Putting pressure on women to leave violent male partners because they are "putting their children at risk" then awarding those very same "risks" the opportunity to look after children without supervision because "children need both parents" is dangerous. Women who are trying to leave or have left men who use violence are used to being bullied and coerced, which means relying on "mediation" in cases of domestic violence is farcical. Thanks again Leonie.
Domestic violence
increasingly trivialised
Over the last 15 years
our justice system has increasingly trivialised domestic violence, viewing it
as “couple conflict”, depicting women as just as violent as men, and ignoring
the pattern of violence of the male perpetrator. Our Criminal Courts, Family
Violence Courts and the Family Court have moved away from the analysis
underpinning the Domestic Violence Act 1995, which recognised the dynamics of
male power and control in domestic violence situations. The repercussions of
this accelerating shift are many and serious. We have seen judges granting bail
to men who have then gone on to kill their ex-partners. The Police are
arresting fewer perpetrators, fewer perpetrators who are arrested are being
convicted, fewer Temporary Protection Orders are being made final, fewer men
are being referred to stopping violence programmes and some women are being
forced to attend couple counselling with their abusers.
Father’s Rights agenda
adopted
Over 50 percent of
applications to the Family Court under the Care of Children Act involve
violence; however, the Family Court has never seriously addressed the lack of
knowledge amongst Family Court professionals (judges, lawyers, psychologists
and counsellors) about the dynamics of domestic violence. Incrementally, over
recent years the Family Courts have adopted many beliefs from the Father’s
Rights agenda, including a false belief that once the couple has separated the
violence between the spouses is historical and of little relevance. The
violence is seen as only a product of “relationship dynamics” and that once
they are separated the abuse will stop. Research, however, shows that women are
most at risk for serious injury and even death within the first 18 months post
separation, especially when she leaves the relationship with the children.
The Courts often
characterise the father as a “good parent” despite his being abusive (“a lousy
partner”). This especially happens if the violence began around the time
of separation. If it did, it will usually be characterised as “separation
engendered violence” and therefore trivialised.
It will not be seen as real violence or as demonstrating a
propensity for violence on the part of the perpetrator or as part of an already
existing pattern of coercive control. It will not be seen as particularly
relevant to parenting order outcomes. An example of this is the High Court
decision in the Surrey v Surrey case, where the husband raped his wife twice
post separation, but was not seen as a possible on-going danger to her because
he was in a new relationship and had said he had “moved on”. An Appeal Court
decision overturned this finding, but the Courts seem to be ignoring the
implications of this Appeal Court decision.
“Shared parenting”
prioritised
In addition to
trivialising violence, the Family Court has unofficially embraced the doctrine
that “shared parenting” (defined as when the parents each have responsibility
of the children 50 percent of the time) is the best outcome for all children of
separated parents, regardless of their particular circumstances. This belief
contradicts New Zealand research which has found that the two most important
factors for children’s well-being post separation are maintaining their
relationship to their primary care giver and minimising their exposure to
inter-parental conflict (New Zealand
Universities Law Review, Vol 24, No 1, June, 2010, Julia Tolmie, Vivienne
Elizabeth and Nicola Gavey).
In the Family Court,
mothers who have concerns about the safety or neglect of their children run a
significant risk of being labelled as “litigious”, “the alienating parent”,
“the hostile parent” or as “an obstructer”. This new shared parenting culture
runs so deep that no credence is given to the possibility that the mother may
simply want what is best for her child, or that battling to find a place of
safety for her child and herself can increase women’s fear and desperation and
make them appear less credible. New Zealand literature has pointed to a
judicial approach in which on-going contact with fathers trumps safety of the
child, when the father is an abuser.
The Family Court
Proceedings Reform Bill
It is in the above
context that we need to view the Government’s Bill to reform the Family Court.
The stated aims of the Bill are to reduce the costs of the Family Court and
speed up its processes. The Bill does this by introducing a variety of measures
that limit access to the Family Court and simplify the Court processes. Family Dispute Resolution (FDR)
Providers will be established to create a formal (privatised) approach to
out-of-Court dispute resolution, principally for care of children and
guardianship proceedings. Counselling sessions will be slashed from six hours to
one. Parties
will work with an approved FDR provider such as a mediator, to reach
agreements. This will be compulsory. The use of Court professionals
(psychologists and lawyers) will be restricted and lawyers for children will
only be appointed where safety issues are identified. There are, however, no
processes identified in the Bill to identify domestic violence or other
problems such as poor or neglectful parenting practices, or mental health or
drug and alcohol problems.
Costs prohibitive
The Family Court will be subsidised for those few who
meet the legal aid threshold, but will cost approximately $897 per half day for
the rest. The costs of these processes will be prohibitive for
many women. It will also mean that if a mother wants to progress the safety of
her children, and the matter is not considered to meet the criteria for access
to the Family Court, she will have to pay to keep her child safe. Furthermore,
parents cannot file proceedings until they have been through mediation, so
those on legal aid will have no access to legal advice until after the FDR
stage.
The removal of the right to legal representation from
FDR and the prehearing processes is a breach of human rights. Many people will
not be able to complete Court documents or represent themselves without legal
assistance for a variety of reasons, including stress, intimidation, language
barriers, health, and confidence issues. Access to lawyers will be denied for
most disputes over children, even where there is domestic violence, sexual
abuse, and drug/alcohol issues. Wealthy men, of course, will
consult lawyers at every step in the process.
Mediation for batterers?
The Bill provides a
separate pathway where abuse is identified, but this pathway is only available
where there is “proof” of physical abuse. With the Police estimating that only
18 percent of domestic violence is reported (with much less than this actually
resulting in a conviction) many mothers in coercive and violent relationships
are going to end up in mediation. For the past two decades we
have realised that mediation is inappropriate for women in abusive
relationships, yet the Bill forces women to use mediation. In his 1993 Review
of the Family Court, Judge Boshier argued that mediation should not be utilised
within the context of domestic violence because of the inherent power
disparities between the parties. Restricting mother’s access to the Court and
forcing them into mediation will put women at risk and could force mothers to
accept decisions that are not safe and/or in the children’ s interests.
Children’s safety
The Bill holds the
interests of the child as paramount and lists five items of importance regarding
paramountcy, including safety of the child. However, it does not state that the
safety and enhancement of resilience in children who have been exposed to
and/or may be the targets of violence is the most important aspect of
children’s well-being. One of the five aspects is the child’s right to be
brought up by both parents. Specifically, the principle also states that both
parents are to be involved in decision-making about the child. If the parents
cannot agree, then it’s off to mediation or counselling, or, rarely, a Court
hearing.
Interestingly, Australia
introduced shared parenting legislation in 2006. However, it was found that
there was not enough judicial attention to the violence of the perpetrator and
to the safety of the child. The Australian Parliament amended their law in
2011, strengthening the focus on child safety and domestic violence. The
Australians realised that too many children were being exposed to violence; the
last straw was an incident involving a five year-old girl who was thrown off a
Melbourne bridge by her father, whose previous violence had been minimised and
ignored by the Court.
Ignoring our history
Perhaps most worrying is the Bill’s intention to
delete clauses in the Care of Children Act known as the “Bristol Clauses”. In
New Plymouth in 1995, Christine Bristol was trying to escape from the on-going
violence of her husband. Christine had three Protection Orders against Alan
Bristol, who the police had just charged with sexual assault. Despite being
known as a violent spouse, he was thought of as an excellent parent. Indeed the
Family Court had awarded him sole custody of the three girls. In a case that
horrified the nation, Mr Bristol murdered their three young children, and then
killed himself. Christine demanded a Ministerial Inquiry into why the Family
Court had awarded a violent parent custody of his children. Research shows that
children living in a domestic violence context are often directly abused
themselves, in addition to being psychologically abused by their knowledge and
witnessing of their mother’s abuse.
In response to the Bristol murders, the Government
introduced law requiring judges to undertake careful risk-assessments before
allowing abusive parents day-to-day care of their children. These measures have
been constantly undermined since their introduction and today are often ignored
by the Courts. The Bill will abolish these clauses and leave children at risk.
Christine Bristol has spoken out against the Bill, emphasising that the law
must prioritise children’s safety over violent parents’ access to their
children. Given that New Zealand has the highest rates of child homicides in
the OECD; it is amazing that one cost-saving measure in the Bill is to remove
the rebuttable presumption against unsafe contact arrangements with violent
parents, generally fathers. Rather than reinforce the focus on the safety of
children (as required by the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, to which
New Zealand is a signatory) this Bill will further allow fathers’ rights to
triumph over children’s welfare. The Courts will save money by amending these
measures, but at what cost, and to whom?
Thanks very much to Ruth Busch for her considerable
assistance with this article.
8 comments:
subjected:
I was a participant in research at a NZ university on intimate partner violence. It is now part of the current canon has been used to foster the dangerous attitudes and the family court changes in you describe.
There were many confounds in this research. For a start, I believe the average age of the participants (a couple of hundred university students) was 21. The number of the participants who were currently, or had been in a marriage or defacto marriage, ie living together without adult witnesses, financially dependent or interdependent etc. was miniscule. Numbers of those who had done so or were doing so with children, was even smaller - one or two at most.
I wasn't surprised to find that the research confirmed similar research that had found that IPV violence was pretty much equivalent between males and females, with females found to be slighly more violent, though not statistically significantly so.
The only other thing I'd like to say about the research and similar research, is that in my own experience of domestic violence, I remember and admit to the two occasions that I was violent myself. On one occasion I slapped my partner (the resulting violence to me was considerably worse, though that doesn't excuse my behaviour). On the other occasion I threw a plastic salt shaker and it hit him in the eye.
I don't want to detail the violence done to me in that relationship except to say that it was many degrees more serious in quantity and quality. It changed my personality.
However my former partner will go to his grave saying he never laid a finger on me, and I believe that he genuinely does not remember. If he had been a participant in the study, our combined data would have shown the exact same trend as the results of the research - almost equivalent, with the female slightly more violent than the male.
I am in an abusive relationship. I am a man. Thanks for yet another article on the internet that assumes I'm the one in the wrong just because I'm a man.
Research shows that intimate partner violence can be divided into 4 patterns: coercive controlling violence, violent resistance, situational couple violence, and separation-instigated violence.
Previous lack of differentiation into these patterns led to confusion as to whether or not there is gender symmetry in who is violent.
Coercive controlling violence is perpetrated far more by men than women and is seen most often in agency settings (the courts, shelters, hospitals).
This form has the most emotional abuse and on average has more frequent and sever violence.
Violent resistance occurs when (predominantly) women fightback CCV with violence of their own; it can generally be simplified to self-defense.
Situational couple violence "is the most common type of physical aggression in the
general population of married spouses and cohabiting partners, and is perpetrated by both
men and women. It is not a more minor version of Coercive Controlling Violence; rather,
it is a different type of intimate partner violence with different causes and consequences.
Situational Couple Violence is not embedded in a relationship-wide pattern of power,
coercion, and control. Generally, Situational Couple Violence
results from situations or arguments between partners that escalate on occasion into physical
violence. One or both partners appear to have poor ability to manage their conflicts and/or
poor control of anger".
The last form, separation-instigated violence, is fairly self-explanatory: a couple with no history of violence has some when they separate. Seen symmetrically in men and women.
(http://www.fsa.me.uk/uploads/7/6/5/6/7656227/typologies_review_-_johnson.pdf)
I hope this helps clarify things for the previous two commenters.
Subjected:
http://www.ted.com/talks/leslie_morgan_steiner_why_domestic_violence_victims_don_t_leave.html
Subjected:
I should have mentioned when I posted the Ted talk above that is was for 'Anonymous'. In it,it is mentioned that 20 percent of coercive controlling violence is perpetrated by women.
And thank you Juliet for your detailed explanation. However, at the time of the research I talked about, it was used to perpetrate the myth that all domestic violence is symmetrical. There was no suggestion that there might be different types of domestic violence, and that women were disproportionately victims of highly dangerous coercive controlling violence.
This in no way detracts from the experience of victims of such violence perpetrated by women.
Hi all - sorry, getting to comments after not being here the last couple of days. Struggling with all the Anonymous's - this breaks our comments policy so please use handles as we ask.
To the Anonymous man in an abusive relationship - nothing about this article assumes men cannot be the victims in domestic violence. The article just speaks to the fact that 90% of protection orders in New Zealand are sought by women against male partners.
I hope you are in contact with specialist support - Victim Support or the Police Family Violence Co-ordinator?
I'm not going to revisit the research around "types" of intimate partner violence, but take your point, first anonymous, that research "proving" symmetry ignores context. It also does not measure sexual violence, and fails to distinguish self-defence. It's hard to see how such research is not just politically motivated.
Subjected:
Hi LJ,
I consistently called myself "subjected"*. Does this not adequately meet the requirements of a pseudonym?
This might be a good time to ask how I could have better identified myself using the options available. I'm not a blogger with my own site, so I used the 'anonymous'option. I put a pseudonym at the top before I write my comment. How should I have done it?
*The pseudonym "Subjected" referred to my having been a subject in the research I talked about. I wouldn't ever label myself according to violence done to me.
Whoops Subjected,
sorry, didn't notice you'd done that. That's absolutely grand :-)
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