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31 January 2019 / David Burrows
Issue: 7826 / Categories: Opinion , Family , Criminal
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Defining domestic abuse

David Burrows assesses the most striking aspects of the draft Domestic Abuse Bill

I have just finished reading the second of Elena Ferrante’s four-part series on Neapolitan life in the 1950s and 60s. I take the series to be semi-autobiographical. In Naples, it seems, violence against wives was endemic; and—of her time—it goes with little comment from Ferrante.

In the early 1970s, Erin Pizzey made us realise—those that did not already—that domestic violence was endemic in our society too. Her ‘battered wives home’ in Chelsea was described by Lord Denning MR in Davis v Johnson [1979] AC 264, [1978] 1 All ER 1132 (in the Court of Appeal at [270]): ‘“Battered wives” is a telling phrase. It was invented to call the attention of the public to an evil. Few were aware of it. It arose when a woman suffered serious or repeated physical injury a from the man [sic] with whom she lived. She might be a wife properly married to her husband: or she might only be a “common law wife.”’ The Domestic Violence and Matrimonial

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After Woodcock confirmed no general duty to warn, debate turns to the criminal law. Writing in NLJ this week, Charles Davey of The Barrister Group urges revival of misprision or a modern equivalent
Family courts are tightening control of expert evidence. Writing in NLJ this week, Dr Chris Pamplin says there is ‘no automatic right’ to call experts; attendance must be ‘necessary in the interests of justice’ under FPR Pt 25
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