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News Release

VLS Lecture: ‘Should Domestic Violence Be Decriminalized?’

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

SOUTH ROYALTON, Vt.

Professor Leigh Goodmark of the Francis King Carey School of Law at the University of Maryland will present "Should Domestic Violence Be Decriminalized?" during Vermont Law School's annual Sterry R. Waterman Lecture at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 2, in Chase Community Center at VLS. The lecture is free and open to the public and press.

Goodmark, a graduate of Yale University and Stanford Law School, is the author of "A Troubled Marriage: Domestic Violence and the Legal System" (New York University Press, 2012). She will be available to sign copies of her book after the lecture.

In 1984, the United States started down a path toward the criminalization of domestic violence that it has continued to follow. The turn to the criminal legal system to address domestic violence coincided with the rise of mass incarceration in the United States. Levels of incarceration have increased by five times during the life of the anti-domestic violence movement. The United States incarcerates about 2.2 million people, with another 5 million under the scrutiny of parole and probation officers.

According to Goodmark, while the criminalization of domestic violence did not have "a significant causal role" in the increase in mass incarceration in the United States, scholars have argued that the turn to criminal law to address domestic violence has contributed to the phenomenon of mass incarceration. Given the current focus on over-criminalization and decreasing mass incarceration, the time may be ripe to consider alternatives to criminalization of intimate partner violence. Accordingly, Goodmark's talk asks the question, "Should domestic violence be decriminalized?"

For more information about the lecture, including registration, visit Eventbrite, email Kim Evans at kevans@vermontlaw.edu, or call 802-831-1225. Advanced registration is encouraged though not required.

The Sterry R. Waterman Lecture is named in honor of the late senior judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and a former president of the Vermont Law School Board of Trustees. For more information about the lecture and other VLS events, visit vermontlaw.edu/news-and-events.

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Vermont Law School, a private, independent institution, is home to the nation's largest and deepest environmental law program. VLS offers a Juris Doctor curriculum that emphasizes public service; three Master's Degrees—Master of Environmental Law and Policy, Master of Energy Regulation and Law, and Master of Food and Agriculture Law and Policy; and four post-JD degrees —LLM in American Legal Studies (for foreign-trained lawyers), LLM in Energy Law, LLM in Environmental Law, and LLM in Food and Agriculture Law. The school features innovative experiential programs and is home to the Environmental Law Center, South Royalton Legal Clinic, Environmental and Natural Resources Law Clinic, Energy Clinic, Food and Agriculture Clinic, and Center for Applied Human Rights. For more information, visit vermontlaw.edu, find us on Facebook, and follow us on Twitter and Instagram.​