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| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Forced marriage as a form of family violence in Victoria | 30.66 MB |
Since 2013, forced marriage has been understood and responded to in Australia as a form of human trafficking and a slavery-like practice. This framing occurred as the result of it being introduced as a criminal offence under Section 270.7A and 270.7B of the Criminal Code Act (1995) (Cth).
During the Victorian Royal Commission into Family Violence, submissions from family violence practitioners, front-line service providers and forced marriage specialist services recommended the inclusion of forced marriage as a statutory example of family violence under the Family Violence Protection Act (2018) (Vic). This was one of the 227 recommendations made in the Commission's final report (specifically recommendation 156).
In late 2018, the Victorian Parliament passed the Justice Legislation Amendment (Family Violence Protection and Other Matters) Act (Vic), which formally recognised forced marriage as a form of family violence. Victoria is the only state in Australia to have recognised forced marriage as a form of family violence in law, although it has been identified as one issue for consideration as part of the National plan to end violence against women and their children (2022-2032).
Despite these commitments and developments, little is known about the impact of this new legal recognition of forced marriage in Victoria, in particular the implications for family violence and other service responses by practitioners and frontline service providers, and the interaction between the state-based criminal justice and service response, and the federal criminal justice and service response. There is also little published data of how well Victorian services meet the needs of persons coming forward to seek assistance and intervention for potential, threatened or formalised forced marriage/s.
In exploring both the shift that has followed the inclusion of forced marriage as a statutory example of family violence and the opportunities it presents, this project seeks to contribute to:
This report is based on research that has sought to lay a foundation that illuminates the current state of service response to forced marriage in Victoria, and to identify next steps in relation to how this may be improved.