In recent decades, influenced by feminist views, the law’s treatment of domestic violence has swung toward a “mandatory arrest, mandatory prosecution” model in which the full weight of criminal law is brought to bear on alleged batterers even if the victim would prefer not to press charges; reinforcing this model are mandatory-reporting laws requiring medical and other professionals to report on cases of likely battering. In Insult to Injury: Rethinking our Responses to Intimate Abuse, however, NYU social work and law professor Linda Mills argues that in practice this model often works against the interests of actual victims of domestic violence, undermining their power to improve their situations and discouraging them from seeking medical attention or other forms of assistance. Description and prologue from Princeton Univ. Press; reviews by Cathy Young (Reason), Clay Evans (Scripps Howard), Trish Oberweis (Law and Politics Book Review)(see Mar. 16 and Mar. 29, 2000; Mar. 4, 2002).
“Insult to Injury”
In recent decades, influenced by feminist views, the law’s treatment of domestic violence has swung toward a “mandatory arrest, mandatory prosecution” model in which the full weight of criminal law is brought to bear on alleged batterers even if the victim would prefer not to press charges; reinforcing this model are mandatory-reporting laws requiring medical […]
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