OUP: Women, Intimate Partner Violence, and the Law

Author Heather Douglas

Interpersonal Violence

  • Draws on interviews with individual women over a three-year period to better understand their engagement with the legal system after leaving violence
  • Reports on the ways the legal system abuses women who are survivors of violence
  • Highlights how violent men use legal processes to perpetuate the entrapment of women

 

Every year, millions of women across the world turn to the law to help them live free from intimate partner violence. They engage with child protection services and police and apply for civil protection orders. They seek family court orders to keep their children safe from violent fathers, and take special visa pathways to avoid deportation following their separation from an abuser. Women are often driven to interact with the law to counteract their abuser’s myriad legal applications against them. While separation may seem like a solution, often the abuse just gets worse.

Countless women who have experienced intimate partner violence are enmeshed in overlapping, complex, and often inconsistent legal processes. They have both fleeting and longer-term connections with the legal system. Women, Intimate Partner Violence, and the Law explores how women from many different backgrounds interact with the law in response to intimate partner violence, over time. Drawing on their experiences of seeking help from the law, this book highlights the many failures of the legal system to provide safety for women and their children. The women’s stories show how abusers often harness aspects of the legal process to continue their abuse. Heather Douglas reveals women’s complex experiences of using law as a response to intimate partner violence.

Douglas interviewed women three times over three years to reveal their journey through the legal process. On occasion, the legal system allowed some women closure. However, circular and unexpected outcomes were a common experience. The resulting book showcases the level of endurance, tenacity, and patience it takes women to seek help and receive protection through law. This book shows how the legal system is failing too often to keep women and their children safe and how it might do better.

Introduction
Chapter 1: The Study Approach and Methodology
Chapter 2: Non-Physical Abuse and Coercive Control
Chapter 3: Using Law
Chapter 4: Interacting with the Child Protection Service
Chapter 5: Policing Intimate Partner Violence
Chapter 6: Lawyers and Legal Representation
Chapter 7: Judges in the Protection Orders and Family Law Systems
Chapter 8: The Process and Conditionality of Separation

Conclusion
Women’s Stories List
Definitions
Visa Status
Reference List