Friday, 14 March 2025
Description
Attend and earn 0.5 CPD hour in Substantive Law
This program is based on NSW legislation
Chair
Ian Lloyd KC, Trust Chambers; Recommended Criminal Law Senior Counsel, Doyle’s Guide 2024
View From the Bench: Coercive Control: Where are We Now and What We Have Learned
Gain a judicial perspective on the evolving legal response to coercive control in Australia. Magistrate Horan of the Local Court of NSW reflects on recent legislative changes, key case law developments, and practical insights from the bench, offering valuable guidance for practitioners navigating this complex area of law.
Presented by Magistrate Horan, Local Court of New South Wales
Presenters
Ian Lloyd KC, Trust Chambers
Ian Lloyd KC was called to the NSW Bar in 1977. He took silk in 1989. He is also a member of the bar in Hong Kong, New York and England & Wales. Mr Lloyd is one of Sydney’s leading criminal law silks. Mr Lloyd was during the 1980s a Senior Crown Counsel with the Hong Kong Government and in the early 1990s the Senior Crown Prosecutor for NSW. Mr Lloyd is also a former Justice of the Court of Appeal of the Fiji Islands and Conjoint Associate Professor with the University of Newcastle Law School. He has previously lectured in law at the University of Technology, the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the University of Notre Dame, Sydney.
Magistrate Horan, Local Court of New South Wales
Magistrate Horan was sworn in as a magistrate of the Local Court in February 2017. Presided over various metropolitan courts including Downing Centre, Burwood and Manly, as well as country service on the Cessnock circuit. Current member of the Local Court Education Committee since July 2022. Appointed Domestic and Family Violence Coordinating Magistrate for the Local Court from January 2025. Member of Government Reference Group on Coercive Control. Prior to appointment as a magistrate, worked as a senior federal prosecutor at the Commonwealth DPP and as a solicitor and senior associate at Mallesons (as it was then known), primarily in Dispute Resolution.
Friday, 14 March 2025
Description
Attend and earn 0.5 CPD hour in Substantive Law
This program is based on NSW legislation
Chair
Ian Lloyd KC, Trust Chambers; Recommended Criminal Law Senior Counsel, Doyle’s Guide 2024
View From the Bench: Coercive Control: Where are We Now and What We Have Learned
Gain a judicial perspective on the evolving legal response to coercive control in Australia. Magistrate Horan of the Local Court of NSW reflects on recent legislative changes, key case law developments, and practical insights from the bench, offering valuable guidance for practitioners navigating this complex area of law.
Presented by Magistrate Horan, Local Court of New South Wales
Presenters
Ian Lloyd KC, Trust Chambers
Ian Lloyd KC was called to the NSW Bar in 1977. He took silk in 1989. He is also a member of the bar in Hong Kong, New York and England & Wales. Mr Lloyd is one of Sydney’s leading criminal law silks. Mr Lloyd was during the 1980s a Senior Crown Counsel with the Hong Kong Government and in the early 1990s the Senior Crown Prosecutor for NSW. Mr Lloyd is also a former Justice of the Court of Appeal of the Fiji Islands and Conjoint Associate Professor with the University of Newcastle Law School. He has previously lectured in law at the University of Technology, the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the University of Notre Dame, Sydney.
Magistrate Horan, Local Court of New South Wales
Magistrate Horan was sworn in as a magistrate of the Local Court in February 2017. Presided over various metropolitan courts including Downing Centre, Burwood and Manly, as well as country service on the Cessnock circuit. Current member of the Local Court Education Committee since July 2022. Appointed Domestic and Family Violence Coordinating Magistrate for the Local Court from January 2025. Member of Government Reference Group on Coercive Control. Prior to appointment as a magistrate, worked as a senior federal prosecutor at the Commonwealth DPP and as a solicitor and senior associate at Mallesons (as it was then known), primarily in Dispute Resolution.