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An alternative means of prosecuting non-physical domestic abuse: are stalking laws an under-utilised resource?

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posted on 2020-01-01, 00:00 authored by Marilyn McMahonMarilyn McMahon, Paul McGorrery, Kelley Burton
The criminal law traditionally has focused exclusively on physical vio- lence and some forms of financial wrongdoing. The recent interest in non-physical abuse has led to consideration of how this harm also might be addressed. Currently, much domestic abuse—including economic and psychological abuse—is indirectly criminalised via breaches of civil orders. This chapter investigates whether that abuse can, is and should also be directly criminalised through stalking laws, par- ticularly in the context of an ongoing intimate relationship where the partners are cohabitating. In doing so, we discuss the broader issue of whether these laws constitute an adequate mechanism for dealing with non-physical abuse. We con- clude that although stalking provisions can be used to prosecute non-physical domestic violence, restricted community and expert understandings of stalking suggest that the enactment of a domestic abuse-specific offence is a more appro- priate solution to comprehensively deal with this form of abuse.

History

Title of book

Criminalising coercive control: family violence and the criminal law

Chapter number

5

Pagination

93 - 110

Publisher

Springer

Place of publication

Singapore

ISBN-13

9789811506529

ISBN-10

9811506531

Language

English

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Extent

12

Editor/Contributor(s)

Marilyn McMahon, Paul McGorrery

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