Lawyers have a duty to confront and challenge
misperceptions about domestic violence because such
stereotypes may affect the relief that they can obtain on
behalf of clients. At a minimum, law students should be
educated about the following myths and realities:
Myth:
Victims of domestic violence like to be beaten.
Fact:
Victims of domestic violence have historically been characterized as masochistic
women who enjoy being beaten. Evidence does not support this anachronistic
psychological theory. Rather, victims of domestic violence desperately want
the abuse to end, and engage in various survival strategies, including calling
the police or seeking help from family members, to protect themselves and
their children.(49) Silence
may also be a survival strategy in some cases. Moreover, enduring a beating
to keep the batterer from attacking the children may be a coping strategy
used by a victim, but does not mean that the victim enjoys it.
Myth:
Victims of domestic violence have psychological disorders.
Fact:
This characterization of battered women as mentally ill stems from the assumption
that victims of domestic violence must be sick or they would not "take" the
abuse. More recent theories demonstrate that battered women resist abuse in
a variety of ways.(50)
In addition, most victims of domestic violence are not mentally ill, although
individuals with mental disabilities are certainly not immune from being abused
by their spouses or intimate partners. Some victims of domestic violence suffer
psychological effects, such as post-traumatic stress disorder or depression,
as a result of being abused.(51)
Myth:
Low self-esteem causes victims to get involved in abusive
relationships.
Fact:
Traditional theories presumed that individuals with adequate self-esteem would
not "allow" themselves to be abused by intimate partners or spouses. In fact,
studies have demonstrated that victims of domestic violence fail to share
common characteristics other than being female.(52)
There is little support for the theory that low self-esteem causes victims
to become involved in abusive relationships, however, some victims may experience
a decrease in self-esteem as a result of being abused, since perpetrators
frequently degrade, humiliate, and criticize victims.
Myth:
Victims of domestic violence never leave their abusers, or
if they do, they just get involved in other abusive
relationships.
Fact:
Most victims of domestic violence leave their abusers,
often several times. It may take a number of attempts to
permanently separate because abusers use violence,
financial control, or threats about the children, to compel
victims to return. Additionally, a lack of support from
friends, family members, or professionals, such as court
personnel, law enforcement officers, counselors, or clergy
members, may cause victims to return. Since the risk of
further violence often increases after victims separate from
their abusers, it can be even harder for victims to leave if
they cannot obtain effective legal relief. Victims who
receive appropriate legal assistance at an early stage
increase their chances of obtaining the protection and
financial security they need to leave their abusers
permanently. While some victims may become involved
with other partners who later begin to abuse them, there is
no evidence that the majority of victims have this
experience.
Myth:
Batterers abuse their partners or spouses because of alcohol
or drug abuse.
Fact:
Alcohol or substance abuse does not cause perpetrators of domestic violence
to abuse their partners, though it is frequently used as an excuse. Substance
abuse may increase the frequency or severity of violent episodes in some cases.(53)
Because substance abuse does not cause domestic violence, requiring batterers
to attend only substance abuse treatment programs will not effectively end
the violence. Such programs may be useful in conjunction with other programs,
such as batterer intervention programs.
Myth:
Perpetrators of domestic violence abuse their partners or
spouses because they are under a lot of stress or
unemployed.
Fact:
Stress or unemployment does not cause batterers to abuse
their partners. Since domestic violence cuts across
socioeconomic lines, domestic abuse cannot be attributed to
unemployment or poverty. Similarly, advocates note that if
stress caused domestic violence, batterers would assault
their bosses or co-workers rather than their intimate
partners. Domestic violence flourishes because society
condones spouse or partner abuse, and because perpetrators
learn that they can achieve what they want through the use
of force, without facing serious consequences.
Myth:
Law enforcement and judicial responses, such as arresting
batterers or issuing civil protection orders, are useless.
Fact:
There is a great deal of debate about the efficacy of particular actions
by law enforcement or the judiciary. Research on the usefulness of mandatory
arrest or civil protection orders has yielded conflicting results.(54)
Most experts agree, however, that actions by one piece of the system are only
effective when the rest of the criminal justice and civil systems are functioning,(55)
and that improved protocols can decrease domestic violence related homicides.(56)
Thus, law enforcement officers must make arrests, prosecutors must prosecute
domestic violence cases, and courts must enforce orders and impose sanctions
for criminal convictions. It is important for batterers to receive the message
from the community that domestic violence will not be tolerated, and that
the criminal justice and law enforcement systems will be involved until the
violence ceases.
Myth:
Children are not affected when one parent abuses the other.
Fact:
Studies show that in 50-70% of cases in which a parent abuses another parent,
the children are also physically abused.(57)
Children also suffer emotional, cognitive, behavioral, and developmental impairments
as a result of witnessing domestic violence in the home.(58)
In addition, some children (especially boys) who experience domestic violence
in their homes grow up to repeat the same behavioral patterns.(59)
For example, an advocate at a shelter in North Florida reported that one
abuser threatened to come to the shelter and kill the victim and anyone who
stood in his way. The abuser revealed that he knew where the shelter was because
he stayed there as a child when his mother ran away from his father.(60)
Myth:
Domestic violence is irrelevant to parental fitness.
Fact:
Because children often suffer physical and emotional harm from living in violent
homes, domestic violence is extremely relevant to parental fitness.(61)
A history of domestic violence can indicate that the perpetrating parent physically
or emotionally abuses the child as well as the other parent. In addition,
abusers frequently use the children as pawns to continue to control the other
parent. Further, an abuser's focus on controlling the victim undermines the
abuser's ability to parent because the primary concern is not the child. Courts
should consider the effects of the abuser's behavior on the children when
determining custody and visitation arrangements.
Some courts mistakenly penalize the victim in custody cases by assuming that
the victim is emotionally unstable because of the violence or because the
victim "let the violence happen." In most states, however, custody statutes
now recognize that domestic violence is relevant to the abuser's parental
fitness. Courts in most states are required to consider domestic violence
as a factor in custody determinations or employ a presumption that perpetrators
should not receive custody of the children.(62)
All Law Students Should Be Taught to Screen for Domestic
Violence
Since domestic violence arises in so many areas of practice, as a matter of
professional competency, lawyers must screen for domestic violence. Screening
skills are critical for students in family or criminal law clinics. Teaching
students to screen for abuse can make a great difference to the future professionalism
of all students, however. Presenting information about screening for domestic
violence does more than introduce students to this specialized subject. It also
provides a good example of interviewing techniques necessary for issue-spotting,
a professional skill which few law students practice in a concrete way during
the educational process. To identify victims or perpetrators, law students should
be trained to ask the following types of questions:(63)
- Everyone argues or fights with their partner or
spouse now and then. When you argue or fight at
home, what happens? Do you ever change your
behavior because you are afraid of the consequences
of a fight?
- Do you feel that your partner or spouse treats you
well? Is there anything that goes on at home that
makes you feel afraid?
- Has your partner or spouse ever hurt or threatened
you or your children? Has your partner or spouse
ever put his or her hands on you against your will?
Has your partner or spouse ever forced you to do
something you did not want to do? Does your
partner or spouse criticize you or your children
often?
- Has your partner or spouse ever tried to keep you
from taking medication you needed or from seeking
medical help? Does your partner refuse to let you
sleep at night?
- Has your partner or spouse ever hurt your pets or
destroyed your possessions? Does your partner or
spouse throw or break objects in the home or
damage the home itself during arguments?
- Does your partner or spouse act jealously, for
example, always calling you at work or home to
check up on you? Is it hard for you to maintain
relationships with your friends, relatives, neighbors,
or co-workers because your partner or spouse
disapproves of them? Does your partner or spouse
accuse you unjustly of flirting with others or having
affairs? Has your partner or spouse ever tried to
keep you from leaving the house?
- Does your spouse or partner make it hard for you to
find or keep a job or go to school?
- Does your partner or spouse withhold money from
you when you need it? Do you know what your
family's assets are? Do you know where important
documents like bank books, check books, financial
statements, birth certificates, and passports for you
and members of your family are kept? If you
wanted to see or use any of them, would your
partner or spouse make it difficult for you to do so?
- Has your spouse or partner ever forced you to have
sex or made you do things during sex that made you
feel uncomfortable? Does your partner demand sex
when you are sick, tired, or sleeping?
- Has your spouse or partner ever used or threatened
to use a weapon against you?
In addition to asking screening questions of all
clients, lawyers should be aware of common warning signs
that may indicate that a client is a victim of domestic abuse.
Law students should be trained to look for the following
signals:
- Does the client show evidence of severe, recurring
or life-threatening abuse, for example, repeated
bruises or broken bones?
- Does the client have to ask permission of her spouse
to make decisions? Does the client's spouse or
partner constantly make the client follow rules
about what she and the children can or cannot do?
- Does the client's partner or spouse continuously
degrade or belittle the client, or accuse the client of
being stupid, unattractive, a bad parent, unfaithful,
or any other similar fault?
- Is the case being litigated in an unusually aggressive
manner by the client's partner or spouse?
- Does the client have difficulty making or keeping
appointments because of his or her partner or
spouse?
- Does the client's partner or spouse insist on
accompanying your client to every appointment?
Does the client's partner or spouse try to speak for
the client, in order to control the information the
client shares?
- Does the client's partner or spouse harass the client
constantly, through phone calls or stalking?
- Has the client's partner or spouse prevented the
client from keeping a job or completing a job
training program?
All Law Students Should Be Taught to Conduct Safety
Planning With Victims of Domestic Violence
Safety planning is critical when representing a client who has been battered
or threatened by an intimate partner. Evidence has shown that the danger of
violence, including the risk of death, escalates when a domestic violence survivor
attempts to leave a batterer.(64)
Seeking legal assistance is a step towards independence which threatens a batterer's
sense of control and may further endanger a survivor. For this reason, lawyers
who represent clients who are planning to separate from their batterers must
alert their clients to the increased likelihood of violence and help them develop
safety plans.
Effective lawyering requires practitioners to serve a
broad range of client needs. For example, an estate
planning attorney might be required to explain certain tax
ramifications to a client, or to refer a client to a tax
specialist. Similarly, lawyers engaged in general practice
should be prepared to offer their clients the information
necessary to assure their safety, should domestic violence
issues emerge. Teaching law students how to conduct basic
safety planning, as well as how and when to make referrals
to safety services such as hotlines or shelters, will help
students develop the most comprehensive skills, tools, and
resources, to fully address client needs.
It is also crucial for students with direct client contact to conduct ongoing
safety planning with clients who continue to live with their batterers. Law
students may need to modify their practices so that they do not inadvertently
endanger clients who are victims of domestic violence. In addition, they must
assist clients to develop comprehensive safety plans which include survival
strategies at home, in the workplace, and in court.(65)
The Appendix contains a comprehensive safety plan for use by attorneys and law
students working with victims of intimate violence.
Criminal Law
Domestic violence issues arise frequently in the
criminal law context, allowing for fascinating debates or
analytical discussions. Domestic violence examples can
illustrate criminal law defenses, ranging from duress and
self defense (by victims) to cultural defenses asserted by
perpetrators. Using the example of a battered woman who
commits crimes because her abuser has threatened to kill
her can serve a dual purpose, teaching students about the
potential lethality of domestic violence while illustrating
the concept of duress.
Domestic violence examples can also be used to discuss prosecutorial discretion
or the distinction between state and federal criminal law. For example, a leading
Supreme Court case on double jeopardy focuses on domestic violence. United
States v. Dixon provides an excellent illustration of the constitutionality
of enforcing civil protection orders through criminal contempt even if the state
pursues criminal prosecution of crimes committed when the protection order was
violated, as long as the contempt proceeding and the criminal prosecution require
proof of additional elements.(66)
When students in criminal law courses discuss crimes such as assault, rape,
kidnapping, stalking, and murder, they should be informed that the majority
of violent crimes against women are committed by persons whom they know.(67)
Many criminal law textbooks contain examples of domestic violence cases, yet
fail to address the dynamics of domestic violence or the practice implications
for prosecutors, defense attorneys, or judges. Failure to discuss examples of
criminal behavior between family members or intimate partners reinforces the
myth that only strangers commit violent crimes, and that what happens inside
the home is a family matter which should not be handled by the criminal justice
system.
A criminal law course is also an excellent forum in
which to discuss recent federal and state legislative
initiatives designed to criminalize and combat domestic
violence. For instance, a professor might discuss how the
Interstate Stalking Act and the Violence Against Women
Act filled the gaps left unaddressed in state criminal codes,
allowing victims to seek federal relief for stalking or
interstate domestic violence.
It is also important for students to learn about the
impact of law enforcement and prosecutorial discretion on
victims of domestic violence. Traditionally, law
enforcement officers were reluctant to arrest perpetrators,
and prosecutors hesitated to prosecute domestic violence
cases. Students should be aware of this history, as well as
recent responses of the law enforcement and criminal
justice systems, such as specialized domestic violence units
within police departments and prosecution offices.
When presenting information on mitigating
circumstances or criminal defenses, instructors can raise
domestic violence issues as examples. For instance, an
expert witness who testifies about the effects of battering
on a defendant who killed her abuser illustrates the
usefulness of expert testimony. Similarly, the concept of
self defense can be readily discussed in the context of
domestic violence cases.
In addition, a significant number of criminal law professors examine whether
battered women who kill their abusers should be permitted to introduce evidence
of battered woman syndrome(68)
in their cases. Any discussion of battered woman syndrome should include contrasting
opinions. Some experts have suggested, for example, that the term "battered
woman syndrome" pathologizes victims of domestic violence and inaccurately describes
the evidence introduced.(69)
Law review articles about the advantages or drawbacks of utilizing expert testimony
on "battered woman syndrome" have substantially affected practice in the field,
and demonstrate the impact of social change on the law and vice versa.
Civil Procedure
Civil procedure courses should address
jurisdictional issues in family law cases, as well as in large
civil cases. Domestic violence hypotheticals can illustrate a
variety of civil procedure issues, since flight from domestic
violence often requires tribunals in various states to
exercise jurisdiction over related court proceedings. Such
cases can bring to life for students the topics of notice,
service, personal and subject matter jurisdiction, and full
faith and credit for out of state court orders.
For instance, the following hypothetical might assist
students to understand the difficult civil procedure and
safety issues confronted by victims who cross state lines:
A victim of domestic violence obtains a protection order in Maryland,
and then flees to California with the children when her husband continues
to batter her and threaten the children. If the husband stalks the family
to California, and violates the Maryland protection order by beating his wife
and children, how can the Maryland protection order be enforced by California
courts and law enforcement?(70)
Through this example, students can discuss whether the
husband was served properly in Maryland with the
protection order, or whether his due process rights would
be violated by enforcement. Additionally, students can
discuss the conflicts of law matters that are raised if the
victim files for custody in California while the husband
remains in Maryland. This raises complex issues, such as
the following:
- Does the California court have appropriate subject
matter and personal jurisdiction over the custody
matter and the husband?
- Have interstate custody jurisdictional statutes been
satisfied?
- What happens if the husband files for custody in
Maryland?
Discussing this hypothetical could thereby familiarize
students with a range of civil procedure and domestic
violence issues.
Torts
Tort courses may prove to be an interesting and
useful non-traditional forum in which to teach domestic
violence law. This class can bring home to students the
fact that knowledge of domestic violence cases can be
integral to the general practice of law.
A list of the most common injuries and problems resulting from a perpetrator's
actions is comparable to a table of contents in a tort law textbook: assault,
battery, intentional or negligent infliction of emotional distress, marital
torts, various property torts, trespass, false imprisonment, wrongful death,
and economic torts, such as tortious interference with contractual relations,
fraud, fraudulent transfer or concealment, and breach of fiduciary duty. Domestic
violence cases have even given rise to some new torts: tortious conduct causing
"battered women's syndrome"(71);
and the eponymous tort of domestic violence.(72)
A particularly interesting trend in tort litigation
involving domestic violence is the portrayal of domestic
violence as a continuous tort, rather than a series of isolated
actions. Using these cases as examples, instructors can
introduce students to concepts such as the tolling of the
statute of limitations. Additionally, discussing domestic
violence as a continuous tort can illustrate for students the
strategic significance of offering the court evidence of a
continuous history of harmful actions -- rather than a series
of isolated incidents -- in order to create a clearer picture of
the egregious nature of such conduct. Torts classes may
also raise the issue of how spousal immunity laws affect
domestic abuse cases.
Teaching domestic violence as a tort law issue will
ultimately help victims. Many victims of domestic
violence end up financially devastated. This may result
from the abuser's control of the family's finances or
exhaustion of the family resources through continuous or
protracted litigation. Many victims are unable to obtain
compensation for their financial losses through protection
order, divorce or criminal proceedings. For some victims,
the only legal avenue available to obtain compensation or
reach assets unjustly held by the abuser is a tort action.
Civil suits may provide victims with financial
remedies for the wrongful acts of their abusers, potentially
covering lost wages, pain and suffering, medical and
psychological treatment costs, and expenses for relocation
and protection. An added benefit of teaching domestic
violence as a part of tort law is changing lawyers'
perceptions that domestic violence cases are financial
drains on the regular practice of law. Instead, law students
may learn that domestic violence cases can be as realistic a
part of practice as any other type of tort case.
Property
Even traditional property law issues apply to
domestic violence cases. Abusers quite commonly take or
destroy victims' property as a further means of controlling
and manipulating their intimate partners. For example, an
abuser may take and sell the victim's jewelry or break
windows or doors in the victim's home to threaten her or
control her life. The abuser may destroy a cherished object
or family heirloom to punish the victim or trespass on her
property in order to stalk or harass her. The abuser may
even smash the victim's car or slash the victim's tires to
prevent the victim from going to work or seeking help. A
victim may find the best legal recourse by undertaking
court action to obtain compensation or injunctive relief for
interference with property interests, conversion, trespass to
chattels, replevin, or destruction of property.
Knowledge of other kinds of property law can ultimately serve victims of domestic
violence well. For example, a real property lawyer can offer pro bono
assistance to domestic violence shelters by providing legal representation in
real estate transactions. A lawyer can also help shelter programs seeking changes
in land use or zoning laws in order to create a domestic violence program. Shelters
may also require assistance with financing, property taxes, property insurance,
and maintenance and upkeep matters. Real property lawyers also have a role to
play in helping shelter programs prepare and submit applications for short and
long term financing, housing subsidies, or grants to private sector, public
sector and quasi-public sector lenders, including charitable foundations.(73)
Property also becomes a critical issue in domestic relations cases. Historically,
property laws have put women at a disadvantage in dissolution proceedings. Property
courses should examine this historical bias, as well as the current impact of
domestic violence on the use, disposition, and division of marital property.
An inclusive course will review statutory provisions, such as protection order
statutes, which cover the use and possession of property. In addition, professors
should discuss how the dynamics of domestic violence affect property distribution.
For example, a victims' fear of physical retribution may affect her negotiating
stance(74) with regard to
property.
Contracts
A creative contracts instructor can introduce the
issue of domestic violence in hypotheticals. For instance,
an abusive spouse may use threats or violence to force the
victim to sign contracts unwillingly. This scenario raises
the issue of whether contracts signed under duress are
enforceable.
An example of a pre-nuptial agreement signed by a victim and an abuser might
illustrate to students both the concepts of signing contracts under duress and
the use of financial coercion by perpetrators of domestic violence. To be valid,
the prenuptial agreement must have been entered into knowingly and voluntarily.
If the abuser, however, coerced the victim into signing the prenuptial agreement
by threats of violence or actual battering, a court may invalidate the agreement.(75)
Evidence of premarital domestic violence might also show a lack of substantive
fairness in provisions made for the prospective spouse.(76)
Constitutional Law
As domestic violence crimes and remedies increasingly become federalized,
constitutional law courses can address domestic violence legal issues. The VAWA
provides an interesting example of federal versus state powers, including the
role of the Commerce Clause and the Equal Protection Clause in enacting federal
statutes. For instance, the civil rights remedy for gender-motivated violence,
enacted recently under the VAWA, has been declared constitutional by several
district court judges and unconstitutional by another.(77)
The Connecticut District Court upheld the civil rights remedy, finding that
violence against women substantially affected interstate commerce; the Virginia
District Court, in contrast, found that the link between gender-based violence
and interstate commerce was too tenuous to satisfy the Supreme Court's standard
in U.S. v. Lopez.(78)
Legal and religious responses to domestic violence
can also reach constitutional proportions. Advocates have
begun to report cases in which perpetrators, required by
court order to stay away from victims, have been counseled
by their pastors to come to services as a sign of repentance
or rehabilitation even though the victims regularly attend
services. Advocates report that perpetrators have sought to
vacate the court orders or avoid sanctions for violating the
orders by claiming that their First Amendment religious
rights have been unconstitutionally abridged.
Professional Responsibility and Ethics
Domestic violence examples are ripe for discussion
in a Professional Responsibility or Ethics course. For
instance, representing an alleged batterer illustrates the
difficulties in providing zealous representation, raising the
following questions: What obligation does counsel have
when the client wants to vacate a civil protection order?
What obligation does the attorney have to independently
authenticate the facts that the client suggests? What should
an attorney do when he or she believes that an abusive
client wants to seek custody of children? How should
counsel respond if the client threatens to harm the opposing
party or children? Examining these questions can provide a
rich and valuable inquiry by students and faculty.
Representing victims of domestic violence also
raises professional responsibility questions, particularly
relating to the safety of the victim and the children. For
instance, an attorney may believe that the children are in
danger if the victim returns to an abusive relationship, yet
attorney-client privilege precludes the attorney from
disclosing this information. A lawyer may also have to
weigh safety concerns when giving legal advice; for
instance, a lawyer may advise a client to file charges or
testify in criminal court, yet the client may fear that she will
be killed by her abuser if she goes forward with the case.
An attorney can best serve a client by providing the client
with the range of legal options, outlining the potential
outcomes, and pursuing the client's choice of action.
Domestic violence also raises competency and malpractice issues. Lawyers who
commit domestic violence against their partners are increasingly facing disciplinary
sanctions from the bar.(79)
In addition, lawyers who become aware of underlying domestic violence issues
in their cases have an ethical, moral, and fiduciary duty to address their clients'
safety concerns. Attorneys must assess perpetrator lethality and help clients
develop comprehensive safety plans. Failure to do so could not only constitute
malpractice, but could also endanger a client's life.
Attorneys who represent victims and fail to address
the violence have not represented their clients competently.
In addition to jeopardizing their clients' physical well-being, attorneys may be liable if they failed to raise relevant
statutory exemptions. For example, family lawyers who do
not raise domestic violence issues in custody proceedings
may be neglecting statutory provisions requiring courts to
consider domestic violence as a factor in custody
determinations. If this omission results in a custody
decision in favor of an abuser, the victim's lawyer has
failed to represent the victim competently. Examining
these types of issues can help law students understand the
real life consequences of ethical or professional violations
by lawyers.
Legal Research and Writing
Legal Research and Writing courses can educate
students about domestic violence and provide them with the
opportunity to assist victims. Instructors may utilize
domestic violence fact patterns to familiarize students with
the dynamics of domestic violence and the legal remedies
available. In addition, students can research legal issues
and prepare memoranda, motions, and briefs that can be
used by attorneys who are working on actual cases. A legal
research and writing seminar could develop a relationship
with a local domestic violence shelter or program; students
could then conduct legal research and draft memoranda on
topics requested by the programs. Many students will learn
more about legal research methods and produce better
products when they are working on issues that affect real
people.
Domestic violence issues are ripe for legal research
and writing not only in first-year courses, but also in more
advanced courses on legislative process. Across the
country, states are developing domestic violence legislation
at a rapid rate on topics including custody, insurance
discrimination, mandatory reporting, and criminal law
standards, among others. Students in legislative process
courses could conduct legal research and help draft cutting
edge legislation with local advocacy groups.
Trial Advocacy and Moot Court
Law students look forward eagerly to participating
in trial advocacy courses and moot court competitions.
Because many law students do not have the opportunity to
enroll in clinical programs, trial advocacy courses or moot
court gives students a chance to gain "courtroom
experience" prior to graduation. Instructors can utilize
domestic violence hypotheticals in both of these types of
programs.
Trial advocacy classes teach courtroom skills such
as examining witnesses, introducing evidence, and
developing case theories and strategies. A domestic
violence scenario can offer many creative opportunities for
practice and discussion. For example, an instructor may
wish to examine the relative merits of different kinds of
testimony and corroborative evidence, and teach students to
balance these to achieve a successful presentation of a case.
In domestic violence cases, complex issues often arise
regarding the credibility of witnesses (e.g., the victim
testifies that the abuser has committed acts of domestic
violence and the abuser then testifies that all of the acts
alleged are actually the victim's fault). Students can use
this kind of scenario to experiment with examination styles
that enhance, destroy, or rehabilitate the testimony of the
witnesses. A domestic violence hypothetical can also
address the issue of what to do if a primary witness, such as
the victim, recants her testimony out of fear that the abuser
might harm her if she testifies. Students can learn to
protect the victim's safety first, and then use corroborative
evidence to present the case in such situations.
In moot court competitions, instructors often look
for legal issues which are complex enough to engage law
students' interest and creativity, but are also relevant to
contemporary issues. Domestic violence fact patterns,
which are generally both compelling and complicated, can
be useful in this regard. For example, a common reason for
appeal in domestic violence custody cases is whether the
court complied with statutory requirements regarding the
weighing of evidence of domestic violence. Another topic
which might yield interesting results would be the
constitutionality of a federal law creating a lifetime
prohibition for domestic violence misdemeanants against
possessing or purchasing a firearm. By utilizing these
kinds of hypotheticals when teaching students about the
realities of litigation experience, instructors can offer
training on domestic violence issues, and can illustrate
general principles of trial practice.
Teaching Domestic Violence Legal Issues
in Law School Upper-Level Courses
Teaching domestic violence legal issues in upper-level courses provides students
with an opportunity to learn about the complexity of domestic violence issues
and how they relate to other legal issues, in intellectually challenging and
participatory forums. A growing number of law schools offer seminar courses
which focus specifically on domestic violence law.(80)
In addition, domestic violence issues are being incorporated into upper-level
seminars addressing family law, criminal law, evidence, and professional responsibility,
to prepare students to practice competently in these areas of law.
Domestic Violence Upper-Level Courses
Domestic violence seminar courses(81)
familiarize students with a range of legal issues because domestic violence
has an impact on such varied fields of law. Law school professors teaching upper
level seminars may emphasize certain facets of domestic violence law, such as
sanctions in the criminal justice system, or the effect of family violence on
custody law, depending on their academic interests or areas of individual expertise.
The majority of these courses, however, address a range of legal topics, and
integrate sociological theories about battering into the course materials.
A typical domestic violence seminar might begin
with an overview of domestic abuse and the response of the
legal system. Starting with a discussion of the historical
underpinnings of recently enacted domestic violence laws,
instructors may discuss the dearth of legal remedies
available to victims prior to the latter half of this century.
A review of legal history, including the dependent legal
status of women, the traditional prohibition against women
owning property, and cultural beliefs that women should
submit to men, provides an excellent illustration of how
social change can lead to major legal evolutions. The
seminar might then examine recent remedies in the civil
legal system, such as civil protection orders or long-term
domestic relations orders. Conflicts of law and
jurisdictional issues may be raised by considering interstate
child custody cases in which victims have fled from
domestic violence.
Again, in discussing the historical evolution of the
law, instructors may show students how criminal responses
to domestic violence were unavailable to women in part
because of cultural attitudes about the insignificance of
violence against women. Law students can study new
interdisciplinary trends in legal responses, including
criminal law issues, such as the prosecution of domestic
violence crimes in state and federal courts. Upper level
courses may address recent enactments in federal law, such
as the VAWA or firearms legislation prohibiting
perpetrators from possessing weapons. This material can
provide an excellent opportunity for discussing how
legislative responsibilities shift between state and federal
levels. A number of upper level courses discuss cases in
which battered women kill their abusers, including the
application of criminal defenses, differing state responses, a
trend toward convictions or acquittals, and the use of
gubernatorial pardons.
Domestic violence seminars may also address the
economic consequences of domestic violence. For
instance, law students may learn of the potential for
recovery under tort law for acts of domestic violence.
Students may also discuss the effects of recent changes in
welfare law on victims of abuse. A growing understanding
of the impact of domestic violence on the workplace may
lead law school professors to incorporate aspects of
employment law into domestic violence seminars.
Most courses also include cross-cultural or multidisciplinary information
about domestic violence, such as psychological theories about battering, the
effects of family violence on victims from various communities,(82)
or the need for differing responses based on the cultural or linguistic issues
in particular cases. Law students may be exposed to immigration law by considering
the provisions for battered immigrant spouses enacted under the VAWA. Other
seminars might focus on the impact of family violence on children, or the response
of Child Protective Services to battered women.
Students exposed to these issues can learn that
lawyering may require creative approaches to legal and
social issues that go beyond application of "black-letter
law." A growing number of upper level courses use
domestic violence issues to teach students about lawyering
for social change. Such courses often emphasize the need
for multidisciplinary responses to family violence by the
health, law enforcement, prosecution, and judicial
professions, among others. Professors may choose to invite
guest speakers to the seminar, enriching the students'
exposure to community leaders. For example, a prosecutor
from a domestic violence unit may be able to communicate
to students the unusual challenges that arise in prosecuting
domestic violence cases. The prosecutor might discuss
methods of introducing evidence in domestic violence
cases, such as the requirements for an excited utterance
hearsay exception. Students are likely to comprehend the
tensions in domestic violence cases and the practical
implications of the hearsay rule when taught by
practitioners from the field.
Law school professors teaching domestic violence courses often attempt to
integrate theory with practice by linking students to local community organizations
or the national battered women's movement. Some professors survey practitioners
in the field to collect research topics for their students, providing students
with the opportunity to work with national experts and draft research papers
with practical implications. Students in upper-level courses have the opportunity
to improve their legal scholarship and develop seminal academic papers on domestic
violence legal issues. In other seminars, students and professors may view the
course as a potential "think tank" for the future.(83)
While domestic violence courses can provide law
students with a grounding in domestic violence law and
related legal topics, such courses can also be used to
explore broader theoretical frameworks. A leading
domestic violence expert summarizes the possibilities as
follows:
"Battering raises fundamental intellectual and political issues about
feminist theory and practice, about law as an instrument of social change,
and about the development and role of legal remedies. Battering also presents
important jurisprudential issues, such as the interrelationship between law
and social science. It is not only an important subject in and of itself because
of the impact it has on society in general, but also because it is a lens
for looking at central issues concerning the transformative possibilities
and limits of the law."(84)
Upper Level Courses in Which Domestic Violence Issues
are a Central Component
Since a goal of legal education is to prepare students
to practice law competently upon passing the bar, domestic
violence issues should be integrated into upper-level
courses. While domestic violence issues could be raised in
virtually every course, it is vital to incorporate domestic
violence issues into family law, criminal law, and evidence
courses. Without the inclusion of domestic violence issues
in such courses, students will be ill equipped to practice in
these fields upon graduation.
Family Law Courses
Family law attorneys recognize that domestic violence issues permeate the
practice of family law.(85)
Family law statutes may carve out domestic violence
exceptions in custody, visitation, or mediation statutes, for
example. Domestic violence also affects the clients' needs
for spousal support or for use and possession of property.
Family law practitioners must be trained to screen for
domestic violence and to conduct safety planning with
clients, since family law cases can be volatile and
dangerous when one party has abused the other party.
Criminal Law Seminars
Similarly, criminal law seminars should address criminal issues involving
domestic violence. To emphasize the pervasiveness of domestic violence issues
in criminal cases, law students should be informed that, according to the U.S.
Department of Justice, in 29% of cases in which a lone offender committed violence
against a woman, the perpetrator was the victim's husband, ex-husband, boyfriend,
or ex-boyfriend.(86) Criminal
law seminars may examine how domestic violence affects criminal law defenses,
such as duress or self defense. Criminal law professors might also discuss the
impact of domestic violence on prosecution or defense strategies. Students should
be introduced to concepts such as vertical prosecution, no-drop prosecution,
and the use of expert testimony on the common effects of battering.(87)
Evidence Seminars
Evidence courses draw a large number of law
students who intend to practice criminal law and who will
therefore handle domestic violence cases as practitioners.
As a result, evidence courses should address domestic
violence issues, which can provide particularly apt
examples for seminar discussions. For instance, a number
of hearsay exceptions, such as the excited utterance or the
present sense impression exceptions, could arise in
domestic violence cases. Domestic violence cases can
teach law students to introduce police reports or medical
records, to qualify domestic violence experts, or to impeach
witnesses. Raising these examples in evidence seminars
serves the dual purpose of teaching students the rules of
evidence and preparing students to handle domestic
violence cases.
All Upper Level Courses Can Maintain Links to the
Community
Professors offering established domestic violence
courses suggest that law students and victims benefit from
courses that encourage students to develop and maintain
links to victim services organizations. Not only do law
students learn firsthand how the law affects individual
cases, but they can also create connections with
practitioners in the field. This may serve students well
upon graduation, in the form of job leads, references, or
mentoring relationships. Victims may receive better
services if law students contribute their research efforts to
issues identified by domestic violence coalitions or shelters.
Victims also reap the future benefits of a generation of
lawyers well-trained on domestic violence matters.
Upper-level seminar courses establish links to the
community in a variety of ways. Under instructor
supervision, law students may conduct research or draft
legislation for use by community task forces developing
new ways to address domestic violence locally. Guest
speakers may be invited to speak at the seminars, or
students may perform legislative or legal research for local
or regional advocacy groups. Some of the most active
seminar courses provide an in-class component on domestic
violence or public interest law, and permit students to
receive credit for externships in the community. Law
students may participate in domestic violence prosecution
units, legal aid organizations, or victim advocacy programs,
among others.
Upper-Level Courses May Serve As A Prerequisite to
Clinical Programs
In some law schools, students may be required to
participate in domestic violence law seminars as a
prerequisite to participating in domestic violence clinical
programs. This requirement may allow students to absorb
information about domestic violence legal issues more
fully, without the additional pressure of representing clients
in court, often for the first time. Students would have the
opportunity to fully assimilate legal and psychological
information about domestic violence before being required
to implement it. In the clinical program, students can then
focus on improving their lawyering and procedural skills,
and using domestic violence law to obtain legal relief for
clients.
All Courses Should Address the Impact of Domestic
Violence on Diverse Communities
Most legal responses to domestic violence are
designed to help a particular "type" of victim: a woman
who has passively endured the abuse; who is willing and
grateful for any assistance offered; and who shares the
beliefs, values, and background of the lawyer or judge
handling her case. Legal professionals may fail to offer
appropriate assistance to victims who do not fit this profile,
particularly if they have difficulty overcoming linguistic or
cultural barriers. Victims from diverse communities, who
may already be reluctant seek help from courts or law
enforcement, may be even more discouraged if culturally
appropriate services are unavailable. The most recent
changes in law, while effective in improving many aspects
of legal remedies offered to victims, sometimes fail to
consider the ways in which cultural or linguistic issues
complicate domestic violence cases.
At the most basic level, law students should learn about the impact of domestic
violence on diverse communities because misunderstandings can endanger the victim
or result in discriminatory treatment of victims or abusers. The most important
message to convey to students is that domestic violence affects individuals
from all races, religions, ethnicities, age groups, sexual orientations, and
socioeconomic levels.(88)
Law students who understand cultural and linguistic differences in domestic
violence cases can enhance their own professionalism. Providing education about
the cross-cultural effects of domestic violence will help create more qualified
lawyers, and may make the system more accessible to victims from diverse backgrounds.
Battered Immigrant Spouses
Cultural factors may inhibit victims from accessing local legal services or
domestic violence programs. Battered immigrant women confront barriers in seeking
legal assistance that non-immigrant victims do not face, including language
or cultural barriers, or fears of the legal system or deportation.(89)
Law students should be aware that perpetrators often threaten to deport their
immigrant spouses or partners. While the VAWA provides protection to battered
immigrant spouses by reducing the ability of perpetrators to control their spouses'
immigration status, some victims may not be aware of their legal rights, and
other victims may be unable to utilize the VAWA provisions.(90)
Battered immigrants may also be afraid that the legal system will not help
them, based on experiences with repressive or non-responsive legal systems in
their countries of origin. Lawyers for battered immigrants may need to discuss
the American legal system with their clients,(91)
and explain what relief is available for victims of domestic violence. To effectively
use these legal remedies, lawyers must ensure that interpreters are available
for their clients during interviews and court appearances.
Serving Victims From Racial or Ethnic Minority Groups
Law students should be aware that victims from some racial or ethnic minority
groups may have additional barriers in obtaining legal relief to end family
violence. For example, victims may experience racism when they seek services
from providers who characterize Latino men(92)
or African-American men as violent, or women of color as more prone to victimization
or immune from it. The history of institutional and individual racism against
members of the African-American community may lead many victims to avoid the
police and the courts because they are part of a system that has historically
discriminated against African-Americans.(93)
Women of color who are victims of domestic violence may also suffer from the
intersection of the effects of racism and sex discrimination.(94)
Latina or Asian victims, or victims from other minority groups, may hesitate
to seek help if domestic violence programs do not provide culturally or linguistically
appropriate services.(95)
Even if victims do not confront overt stereotypes from service providers, it
may be difficult for them to obtain useful services. For example, victims from
particular communities may have dietary needs that are unmet by most domestic
violence shelters(96) or
may speak languages other than English. In some communities, domestic violence
programs have proved to be more effective when culturally tailored to the population
they serve. For example, some batterer intervention programs teach batterers
that spouse abuse is not inherent in Native American culture, but rather developed
from outside influences.(97)
Law students serving Native American clients need to understand not only the
cultural values which shape concepts of justice for various tribes, but also
how tribal laws and courts intersect with state responses to domestic violence.(98)
Even when appropriate services are available, victims may face pressure from
within their own communities to endure the violence or deal with it privately
because of allegiance to the community. Women of color may hesitate to contact
law enforcement to arrest their batterers because of a pattern of police brutality
against members of the community.(99)
Similarly, victims may be reluctant to involve the criminal justice system,
which has historically perpetuated discrimination. To effectively advocate on
behalf of victims, lawyers must understand the role of these cultural and historical
factors, and work with victims to develop safe and acceptable solutions to end
the violence.
Victims of Same-Sex Battering
Victims of same-sex battering confront a range of
challenges when seeking legal relief in domestic violence
cases. Perpetrators of same-sex violence may threaten to
reveal the victim's sexual orientation to the victim's family
members or employer to prevent the victim from seeking
help. Such threats may be effective in keeping victims
silent for fear of losing their jobs, facing discrimination, or
altering their family or personal relationships.
Victims who seek outside assistance may confront
anti-gay or lesbian discrimination by a range of service
providers. Law enforcement officers may fail to arrest
perpetrators of domestic violence, claiming that they could
not determine who was the perpetrator and who was the
victim, or they may arrest both parties. Statutory
protections may be limited to opposite-sex couples, or
courts may be unwilling to intervene in cases involving
same-sex violence. Supportive services, such as counseling
or shelter for victims or perpetrators of intimate violence,
may not be tailored to lesbian or gay individuals.
In addition to facing difficulties in obtaining services, same-sex victims
may face pressures from within the gay or lesbian community to keep the violence
a secret.(100) Well-meaning
friends or acquaintances may be afraid that disclosing same-sex intimate violence
will fuel homophobia or stereotypes about gay or lesbian relationships. Without
legal assistance, however, victims of same-sex violence may be unable to escape
from the violence. It is therefore critical for lawyers to be aware of the obstacles
that gay or lesbian victims confront when seeking assistance from law enforcement,
the judiciary, or service providers.
Victims From Religious Communities
Victims who are closely involved with religious communities may believe that
their religious tenets conflict with legal principles or rights. For example,
victims or their family members may have religious beliefs that emphasize the
sanctity of the family and prohibit or discourage divorce. In some cases, religious
tenets may require wives to obtain their husbands' permission for divorce, giving
perpetrators an additional means of control.(101)
The moral or emotional turmoil this creates for victims means that lawyers may
have to resort to creative responses to avoid forcing victims to choose between
deeply held spiritual beliefs and traditional legal remedies.
Victims who disclose the violence to community
leaders may not receive support from their religious
communities. They often report that when they sought help
from religious leaders to end the family violence, they were
told it was their duty to make the marriage work. When the
religious community offers a solution completely at odds
with that offered by the legal system, lawyers and judges
should be prepared to consider solutions which provide
victims with the greatest safety and support.
Some victims who live in insular religious
communities may be afraid to reveal the family violence to
service providers outside of their community. They may
fear that if they seek outside assistance, members of their
community will ostracize them or support the perpetrator,
particularly if the religion emphasizes the rights of men to
rule their families. Lawyers should be aware of the barriers
and complications that victims from religious communities
face when they seek legal relief.
Serving Victims with Disabilities and Victims of Elder
Abuse
Law students should also recognize the obstacles
that victims of elder abuse or victims with disabilities
confront when seeking legal assistance. Individuals from
these populations can be particularly vulnerable to abuse by
intimate partners or spouses if they are physically unable to
seek help. Victims of elder abuse may also be abused by
persons who are not their intimate partners or spouses, such
as their adult children or care-givers. Battered older
persons or victims with disabilities may find it extremely
difficult to separate from their abusers if their abusers are
their sole caretakers.
Perpetrators of abuse exercise additional forms of control over victims from
these populations. For instance, abusers may over-medicate or under-medicate
disabled victims(102) or
refuse to buy food for elderly spouses. Lawyers should be aware that these factors
may complicate domestic violence cases.
In addition, when disabled victims seek assistance,
they may find that appropriate services are unavailable.
Shelters may not be equipped to physically accommodate
victims with disabilities. Domestic violence programs or
legal services organizations may not have access to
interpreters for deaf victims. Courts may not understand
that a disabled or elderly victim's survival requires strict
enforcement of financial support orders. Lawyers who are
trained to recognize these issues will be better able to serve
clients who are victims of domestic violence.
Clinical Programs Can Provide Direct
Services to Victims of Domestic Violence
Clinical programs across the country have begun to address domestic violence
legal issues in innovative and comprehensive ways. Several domestic violence
clinical programs have been created as a result of student interest or advocacy.(103)
Some law schools have established domestic violence clinics in which students
represent battered clients in civil or criminal cases. Other law schools have
general clinics which simply address domestic violence issues when they arise.
Regardless of their structure, clinical programs which train students to represent
victims provide needed services to community members while enhancing student
skills.
Clinical Programs Assist Victims to Obtain Protection
Orders
The majority of domestic violence clinical programs
train students to represent clients in protection order
hearings. Protection order statutes in every state, tribe, and
territory permit victims of domestic violence to seek
immediate relief from the courts. Depending on the state or
tribal law, courts may be authorized to order perpetrators to
refrain from abusing or contacting victims, as well as
ordering other relief. For example, most courts may
include short-term orders pertaining to custody, visitation,
use and possession of property, and financial relief.
Protection order cases thus provide students with the
opportunity to litigate cases from beginning to end, while
enriching their understanding of domestic relations,
evidence, criminal, and property law.
Protection order clinics teach students a range of
substantive and procedural legal skills. Students generally
attend classes taught by supervising attorneys for several
hours a week; classes may focus on substantive legal
issues, trial practice skills, or specific challenges arising in
individual cases. Students also spend an average of 15-20
hours a week preparing their cases, meeting with clients,
witnesses, and supervising attorneys, and representing
clients in court. Protection order clinics generally train
students to develop lawyering skills in the following areas:
interviewing clients, investigating cases, writing motions,
preparing witnesses (including expert witnesses) for trial,
advising clients, negotiating with opposing parties or
counsel, and conducting trials in court.
Clinical Programs May Represent Clients in Family Law
Cases
Victims of domestic violence often require legal
representation in custody or divorce cases to resolve
custody, visitation, paternity and support, or property
issues. If victims are unrepresented in domestic relations
cases, they may not obtain the tightly crafted court orders
they need to reduce the likelihood of further violence. In
addition, since perpetrators often shift their control tactics
to custody litigation, victims may desperately need to be
represented in these litigious cases.
Any family law clinic should screen for domestic
violence cases. Students representing victims should
develop safety plans with clients, and provide referrals for
other services related to the abuse. Ideally, students can
assist clients in obtaining protection orders if such relief is
necessary, prior to representing them in domestic relations
hearings.
Clinical Programs May Represent Victims of Domestic
Violence or Perpetrators in Criminal Cases
Law school criminal practice clinics are likely to
represent victims or perpetrators of domestic violence
simply because domestic violence crimes constitute a large
proportion of misdemeanors in almost every jurisdiction.
A growing number of criminal law clinics, however, focus
deliberately on domestic violence issues. Some
jurisdictions permit students to interview victims and try
cases under the supervision of licensed attorneys. Students
may prosecute domestic violence cases by working in local
State's Attorney's offices.
Law students in criminal defense clinics may also represent victims or perpetrators
of domestic violence. Often perpetrators retaliate against victims who file
criminal charges by filing false criminal charges against the victims. Students
in criminal defense or domestic violence clinics may defend victims who face
such charges.(104) Students
in the Domestic Violence Advocacy Project at the George Washington University
Law School, for example, have worked with the Public Defender Service in the
District of Columbia and in Alexandria, Virginia. In criminal defense clinics,
law students may also represent victims charged with killing their abusers.
These cases may require students to research advanced criminal law theories
on self defense, or to prepare expert witnesses to testify about the effects
of battering. Other clinical programs undertake clemency projects in which students
advocate for reduced sentences for victims imprisoned for killing their abusers.
Criminal law clinics which provide representation to perpetrators have a responsibility
to educate law students about the dynamics of domestic violence. Without this
knowledge, students may inadvertently collude with batterers, assisting them
to deny responsibility for their violence and to continue to perpetrate it.
Lawyers should instead advise perpetrators about the long-term consequences
of their criminal acts. Students who are trained on the psychological and legal
issues surrounding family violence can assist perpetrators to take steps to
end the violence, promoting their long-term interests.(105)
Clinical Programs May Represent Victims in Other Civil
Cases Related to the Abuse
Victims of domestic violence frequently face a range of legal problems arising
from the abuse. In addition to criminal and family law matters, victims may
be on the verge of eviction as a result of landlord-tenant or housing problems
arising from the violence.(106)
Victims may also be on the brink of destitution because their batterers have
deprived them of financial resources by controlling their income or terminating
their public assistance.(107)
As a result, victims may need representation in bankruptcy, tax, child support,
or public benefits cases. A victim's legal needs may be as extensive as the
perpetrator's abusive tactics; for instance, battered immigrants may need representation
in immigration law matters if their abusers have interfered with their immigration
status or threatened to deport them.
Clinical programs provide an ideal means to represent victims in a range of
legal cases while exposing law students to varied areas of substantive law.
Students in domestic violence clinical programs can consult supervising attorneys
in other law school clinics, such as poverty law, landlord-tenant, or bankruptcy
clinics, to assist with interwoven legal issues. Law school clinical programs
with general practice clinics, rather than specific domestic violence clinics,
may be able to represent victims in a range of legal cases.(108)
Clinical Programs Should Be Tailored to Serve the Needs
of the Community
Law school clinical programs should be tailored to
serve the needs of the community. In particular, domestic
violence clinics should address the special needs of victims
from underserved populations, including victims from
rural, migrant, immigrant, or urban populations. For
example, victims in rural areas may be completely cut off
from legal services or domestic violence shelters if such
services do not exist in their communities. Yet domestic
violence may be exacerbated in small communities if
perpetrators are familiar with or related to members of law
enforcement or the judiciary. Law school clinical programs
may be able to employ innovative strategies to serve the
needs of victims in the community.
Similarly, law schools located in inner cities should
address the needs of urban populations. Clinical
professors can incorporate issues of race, ethnicity, or the
culture of the community into their programs. Law
students may need to seek clients or to conduct legal
workshops in non-legal settings, such as community-based
organizations, health clinics, social services agencies, or
religious institutions, to truly provide community members
with access to legal services.
Clinical Programs Should Be Linked to Existing
Community Services
Law school clinical programs will better serve
clients if they are linked to existing community services.
Victims of domestic violence will be able to obtain the non-legal services they need, such as health care, counseling,
financial assistance, or social services, if these agencies
have close ties with law school clinical programs. Law
students will also gain a more comprehensive perspective
on client representation by maintaining connections with
service providers. In addition, students in some clinical
programs are placed in community agencies with an on-site
supervising attorney, giving students a realistic picture of
actual practice.
Clinical programs frequently obtain client referrals
from community based agencies, such as domestic violence
shelters, overburdened legal services organizations, or
health care providers. A growing number of law school
clinics have begun to offer legal advocacy to victims
identified through community organizations, such as
hospitals. Such coordination permits victims to obtain
quality legal services without tremendous expenditures of
time and money. Clinical programs can also obtain
appropriate client referrals in this manner.
Co-Curricular Programs
Co-curricular programs can provide direct services
to victims of domestic violence on campus and in the
community. Such programs promote awareness and
understanding of domestic violence issues within the law
school community. Both the law school administration and
students should be involved in developing these programs.
Law schools must be equipped to address domestic violence within their own
communities. Law students, faculty, and staff are just as likely as other members
of society to be victims or perpetrators of domestic violence. Law schools should
therefore institute employment and student life policies that are responsive
to the needs of victims. For instance, students who experience violence in their
relationships should be able to obtain legal advice and counseling services
without affecting their ability to participate in the law school's academic
program. Law schools may also need to implement policies to avoid liability
for workplace violence that erupts as a result of domestic violence.(109)
Student or school sponsored programs can educate
the law school community -- and perhaps the entire
university -- about domestic violence. A lecture series
might include guest speakers who are domestic violence
survivors or attorneys. Such programs may help students
gain a genuine understanding of victim experiences and
legal remedies.
The following steps can also integrate domestic
violence legal issues into co-curricular activities:
- Focus an issue of the law review on
domestic violence
- Discuss the law school intervention efforts
in school publications
- Use a domestic violence case in the moot
court competition argument
- Offer self-defense classes
- Provide training on safety planning
- Offer programs specifically geared toward
steps men can take to end domestic violence
Student groups, such as student bar associations,
law fraternities, criminal law, women's law, juvenile
justice, and public interest law associations, equal justice
foundations, and National Lawyer's Guild sections, can
work collaboratively to sponsor programs on domestic
violence that address overlapping areas of concern. This
may broaden support for the activities. Programs should
also be developed with diverse student groups so that they
provide inclusive information about domestic violence and
the relief available.
Student advocacy groups in a number of law
schools provide direct services and information to victims
of domestic violence. For instance, students have created
hotlines and court accompaniment programs to provide
information and support to pro se clients. Students have
also drafted domestic violence legislation, initiated
clemency programs for victims imprisoned for killing their
abusers, and participated in fundraising or volunteer efforts
for local shelters.
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