Some organisations advocating against domestic violence have been pushing for the聽.
Known as聽a聽series of escalating behaviours, coercive control is when males become emotionally abusive towards female partners. It often occurs before聽a homicide.
The New South Wales government has come up with the聽, which establishes a coercive control offence 鈥 abusive behaviour towards current or former intimate partners.
The bill, authored by NSW Attorney General (AG) Mark Speakman, passed the Legislative Assembly on September 19.
As coercive control involves a variety of behaviours, it聽is not easy to identify, as often only the perpetrator and victim are aware that it is occurring.
Speakman鈥檚 bill does not attempt to define coercive control and the context in which it can take place.
Because of the difficulty in identifying this behaviour some women鈥檚 organisations, especially those representing First Nations women, want the AG聽聽so that, if passed, it helps combat the behavior rather than escalate it.
Despite聽the NSW Women鈥檚 Alliance calling on the AG on聽聽to reopen consultation on the draft bill, Speakman introduced the bill on October 11 and is hell bent on pushing it through parliament by year鈥檚 end.
Flawed legislation
鈥淭here are a number of different ways to create this offence, and these constructions need to be hypothesised and tested with everyone in the legal system at the table, not in silos,鈥澛犅燾hief executive Delia Donovan told聽.
鈥淒VNSW is concerned that the bill sets a bar too high for providing proof,鈥 she said.
鈥淚n practice, this may mean victim-survivors are unable to access justice for the harm committed against them and [this] may result in the criminal legal system offering false hope and no delivery.鈥
The organisation is part of a coalition that warned the bill was flawed on its release. Donovan asserts it could lead to a similar situation to Scotland, where the crime is so hard to prove that those who have reported it have then been subjected to an escalation of the abuse.
The four main points of concern are: the bill does not define coercive control or the context in which it occurs; the crime only applies to intimate partners; insufficient attention has been given to how it aligns with聽聽and other orders of protection; and it will be incredibly hard to prove the offence.
鈥淒VNSW recommends robust implementation, monitoring, and evaluation to ensure this legislation does not have any unintended consequences when it comes into effect,鈥 Donovan said.
She said a taskforce should inquire into the bill including looking into whether current systems can work with it.
Enforcing laws through a racist lens
While some women鈥檚 groups have supported moves towards criminalising coercive control, First Nations women鈥檚 organisations have been hesitant.
鈥淏y excluding all domestic relationships other than current or ex-intimate partners, the bill is excluding kinship violence in Aboriginal communities,鈥 Donovan said.
She is also concerned that it has 鈥渢he potential to over-criminalise鈥 these communities as a range of other laws have.
Wirringa Baiya Aboriginal Women鈥檚 Legal Centre was part of the coalition that warned about potential issues with the bill the day it was released.聽The聽DVNSW, Women鈥檚 Legal Service NSW and the Redfern Legal Centre were did also.
Christine Robinson, coordinator of Wirringa Baiya, said in聽a recent piece in 聽that any 鈥渃oercive control offence should not come before thorough cultural and systems reform, including police culture, police investigations, criminal court systems and support systems鈥.
A major issue for First Nations women experiencing domestic violence is that police will often misidentify the victim as the perpetrator and arrest the victim.
Robinson said if First Nations women are not able to persuade police that they are the victim, what hope do they have in convincing officers that they are experiencing 鈥渙ngoing psychological abuse and economic abuse鈥.
Donovan advised that groups at a NSW Legislative Council committee inquiry on October 31 discussed the problem of misidentification and suggested 聽鈥渓egislative guidance on how to identify the person most in need of protection鈥, as other jurisdictions do.
Recognising the harm
Donovan has welcomed the attention MPs from all parties have given to addressing coercive control in the community.
NSW Greens MLC Abigail Boyd first聽聽in June 2020, and Labor tabled聽聽three months later.
Speakman鈥檚 bill inserts section 54D into the聽聽to create the offence of abusive behaviour towards current or former intimate partners intended to coerce or control, with a maximum penalty of seven year鈥檚 imprisonment.
While no definition for coercive control is provided, the proposed section 54F outlines a list of actions that constitute聽abusive behaviour including violence, threats, coercion, financial abuse, humiliation, the monitoring of someone, as well as the destruction of property.
鈥淭he criminalisation of coercive control has been called for by victim-survivors for a very long time,鈥 Donovan said, 鈥減articularly due to the educative function of legislation, which they believe, will demonstrate to the community the significant harm of this pattern of abuse.鈥
Prepping NSW police
Donovan said a more productive approach to dealing with coercive control would be to initially recognise it in civil protections, such as apprehended domestic violence orders as other jurisdictions have done.
This, she said, would also help counter misidentification.
If such laws were accompanied by quality educative programs, she said, it would send a clear message that coercive control behaviours were not acceptable. But she underscored that 鈥渙ur systems鈥 also need to be equipped, and that would include law enforcement.
鈥淭he lack of system readiness can be seen in the聽聽on police responses to domestic and family violence,鈥 Donovan said.
鈥淭hese systems must be appropriately transformed before such complex legislation [is enacted] which will require an entirely new way of policing.鈥
[This article was first published by聽.]