Punishing Mothers for Men’s Violence: Failure to Protect Legislation and the Criminalisation of Abused Women

Author:

Singh SarahORCID

Abstract

AbstractThis article explores the gender dynamics of ‘causing or allowing a child to die’, contrary to the Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004, section 5. This offence was intended to allow for prosecution where a child had been killed and it was uncertain who had killed him/her, but also to allow for prosecution of non-violent defendants who failed to protect him/her. More women than men have been charged and convicted of this offence signifying a reversal of usual patterns of prosecution and conviction. This analysis interrogates how section 5 criminalises women who have experienced domestic abuse. Drawing on a case observation, reported cases and media reports of cases, I suggest this offence derives from and perpetuates patriarchal constructs of motherhood. Grounded in a feminist approach building on women’s concrete experiences of law, I conclude that section 5 should be amended so that it is only used where it cannot be ascertained which defendant actively harmed a child.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Gender Studies

Reference94 articles.

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3. Barnett, Adrienne. 2015. ‘Like gold dust these days’: Domestic violence fact–finding hearings in child contact cases. Feminist Legal Studies 23 (1): 47–78.

4. BBC News Online. 2012. Yaseen Ali Ege murder trial: Sara Ege ‘beat son to death’. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-south-east-wales-17916367. Accessed 4th April 2020.

5. Bell, Christine, and Marie Fox. 1996. Telling Stories of Women who Kill. Social and Legal Studies 5 (4): 451–470.

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