence' proposed by the Western Australian Task Force on Gender Violence, 'tyrannicide', and 'diminished responsibility'. It does not recommend these as options for the New Zealand judicial system. The report also looks at the partial defence of 'provocation' and the fact that it has been used successfully as an excuse for domestic violence against women. It recommends that this should be abolished in favour of matters of provocation being taken into account in the exercise of sentencing discretion for murder, which it also recommends replaces the mandatory life sentence currently in operation in New Zealand. 'Compulsion' and 'duress', by treat, or of circumstances, are also reviewed in relation to domestic violence. Appended to the report is an informative overview entitled "Battered Heterosexual Men, Gay Men and Lesbians", which discusses methodological issues relating to the study of female to male violence such as use of the Conflict Tactics Scales, and looks at violence in gay and lesbian relationships.
522 _anz
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aABUSED MEN
_924
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aABUSED WOMEN
_925
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9203
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aJUSTICE
_9333
650 2 7 _aLAW REFORM
_9338
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aLEGISLATION
_9346
650 2 7 _aOFFENDERS
_9413
650 2 7 _aSELF DEFENCE
_9518
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aVICTIMS
_9622
650 2 7 _9431
_aINTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
_2FVC
650 2 0 _aLGBTQIA+
_93453
650 2 7 _aSAME SEX RELATIONSHIPS
_9266
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
651 4 _aAUSTRALIA
_92597
710 _aTe Aka Matua o te Ture | Law Commission
_913835
856 4 _uhttp://www.lawcom.govt.nz/sites/default/files/publications/2001/05/Publication_80_194_R73.pdf
942 _cREPORT
_2ddc
999 _c3111
_d3111