Home
| Databases
| WorldLII
| Search
| Feedback
eLaw Journal: Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law |
"Enforcement personnel - police, prosecutors, regulatory agencies - may also produce transformations: seeking disputes in order to advance public policy or generate a caseload...discouraging disputes because of personnel shortages; or selectively encouraging those disputes that enhance the prestige of the agency and discouraging those that diminish its significance or call for skills it lacks or are thought to be inappropriate..." [38]
This experience accords with the views expressed by many workers in the domestic violence field, and again we explore below the implications of these third stage 'transformations'.
"[T] he manner in which violence against women in the home is responded to by the community and its legal systems is very much affected by the patriarchal language, structures and beliefs of the cultural and legal context including the substance and procedures of the laws themselves."[41]
"A restraining order is somehow seen to address what's occurred and it hasn't."[60]
"...no-one had the right to do that and that a person needs to be in trouble for their behaviour and sanctioned...in the longer term it is also about prevention." [62]
"...The onus rests on the investigating officer to properly investigate the matter. This may include audio and video taping of evidence, the taking of a statement, notes in an official police notebook and the gathering of evidence with the view to proving the matter to the appropriate standard."[71]
"...if it is managed correctly the police are the ones laying the assault charges. They then use the woman as a witness. That woman doesn't have to be a helpful witness...if they use all their forensic evidence..."[72]
"It would be really good to see police treat it as a crime scene when they get there and as seriously as they would treat any other that wasn't of a domestic nature."[75]
[1] R Alexander, Domestic Violence in Australia: The Legal Response, 3rd ed. (Federation, Leichardt, 2002), p.4. Alexander quotes statistics from a 1996 survey which found that 23 percent of women who have ever been married, or lived in a defacto relationship, experienced violence by their partner. See Australian Bureau of Statistics, Women's Safety Australia (Canberra, 1996, cat No 4128.0.)
[2] R Holder, "Domestic and Family Violence: Criminal Justice Interventions" Issues Paper No 3.1 (Australian Domestic and Family Violence Clearing House, Sydney, 2001) at 2.
[3] The ACT is perhaps an emerging exception in Australia. See Urbis Keys Young, "Evaluation of the ACT Family Violence Intervention Program" Phase II Final Report (Publishing Services for the ACT Department of Justice and Community Safety, Australian Capital Territory, 2001) at 93.
[4] H Douglas and L Godden, The Decriminalisation of Domestic Violence (Griffith University, Brisbane, 2002) at 58. Available on line.
[5] Interview Transcript #6 at 16. (Transcripts are represented by numbers and not by names in order to retain confidentiality). Transcript copies are held by Heather Douglas, Griffith University. The interview sample and methodology are discussed later in the article and a more extensive discussion of the broader empirical study can be found in H Douglas and L Godden The Decriminalisation of Domestic Violence (Griffith University, Brisbane, 2002)
[6] Interview Transcript #4 at 20.
[7] It seems that a similar situation exists in most other Australian states. See generally P Easteal, Less Than Equal: Women and the Australian Legal System (Butterworths, NSW, 2001) pp110-112, 115-116, where she notes the lack of police and institutional responses to intimate partner violence in many Australian jurisdictions.
[8] Interview methodology is discussed below.
[9] We have focussed our research on intimate partner violence between married or de facto (or previously married or de facto) partners. It is from their partners (or ex-partners) in their homes that women are most at risk of violence and thus most likely to perpetrate violence in response. See Criminal Justice Commission Queensland, "A Snapshot of Crime in Queensland" (1999) 5 (1) Research Paper Series at 9. See A Elliot, Evaluation of the FAX-BACK Project (2001, WAVS- Working Against Violence Support Service) at 7.
[10] Such legislation also provides for criminal offences and associated penalties for breaches of the civil orders. See Domestic Violence (Family Protection) Act 1989 (Qld), Domestic Violence Act 1986 (ACT), Crimes (Domestic Violence) Amendment Act 1993 (NSW), Domestic Violence Act 1992 (NT), Domestic Violence Act 1994 (SA), Justices Act 1959 (Tas), Crimes (Family Violence) Act 1987 (Vic). Note also the Restraining Orders Act 1997 (WA)
[11] Note the writers' recent research, which found that 79.7% of applicants for protection orders from the Brisbane Magistrates Court in 2001 were women. H Douglas and L Godden as above n 4 at i.
[12] The central purpose of which is to provide protection to people against whom violence had been committed or threatened and to discourage future violence. Violence in the Family: Crime Statistics Bulletin #1, p 8, http://www.oesr.qld.gov.au/data/bulletins/crime/01_violence/bull_crime01.html visited 4/6/01.
[13] Office of Women's Policy, Report of the Taskforce on Women and the Criminal Code (Department of Justice and Attorney General, Queensland, 2000).
[14] As there is no formal reporting of matters that are conducted in the Magistrates' Court, the researchers relied on examining the actual Brisbane Magistrates' Court files for 2001, including applications under the DVA.
[15] While in some high profile cases women are the violent aggressors, generally in domestic situations, women are most likely to be the victims of violence. K Hegarty, et al, "Domestic Violence in Australia: Definition, Prevalence and Nature of Presentation in Clinical Practice" (2000) Medical Journal of Australia (published on the Internet) at http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/173_07_021000/hegarty/hegarty.html visited 9/2/03.
[16] See Queensland Police Service Operational Procedures Manual, at paragraph 9.6.1.
[17] See generally Police Powers and Responsibilities Act 2000 (Qld) and Queensland Police Service Operational Procedures Manual at paragraph 9.3.1. See s71 DVA.
[18] The workers to be interviewed were selected after discussions with a key respondent, Zoe Rathus, Co-ordinator Women's Legal Service, Brisbane, a person with a long history of experience in domestic violence issues. This form of respondent driven sampling where key personnel are identified and they subsequently identify other key interviewees, to form a focus group is described in D Heckathon, "Respondent-driven Sampling: A New Approach to the Study of Hidden Populations", (1997) 44 (2) Social Problems 174-199.
[19] For a discussion of these reasons see H Douglas and L Godden as above n 4 at i.
[20] Op cit. at i, ii.
[21] Early studies in this field include, W Felstiner et al, 'The Emergence and Transformation of Disputes: Naming Blaming and Claiming' (1980-81) 15 Law and Society Review 631 and D Mc Barnett, "Pre-Trial Processes and the Construction of Conviction" in P Carlen (ed) Sociology of Law (Sociological Review Monographs, Keele 1976) pp 172-201.
[22] W Felstiner et al, ibid.
[23] Taskforce on Women and the Criminal Code at 110. Easteal, as above n 7 at 101. R Alexander as above n 1 at 5.
[24] Violence designates a wider category of harm than simply physical abuse.
[25] See for example, C Mackinnon, Toward a Feminist Theory of the State (Harvard UP 1989) and more directly on the private/public sphere K O'Donovan, Sexual Divisions in Law (Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1985) at ch 1.
[26] Easteal, as above n 7 at 101-106.
[27] This point was made by Warner in her discussion at the time of the second reading speech introducing the Queensland DVA. Ms A Warner, Hansard Qld Parliament Second Reading Speech, Domestic Violence (Family Protection) Bill, 11 April 1989, 4418 at 4420.
[28] Op cit at 4418.
[29] A Young, "Textual Outlaws and Criminal Conversations", Imagining Crime, (Sage 1996), at 8-15; 'Crime is often associated with violence that occurs in public places and which occurs between comparative strangers'.
[30] W Felstiner et al as above n 20 at p 633-636.
[31] W Felstiner et al describe the phenomenon of naming as, 'a perceived injurious experience, see W Felstiner et al as above n 20 at 634.
[32] W Felstiner et al as above n 20 at 633-4.
[33] For a discussion of the manner in which legal categories are ultimately to be regarded as social constructs based around language, see the work of structuralist theorists such as de Sassure and post-structuralist theorists. See generally in regard to the application in law, M Davies, Asking the Law Question (Law Book Company, Sydney, 2002) pp. 306-320.
[34] W Felstiner et al as above n 20 at 636.
[35] W Felstiner et al as above n 20 at 641.
[36] W Felstiner et al as above n 20 at 639 and 645.
[37] W Felstiner et al as above n20 at 636.
[38] W Felstiner et al as above n20 at 647.
[39] H Douglas and L Godden as above n 4 at 32-33; there were 3 criminal prosecutions arising from 694 applications for protection orders.
[40] Two empirical studies have concluded that generally court orders were effective in that the majority of applicants who were granted such orders reported a reduction in violence toward them after the order was issued. See L Trimboli and R Bonney, An Evaluation of the NSW Apprehended Violence Order Scheme, (New South Wales Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research, Sydney, 1997) at vii and M Young, J Byles and A Dobson, "The Effectiveness of Legal protection in the Prevention of Domestic Violence in the Lives of Young Australian Women", Trends and Issues Paper no. 148 (Australian Institute of Criminology, Canberra, 2000) at 4-5.
[41] P Easteal as above n 7 at 108.
[42] Co-ordinator of the Women's Legal Service, Queensland and Deputy Chair of the Taskforce on Women and the Criminal Code.
[43] Senior Sergeant Dale Murray, State Domestic Violence Co-ordinator for Queensland Police Service, as he then was.
[44] Interview Transcript #7 at 6.
[45] Interview Transcript #6 at 21.
[46] R Holder, "Domestic and Family Violence: Criminal Justice Interventions" Issues Paper No. 3.1 (Australian Domestic and Family Violence Clearing House, Sydney, 2001) at 2.
[47] Interview Transcript #1 at 19.
[48] Interview Transcript #9 at 13.
[49] Women's Coalition Against Family Violence Blood on Whose Hands: The Killing of Women and Children in Domestic Homicides (Funded by Women's Trust, 1994, Melb, Victoria) at 72.
[50] Interview Transcript #1 at 24.
[51] Interview Transcript #6 at 13.
[52] Interview Transcript #6 at 17.
[53] Interview Transcript #9 at 9.
[54] Interview Transcript #9 at 16 and 19. See also B Taylor "Domestic Violence Integrated Responses: Reflections from the USA and Canada." (2002) Vol. 1 No. 2 Newsletter, Queensland Centre for the Prevention of Domestic and Family Violence 3 at 5.
[55] Interview Transcript #12 at 10.
[56] Interview Transcript #2 at 16.
[57] Interview Transcript #6 at 3.
[58] Interview Transcript #2 at 17.
[59] As the Taskforce noted, (Taskforce at iv) one of the problems with researching domestic violence is that statistics are not readily available or collated in a way that makes a thorough analysis of the current situation possible. It is clear that statistical data needs to be collected in an organised fashion. One interviewed worker in this study suggested that if the statistics were properly collected there would be a much greater realisation of the social and hidden costs of domestic violence (Interview Transcript #7 p.14). Currently, it is difficult to draw the links between the impact of domestic violence on the health sector with impacts on the welfare and legal sectors. It may be that openly naming domestic violence, as criminal behaviour will encourage proper statistics gathering to occur.
[60] Interview Transcript #6 at 6; see also Interview Transcript #9 at 7.
[61] See the discussion by S Egger, and J Stubbs, The Effectiveness of Protection Orders in Australian Jurisdictions, (AGPS, Canberra, 1993) who suggest that it is likely that women who apply for a domestic violence order do not necessarily report the violence to the police.
[62] Interview Transcript #9 at 16.
[63] See for example J Scutt, The Incredible Woman: Power and Sexual Politics Volume 1 (Artemis Publishing, Melbourne, 1997) at 5-8.
[64] Interview Transcript #1 at 19.
[65] Interview Transcript #4 at 17.
[66] E Colvin, S Linden, J McKechnie, Criminal Law in Queensland and Western Australia 3rd edition, (Butterworths, Sydney, 2001) at 603.
[67] Interview Transcript #2 at 16
[68] Interview Transcript #8 at 11
[69] Interview Transcript #3 at 1. The Logan District Police Service (part of the Queensland Police Service) is examining this issue in conjunction with local domestic violence workers.
[70] The formal statement of the role of the Queensland Police Service includes: "The preservation of peace and good order in all areas of Queensland; the protection of all communities in Queensland; the prevention of crime; the detection of offenders and bringing of offenders to justice; and upholding the law generally and providing policing services in an emergency." http://www.police.qld.gov.au/pr/about/charter/intro.shtml at 10 December 2002
[71] See para 9.3.1 Queensland Police Manual.
[72] Interview Transcript #8 at 6. This has been the attitude of the police service in the ACT. See Urbis Keys Young "Evaluation of the ACT Family Violence Intervention Program" Phase II Final Report (Publishing Services for the ACT Department of Justice and Community Safety, ACT, 2001) at 88-89.
[73] Although it has also been acknowledged that there are broader systemic problems associated with its implementation. For an overview of these responses see L Laing, "Progress, Trends and Challenges in Australian Responses to Domestic Violence" Issue Paper No. 1 (Australian Domestic and Family Violence Clearing House, Sydney, 2000).
[74] C Hoyle, Negotiating Domestic Violence: Police Criminal Justice and Victims (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000) at 147.
[75] Interview Transcript #1 at 18.
[76] Interview Transcript #11 at 5.
[77] In seven matters investigations in relation to criminal matters took place. See H Douglas and L Godden as above n 4 at p32.
[78] Interview Transcript #9 at 4.
[79] W Felstiner et al as above n 20 at 645.
[80] W Felstiner et al as above n 20 at 644.
[81] H Douglas and L Godden, as above n 4 at 32-33.
[82] See Interview Transcript #3 at 1 and Interview Transcript #4 at 16.
[83] See for example Criminal Law Amendment Act 2000 (Qld).
[84] W Felstiner et al, as above n 20 at 637.
[85] Interview Transcript #4 at 8, Interview Transcript #5 at 10. The ACT currently has a witness support program for women assisting to prosecute intimates in relation to criminal offences. See ACT Director of Public Prosecutions Annual Report 2000-2001(ACT Publishing Service, Canberra, 2000) at 14-15.
[86] Interview Transcript #9 at 17. The "Fax Back Domestic Violence Project" that is currently operating in a number of regions in Queensland requires police to advise complainants of the project and then where there is consent of the complainants to fax local domestic violence services with contact details of complainants. Local domestic violence workers then contact the complainant to offer support and to advise about options. See A Elliot, Evaluation of the FAX-BACK Project (2001, WAVSS- Working Against Violence Support Service).
[87] Interview Transcript #9 at 13. W Felstiner et al note that delays can transform a case that may have been considered a useful procedure into a "pointless frustration" as above n 20 at 648.
[88] Urbis Keys Young, as above n 74 at 93.
[89] More generally the criminal law is involved in the use of penal sanctions to "enforce the prohibitions which the state imposes on conduct," see Colvin et al, Criminal Law in Queensland and Western Australia (Butterworths, Sydney, 2001), at 3. The DVA short title is: "An Act to provide for protection to a person against violence...and for prevention of behaviour disruptive to family life."
[90] Interview Transcript #12 at 20.
[91] Interview Transcript #12 at 17, Interview Transcript #9 at 16.
[92] Interview Transcript #9 at 12, Interview Transcript #11 at 8, Interview Transcript #32 at 30.
[93] H Douglas and L Godden as above n 4 at 36-37. See also R Holder and N Munsterman "Prosecuting Family Violence in the ACT." Conference Paper presented at Expanding Our Horizons: Understanding the Complexities of Violence Against Women Conference, 18 February 2002.
[94] Interview Transcript #3 at 1, Interview Transcript #7 at 30.
[95] Interview Transcript #6 at 13 but noted that they were insufficiently resourced in Australia.
[96] See W Felstiner, et al as above n 20 at 653.
[97] See also J Stubbs, "The Effectiveness of Protection Orders - A National Perspective." Paper presented at Challenging the Legal System's Response to Domestic Violence Conference, (23-26 March 1994), at 10.
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/MdUeJlLaw/2003/17.html