A family violence intervention order is designed to protect a person from a family member who is acting in a violent or abusive manner. This behaviour also includes emotional, financial, physical and sexual abuse. It is not just limited to physical violence.

A family violence intervention order is applied for at a magistrate’s court, with immediate protections being put in place by interim intervention orders. Children can be included on applications.

     What do we call everyone in this process?

  1. The person who wants the intervention order is called ‘the affected family member’ or ‘protected person’.
  2. The person the intervention order is against is called ‘the respondent’.

     What can be included in a family violence intervention order?
A respondent can be blocked from using family violence against the protected person, and if the respondent breaks these conditions, the police can charge them with a criminal offence. The conditions are decided by the magistrate.

     What is considered ‘family violence’?
Family violence is any controlling, threatening, forceful or fear-inducing behaviour that is used to dominate a family member.

  • Physical abuse – hitting, pushing, punching, slapping
  • Sexual abuse – forced sex or sexual behaviours
  • Emotional/psychological abuse – controlling who someone sees or speaks to, calling names, belittling
  • Financial abuse – withholding money, controlling someone else’s money without their consent
  • Behaviour that causes someone to fear for their property, another person, or an animal

     Children
If a child sees or hears or is around family violence, they are covered by law. That is if a child:

  • Helps an abused family member
  • Sees damaged property at home
  • Is there after a domestic violence incident that the police are called to

The police must act on all reports of family violence, and must act even if nobody wants them to – safety first.

     Who are ‘family members’?
For the purposes of making an application for a family violence intervention order, ‘family members’ means:

  1. Those who share an intimate personal relationship – married, de facto or domestic partners. It does not need to be sexual for this to count. Domestic partners could mean a flatmate.
  2. Parents and children, including the children of an intimate partner.
  3. Birth, marriage or adopted relatives.
  4. Those you treat like family – a carer, guardian, or person related to you within a family structure in certain cultures.
  5. Past family members – for example step-siblings from a dissolved marriage.

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