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Prosecuting non-physical abuse between current intimate partners: are stalking laws an under-utilised resource?

journal contribution
posted on 2019-01-01, 00:00 authored by Marilyn McMahonMarilyn McMahon, Paul McGorrery, Kelley Burton
The prevention of family violence—including economic and psychological abuse—is currently a major priority for governments in Australia and New Zealand. Traditionally, the criminal law in those jurisdictions has focused exclusively on physical violence. However, there is increasing interest in also targeting non-physical forms of abuse. Many of these behaviours are indirectly criminalised via family violence legislation, which requires an intervention order to be in place before the behaviour is deemed criminal. This article investigates whether those behaviours are also directly criminalised by stalking laws, particularly in the context of an ongoing intimate relationship, where the partners are cohabitating. The extent to which stalking laws can and are being used to prosecute offenders for psychologically or emotionally abusing their intimate partners is investigated, as well as the broader issue of whether stalking laws constitute an adequate mechanism for dealing with this form of abuse. We conclude that although stalking provisions can be used to prosecute non-physical family violence against current intimate partners, restricted community and expert understandings of stalking suggest that a more appropriate solution would be to construct a new family violence-specific offence to deal with this form of abuse.

History

Journal

Melbourne university law review

Volume

42

Issue

2

Pagination

551 - 592

Publisher

Melbourne University, Law Review Association

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

0025-8938

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, Melbourne University