This article examines sentencing for male intimate partner violence against women since the 1996 enactment of s 718.2(a)(ii) of the Criminal Code, which requires that a spousal/common-law relationship between an offender and victim be considered an aggravating factor in sentencing. The article argues that, while in general appellate courts in Canada are taking this violence seriously, cases involving level I sexual assaults still demonstrate the longstanding tendency to treat the intimate relationship as mitigating. Further appellate guidance is necessary on how courts should reconcile s 718.2(a)(ii) with s 718.2(e), which requires that all options other than incarceration be considered when sentencing an Indigenous offender. The author arg...
Intimate partner violence (IPV) occurs frequently in Canada, with 35 percent of all women experienci...
grantor: University of TorontoDo some types of violent offenders receive more lenient trea...
Women entering the court system face a challenging experience, in part, because a courtroom can be a...
This article examines sentencing for male intimate partner violence against women since the 1996 ena...
This article examines sentencing trends over the past 18 years for men who kill their intimate partn...
An alarming number of women are in abusive relationships where violence and threats of violence perv...
Academics have considered the treatment of domestic violence in Canada inadequate (Bell, Perez, Good...
The sentencing provisions of section 718.2(a)(i) of the Criminal Code of Canada adopt the view that ...
Feminist scholars have demonstrated the gendered nature of intimate violence and the tendency to put...
Conditional sentencing was introduced in Canada in 1996 and has since gained momentum in the justice...
This article considers the disproportionate incarceration rate of Aboriginal offenders in Canadian p...
This article examines the failure of Canadian sentencing reforms to remedy the over-incarceration of...
The focus of this article is on the judicial application of Canada’s sexual assault doctrine in the ...
Sexual assault is a serious and prevalent crime in Canada, and the legal responses addressing this p...
In August of 1989, Donald Michael Doyle murdered his wife of fifteen years by firing three shots int...
Intimate partner violence (IPV) occurs frequently in Canada, with 35 percent of all women experienci...
grantor: University of TorontoDo some types of violent offenders receive more lenient trea...
Women entering the court system face a challenging experience, in part, because a courtroom can be a...
This article examines sentencing for male intimate partner violence against women since the 1996 ena...
This article examines sentencing trends over the past 18 years for men who kill their intimate partn...
An alarming number of women are in abusive relationships where violence and threats of violence perv...
Academics have considered the treatment of domestic violence in Canada inadequate (Bell, Perez, Good...
The sentencing provisions of section 718.2(a)(i) of the Criminal Code of Canada adopt the view that ...
Feminist scholars have demonstrated the gendered nature of intimate violence and the tendency to put...
Conditional sentencing was introduced in Canada in 1996 and has since gained momentum in the justice...
This article considers the disproportionate incarceration rate of Aboriginal offenders in Canadian p...
This article examines the failure of Canadian sentencing reforms to remedy the over-incarceration of...
The focus of this article is on the judicial application of Canada’s sexual assault doctrine in the ...
Sexual assault is a serious and prevalent crime in Canada, and the legal responses addressing this p...
In August of 1989, Donald Michael Doyle murdered his wife of fifteen years by firing three shots int...
Intimate partner violence (IPV) occurs frequently in Canada, with 35 percent of all women experienci...
grantor: University of TorontoDo some types of violent offenders receive more lenient trea...
Women entering the court system face a challenging experience, in part, because a courtroom can be a...