Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/22708
Record ID: c0043e1f-50e4-430a-a79b-0eadeaafccda
Electronic Resources: https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/report/Securing_women_s_lives_examining_system_interactions_and_perpetrator_risk_in_intimate_femicide_sentencing_judgments_over_a_decade_in_Australia_/25855543?utm_source=Research+Review&utm_campaign=340e58d3c3-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2024_July_ResearchReview&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-d2e4bffb50-%5BLIST_EMAIL_ID%5D&mc_cid=340e58d3c3&mc_eid=59a24366c7
Web resource: https://doi.org/10.26180/25855543
Type: Report
Title: Securing Women’s Lives: Examining System Interactions and Perpetrator Risk in Intimate Femicide Sentencing Judgments Over a Decade in Australia
Authors: Fitz-Gibbon, Kate
Walklate, Sandra
McGowan, Jasmine
Maher, JaneMaree
McCulloch, Jude
Keywords: Femicide;Intimate Partner Homicide (IPH);Domestic and Family Violence;Intimate Partner Violence;Criminal Justice System;Perpetrator Interventions;Risk Assessment;Prevention;Health Care;Police, Law, Courts, and Corrections;DFSV Specific Services;Child Protection
Topic: Primary prevention
Coercive control
Impacts of violence
Policing and legal responses
Perpetrator interventions
Structural inequities
Systems responses
Population: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
Children and young people
People who use domestic, family and sexual violence
People with disability
People with drug and/or alcohol issues
People with mental health issues
Year: Jun-2024
Publisher: Monash University and University of Liverpool
Abstract: 

In Australia, at least one woman a week is murdered by her current or former partner. According to Destroy the Joint, this equated to the killing of at least 57 women in 2022 and at least 64 women in 2023 allegedly as a result of men’s violence. At the time of finalising this report, an unusually high number of killings allegedly by men’s violence in the first four months of 2024 in Australia has reignited national attention over the need to better address women’s risk of fatal violence (see, inter alia, AAP, 2024; Priestley, 2024; Tuohy, 2024).

Intimate partner homicides are recognised as the most preventable type of homicide because it is assumed that histories of abuse can provide clear indicators of risk (see, inter alia, Bugeja et al., 2013; Dearden & Jones, 2008; Virueda & Payne, 2010). While intimate partner homicides are monitored and examined in Australia via the work of the Australian Institute of Criminology and state-based death review teams, there is no fully funded, multi-systems approach to the prevention of men’s lethal violence against women (McPhedran & Baker, 2012). As in Australia, international efforts to review and count such deaths are carried out in different ways and are often fraught with difficulties (see, inter alia, Walklate et al., 2020; Dawson & Vega, 2023).

In Australia and comparable international jurisdictions, a range of provisions, measures, laws and programs are designed to assess and address the risk of intimate partner violence. These include civil orders alongside programs that provide increased levels of protection and monitoring for women deemed at high risk of repeat victimisation. These instruments include the development of various risk assessment and management frameworks (Walklate et al., 2020). While magistrates, police and specialist support services use these instruments to identify and respond to risk (Boxall et al., 2015; Robinson & Moloney, 2010; Wakefield & Taylor, 2015), there is evidence that these approaches are limited by their conceptualisations of risk and in their scale of implementation and inconsistency in application.

This project sought to contribute new evidence to inform the further development of whole-of-systems preventive approaches to repeat violence and intimate femicide. Specifically, the project aimed to build evidence based on the following touchpoints:

  • Places where an intervention between the initial emergence of family violence and the fatal outcomes had occurred.
  • What could potentially be known about those points of intervention.
  • If/how the pathway from intervention to safety could be better supported.

This report presents findings from the collection of over 250 intimate femicide sentencing judgments and the in-depth analyses of 235 of these. These judgements were used, in part, to identify potential points of intervention that might have provided an opportunity to prevent such killings. Sentencing judgments typically include narrative accounts from a judge, who describes how and where the crime took place as well as the circumstances that led to it.

This project builds current understandings of the potential points of intervention prior to the killing of women by their male intimate partners. In doing so, this project has contributed to building understanding of who perpetrates intimate femicide.

Notes:  Open access
Contents:  Acknowledgements
Acronyms
Introduction
What Is Intimate Femicide?
About This Project
Research Design
Sourcing and Identifying the Dataset
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
Australian Intimate Femicide Sentencing Judgment Dataset
Data Analysis
Data Limitations
Intimate Femicide Case Characteristics
Characteristics of the Victim
Characteristics of the Offender
The Relationship Between the Victim and Offender
Method of Killing
Intimate Femicide and the Impact on Children
Perpetrators and the Role of Suicide
Offender Risk and Dangerousness
Bail and Parole at the Time of the Femicide
Prior Convictions and Civil Order Histories
Known Histories of Violence
No Histories of Legal System Interaction
Perpetrator Points of Contact Beyond the Criminal Legal System
Perpetrator Engagement With Legal and Service Settings
Victim Service Setting Engagement
The Role of Bystanders
The Invisibility of the Victim in the Sentencing Process
Discussion & Conclusion
Appendix 1. Process For Gaining Access to Homicide Sentencing Remarks
Appendix 2. Other Project Outputs
URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/22708
Appears in Collections:New research: July 2024
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