0001.jpg

The third edition of the New Zealand Women’s Law Journal — Te Aho Kawe Kaupapa Ture a ngā Wāhine can be downloaded in full here.

Hardcopies can be purchased from LexisNexis here.

Volume III, 2019
CONTENTS — RĀRANGI UPOKO
Josie Te Rata and Monique van Alphen Fyfe Editorial — Kōrero Tīmatanga
Joy Liddicoat and Wendy Parker Foreword — Kupu Whakataki

Part One — Sexual Violence
Charlotte Shade with Jan Logie Culture is key: Sexual violence policy and prevention in Aotearoa New Zealand — where to from here?
Vanessa E Munro Judging juries: The “common sense” conundrums of prosecuting violence against women
Rosa Gavey Affirmative consent to “sex”: Is it enough?
Fiona Culliney and Kate Fitzgibbon The sexual violence pilot court
Luke Elborough and Cheyenne Conroy-Mosdell A snapshot of the Law Commission’s second review of the Evidence Act 2006: Fine lines to draw in sexual violence cases
Camille Wrightson When good boys do bad things: T v Police

Part Two — Family
Emily Stannard with Justice Cull QC Ka kōrure te hau: Lankow v Rose and its aftermath
Seb Recordon Rules or discretion? Towards a better approach to quantum in addressing post-separation economic disparities in New Zealand
Julia Tolmie, Fleur Te Aho and Katherine Doolin with Sylvie Arnerich and Natanahira Herewini Criminalising parental failures: Documenting bias in the criminal justice system [ADLS Writing Prize Winner]

Part Three — Courts and Litigation
Alice Anderson with Mary Scholtens QC “Even now, people still see a good lawyer QC as being a man in a suit”: The voice of women in New Zealand’s senior courts
Jenny Cooper QC Who gets to speak in New Zealand’s top courts?
Elizabeth Sheehy and Julia Tolmie Feminist interventions: Learning from Canada

Part Four — Autonomy
Victoria Stace Reducing the risks from high-cost short-term lending and protecting vulnerable consumers
Kade Cory-Wright Sex work in New Zealand: A case for repeal of section 19 of the Prostitution Reform Act 2003
Danielle Houghton The Abortion Legislation Bill: Welcome if overdue reforms
Taylor Mitchell “I’m here, I’m alive, I’m telling you”: The deferment of sex self-identification in the Births, Deaths, Marriages, and Relationships Registration Act 1995
Michelle Byczkow and Kirsty Thompson Testosterone maketh the man or woman: Slowing down Caster Semenya