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Research

Our research

Violence against women and children affects everybody. It impacts on the health, wellbeing and safety of a significant proportion of Australians throughout all states and territories and places an enormous burden on the nation’s economy across family and community services, health and hospitals, income-support and criminal justice systems.

KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER

News and events

ANROWS hosts events as part of its knowledge transfer and exchange work, including public lectures, workshops and research launches. Details of upcoming ANROWS activities and news are available from the list on the right.

ANROWS

About ANROWS

ANROWS was established by the Commonwealth and all state and territory governments of Australia to produce, disseminate and assist in applying evidence for policy and practice addressing violence against women and children.

KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER

Resources

To support the take-up of evidence, ANROWS offers a range of resources developed from research to support practitioners and policy-makers in delivering evidence-based interventions.

CPD seminar: Transforming legal understandings of intimate partner violence

CPD seminar: Transforming legal understandings of intimate partner violence

  • 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm, Tuesday, 3rd December 2019 - Tuesday, 3rd December 2019
  • Sydney Law School, Common Room, Level 4, New Law Building (F10), Eastern Avenue Camperdown, NSW 2006

Join ANROWS, The University of Sydney and research partners for a seminar that will explore the findings and implications of a new research report: Transforming legal understandings of intimate partner violence (IPV).

The report examines homicide trials in which self-defence is raised by women who have killed an abusive intimate partner.

All Australian jurisdictions now recognise that self-defence can be raised in circumstances when the harm a person was defending themselves against was non-imminent. A key impetus for these reforms was the need to recognise self-defence against IPV.

However, these reforms are not operating as intended. There is a distinct gap between the now well-developed social science understandings of IPV on the one hand, and the models of IPV that are underpinning these homicide trials.

This seminar will explore how legal professionals and experts understand IPV, influencing which facts are selected and presented as relevant and the meaning that is made of those facts. It will argue 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. The researchers will show that the current models of IPV used in the criminal justice system effectively pre-package a defendant’s defensive actions in response to IPV as unreasonable.

It will be suggested that using social entrapment as a conceptual framework for understanding IPV provides a more accurate and complete picture of facts involving IPV and therefore a proper foundation for assessing whether a defendant was acting in self-defence.

Who should attend?
  • Criminal lawyers (defence lawyers and prosecutors),
  • family lawyers,
  • judicial officers and justice officials,
  • government workers in justice and/or social services,
  • expert witnesses in matters involving family and domestic violence, and
  • family violence workers.

 

Why should you attend?

This seminar will offer an in-depth consideration of how better understandings of IPV can support the proper application of the criminal law.

 

Speakers

Professor Julia Tolmie, Faculty of Law, The University of Auckland.
Associate Professor Stella Tarrant, Law School, The University of Western Australia.

Associate Professor Stella Tarrant
Associate Professor Stella Tarrant is a graduate of the University of Western Australia and Yale University. She began her career as Associate to Justice Toohey of the High Court of Australia and a solicitor in the Land and Heritage Unit of the Aboriginal Legal Service of Western Australia. She studied as a Harkness Fellow and Fulbright Scholar in the United States before joining the Law Faculty at the University of Western Australia, from 1996-2002. After raising her two sons in their early years, Stella returned to teaching at UWA Law School in 2009 and resumed her research career in 2013.

Stella’s research focuses on criminal law, criminal law theory and gender and the law. She has explored the impact of law on women’s lives and the part law plays in maintaining unhelpful gender relations in society, in the areas of criminal law, constitutional law and reproductive technology law. Her current research projects concern gender equality in the law of self-defence and the incorporation of philosophical method into the teaching of Gender and the Law and for young people in community settings.

Professor Julia Tolmie
Professor Julia Tolmie currently teaches Criminal Law at The University of Auckland. Prior to her appointment at the University of Auckland in 1999 she lectured in the Faculty of Law at the University of Sydney for ten years.

She served as chair of the New Zealand Family Violence Death Review Committee from December 2011-2016, deputy chair in 2017, and as a member of the New Zealand Government’s Expert Advisory Group on Family Violence in 2013. She was the academic member of the District Court Judges Education Committee in 2015-2017. She was the inaugural Shirley Greenberg International Visiting Scholar at The University of Ottawa in 2016 and a distinguished visiting scholar with the Gender and Family Violence Research Program at the University of Monash in 2018.

 

Registration: Free, but essential

CPD Points: 2

 

This event is jointly hosted by ANROWS and the Sydney Institute of Criminology at Sydney Law School

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