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.
You can also download the second edition here and first edition 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 100 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
Part Three — Courts and Litigation
Alice Anderson with Mary Sholtens 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