000 02267nab a22002777a 4500
999 _c8623
_d8623
005 20250625151658.0
008 240418s2023 ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aNewton, Libby
_912839
245 _aNot ready, not right :
_bkey objections to criminalising coercive control in New South Wales
_cLibby Newton
260 _bSydney Law Review,
_c2023
500 _aSydney Law Review, 2023, 45(1): 121
520 _aIn recent years, the New South Wales (‘NSW’) government has taken substantial steps toward legislating a criminal offence of coercive control. In November 2022, these steps culminated in the passage through Parliament of a Bill featuring a proposed offence of ‘abusive behaviour towards current or former intimate partners’. This comment explores the main objections to criminalising coercive control by examining the NSW legislation and the vigorous public policy debate surrounding its introduction, along with leading scholarship and evidence from within and outside Australia. These objections tend to be based in one of two concerns: (i) that the criminal justice system is not ready for a discrete offence of coercive control and (ii) that the criminal law cannot provide an answer to the problem of domestic and family violence. An examination of these two framings reveals that criminalisation is presently seen as a high-risk, short-sighted response to an inherently complex social problem. This position appears to be taken irrespective of any overall belief in the utility or appropriateness of criminal justice–based solutions to domestic and family violence. Implications for the 2022 NSW reforms are duly considered. (Author's abstract). Record #8623
650 _aCOERCIVE CONTROL
_95771
650 _aCRIMINAL JUSTICE
_9167
650 _aDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9203
650 _aINTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
_9431
650 _aLAW REFORM
_9338
651 _aINTERNATIONAL
_93624
651 4 _aAUSTRALIA
_92597
651 _aNEW SOUTH WALES
_93273
773 0 _tSydney Law Review, 2023, 45(1): 121
830 _aSydney Law Review
_94168
856 _uhttps://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/viewdoc/au/journals/SydLawRw/2023/5.html
_zRead online
942 _2ddc
_cARTICLE
_hnews127