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Australia's divergent legal responses to women who kill their abusive partners Caitlin Nash and Rachel Dioso-Villa

By: Nash, Caitlin.
Contributor(s): Dioso-Villa, Rachel.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Violence Against Women.Publisher: Sage, 2024Subject(s): ABUSED WOMEN | ATTITUDES | CRIMINAL JUSTICE | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | HOMICIDE | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | LAW REFORM | LEGAL PROFESSION | SENTENCING | WOMEN'S USE OF VIOLENCE | INTERNATIONAL | AUSTRALIAOnline resources: DOI: 10.1177/10778012231156154 (Open access) In: Violence Against Women, 2024, 30(9): 2275-2301Summary: Concerns over the legal treatment of women who kill in response to domestic abuse have driven several jurisdictions to reform their homicide laws in recent years. This article examines how abused women are currently treated within the Australian legal system by analyzing homicide cases involving women prosecuted for killing an abusive partner in Australia from 2010 to 2020. The findings reveal the limitations of legal reforms to improve access to justice for abused women. Instead, there needs to be an increased focus toward pre-trial stages of criminal proceedings and to address persistent misconceptions and stereotypes associated with domestic abuse. (Author's abstract). Record #8738
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Violence Against Women, 2024, 30(9): 2275-2301

Concerns over the legal treatment of women who kill in response to domestic abuse have driven several jurisdictions to reform their homicide laws in recent years. This article examines how abused women are currently treated within the Australian legal system by analyzing homicide cases involving women prosecuted for killing an abusive partner in Australia from 2010 to 2020. The findings reveal the limitations of legal reforms to improve access to justice for abused women. Instead, there needs to be an increased focus toward pre-trial stages of criminal proceedings and to address persistent misconceptions and stereotypes associated with domestic abuse. (Author's abstract). Record #8738