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Addressing financial domestic violence

There is limited international law which explicitly mentions financial domestic violence, writes Angela Powditch.

user iconAngela Powditch 06 June 2017 Big Law
Angela Powditch
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The 61st Commission on the Status of Women (CSW61) concluded on 24 March 2017 at the UN’s head office in New York. One of the agreed conclusions of this forum on “women’s economic empowerment in the changing world of work” was to strongly condemn gender-based violence (including domestic violence), recognising that such violence can affect the economic independence of victims and impose costs on society. As such, I thought it is timely to discuss: financial domestic violence. 

Economic abuse (also known as financial abuse) is a pattern of behaviour where the abuser ‘maintain[s] power and control over their partners’ economic resources’. This action reduces the victims capacity to support themselves and they are forced to depend on the perpetrator financially. Economic abuse falls outside of traditional understands of gender-based violence making it extremely difficult for victims, of which I am one, to identify this type of abuse.

Despite the progress made during the women’s human rights movement in the 1990s (including the 1993 Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women), financial domestic violence has not received the attention it deserves.

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The CSW61 conclusions, although not mentioning it explicitly, clearly identify salient aspects of FDV, including the restriction of the economic autonomy of the partner, and their ability to engage in economic and social life.

Violence against women is a pandemic. One in three women in the world experiences physical or sexual violence by a partner. Studies indicate that FDV occurs in up to 94 per cent of DV cases, and yet, “many [are] unaware they are victims of this subtle form of domestic violence”.

In spite of this, there is limited international law which explicitly mentions financial domestic violence (one example is the Council of Europe Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence).

There has been success for victims of domestic violence more generally who have brought cases before the CEDAW Committee under the Option Protocol. In A.T. v Hungary, the first domestic violence case before the committee, the committee clearly stated that failure to protect women from domestic violence is a form of discrimination and human rights violation.

Thus, this case defined the state’s due diligence obligation to end domestic violence under international law. Although A.T. concerned violent physical abuse, and based its analysis on General Recommendation 19, on violence against women, there is no reason in principle why this due diligence obligation should not apply to FDV.

While there are challenges, change is possible via contributions from the state, community and non-state actors. And as mentioned, this now appears to be slowly occurring as evident from the agreed conclusions at CSW61 on gender based violence and action by the UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, Dubravka Simonovic, (in accordance with her mandate) who coincidentally visited Australia in February this year.

Ms Simonovic’s trip involved a busy schedule travelling to Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Cherbourg and Alice Springs to meet with stakeholders and gain information on violence against women. She took the opportunity to remind the Australian government of their human rights obligations to women fleeing domestic violence.

Hopefully with further international recognition, development of specific state-based laws and education in this area, women, authorities and states will come to understand this human rights issue, which in turn will hopefully reduce the number of victims and provide them with an avenue of recourse.

The first step should be explicit international recognition of FDV as a form of violence against women to which states’ due diligence obligations attach.

Angela Powditch is a human rights advocate and graduate LLB student at Southern Cross University (SCU) Australia. Angela graduated from Oxford University's International Human Rights Law Summer School in 2016. Her human rights interests include domestic violence, LGBTI rights and refugees. Angela is an active member of the LGBTI subcommittee of Australian Lawyers for Human Rights (ALHR) and The Australian Red Cross Society of Women Leaders. She was awarded an Australian Law Students Association Scholarship, an SCU Associate Alumni Scholarship and a SCU Rising Star Scholarship.

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