Victim legal representation, procedural change and adversarial criminal trial reform: Systemic support for sex offences victims and survivors in Victoria
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Open Access
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ArticleAuthor/s
Kirchengast, TyroneAbstract
The Victorian Law Reform Commission's (VLRC) 2021 report, Improving the Justice System Response to Sexual Offences, makes several recommendations to transform the adversarial criminal trial by encouraging systemic change in greater support of sex offences complainants. By recommending ...
See moreThe Victorian Law Reform Commission's (VLRC) 2021 report, Improving the Justice System Response to Sexual Offences, makes several recommendations to transform the adversarial criminal trial by encouraging systemic change in greater support of sex offences complainants. By recommending funded legal representation up until jury trial and across related hearings, the VLRC has gone further than past inquiries by offering representation across the criminal trial process. Legal representation would be tasked with protecting the interest of victims by exercising limited rights, specifically: privilege in relation to evidence, including confidential communication, access to alternative arrangements, special protections, and intermediaries; rights to privacy in relation to personal information, including sexual history, during cross-examination, or lifting suppression orders; rights to compensation; and advice on the consequences of participating in restorative justice referrals. This article assesses the scope of change proposed by the VLRC to transform the adversarial criminal trial experience for sex offences survivors.
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See moreThe Victorian Law Reform Commission's (VLRC) 2021 report, Improving the Justice System Response to Sexual Offences, makes several recommendations to transform the adversarial criminal trial by encouraging systemic change in greater support of sex offences complainants. By recommending funded legal representation up until jury trial and across related hearings, the VLRC has gone further than past inquiries by offering representation across the criminal trial process. Legal representation would be tasked with protecting the interest of victims by exercising limited rights, specifically: privilege in relation to evidence, including confidential communication, access to alternative arrangements, special protections, and intermediaries; rights to privacy in relation to personal information, including sexual history, during cross-examination, or lifting suppression orders; rights to compensation; and advice on the consequences of participating in restorative justice referrals. This article assesses the scope of change proposed by the VLRC to transform the adversarial criminal trial experience for sex offences survivors.
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Date
2023Source title
Criminal Law JournalVolume
47Issue
15Publisher
Thomson ReutersLicence
Copyright All Rights ReservedRights statement
This article was published by Thomson Reuters and should be cited as Kirchengast, T. (2023). Victim legal representation, procedural change and adversarial criminal trial reform: Systemic support for sex offences victims and survivors in Victoria. CRIMINAL LAW JOURNAL, 47(1), 365–375. For all subscription inquiries please phone, from Australia: 1300 304 195, from Overseas: +61 2 8587 7980 or online at legal.thomsonreuters.com.au/search. The official PDF version of this article can also be purchased separately from Thomson Reuters at http://sites.thomsonreuters.com.au/journals/subscribe-or-purchase. This publication is copyright. Other than for the purposes of and subject to the conditions prescribed under the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth), no part of it may in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, microcopying, photocopying, recording or otherwise) be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted without prior written permission. Enquiries should be addressed to Thomson Reuters (Professional) Australia Limited. PO Box 3502, Rozelle NSW 2039. legal.thomsonreuters.com.auFaculty/School
The University of Sydney Law SchoolShare