Unintended Consequences of Domestic Violence Law

Gendered Aspirations and Racialised Realities

Unintended Consequences of Domestic Violence Law

Gendered Aspirations and Racialised Realities

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This book addresses the intersection of two current major concerns in Australia: how law and justice responses to domestic violence - including harsher punitive measures - and the over-representation of Indigenous Australians in the criminal justice system, which are similar concerns in New Zealand, Canada and the US. Nancarrow re-conceptualises typologies of violence and provides a means of understanding and explaining female use of violence without undermining the hard-won gains of the women's movement. It does, however, argue for a paradigm shift, which has implications for every aspect of the system we have built to stop men's violence against women (law, police policy and practice, counselling and advocacy for victims, and interventions for those who perpetrate violence). The book is based on quantitative and qualitative research and explores the nature of Indigenous intimate partner violence and the types of violence that domestic violence law sought to address.



Heather Nancarrow is Chief Executive Officer of Australia's National Research Organisation for Women's Safety (ANROWS). She has 35 years' experience in research, policy and practice in the violence against women field, including extensive work with Indigenous Australian communities, whose experiences of violence and the criminal justice system feature in this book. She completed her PhD at Griffith University, Australia. 
ISBN 9783030275006
Article number 9783030275006
Media type eBook - PDF
Copyright year 2019
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Length 245 pages
Language English
Copy protection Digital watermarking