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coercive control mediation australia

Coercive Control and Family Mediation in Australia: Safety, When to Refuse, and How to Make Agreements Court‑proof

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: 23 June 2026

Coercive control mediation Australia is now one of the most searched practice‑area queries among family lawyers and Family Dispute Resolution (FDR) practitioners, and for good reason. The Attorney‑General’s Department has placed coercive control at the centre of national family‑violence policy through its National Principles to Address Coercive Control, while the Law Council of Australia released updated practice guidance in April 2026 reinforcing mediator screening obligations and the duty to terminate unsafe processes. At the same time, the transition from the National Mediator Accreditation System (NMAS) to the Australian Mediator and Dispute Resolution Accreditation System (AMDRAS) has sharpened professional standards around mediation safety and family violence.

This guide is written for the practitioners who must make the call, proceed, modify or refuse, and who then need to convert any mediated outcome into an agreement that will withstand judicial scrutiny if coercion is later alleged.

1. When mediation is unsuitable: coercive control thresholds and practitioner decisions

Not every case involving family violence makes mediation impossible, but coercive control demands a different calculus than a single incident of conflict. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) defines coercive control as a pattern of behaviour that strips away autonomy, financial restriction, isolation, surveillance, intimidation and degradation sustained over time. When that pattern is present, the power imbalance it creates can render the “voluntary, informed participation” that underpins mediation meaningless.

Industry observers expect the practical effect of the April 2026 Law Council guidance to be a clearer, tiered decision model. The framework below reflects both that guidance and the screening obligations embedded in FDR practitioner regulations.

1.1 Tiered decision model

  • Tier A, Proceed with safeguards. Historical, isolated incident of family violence; the affected party confirms willingness to participate; independent legal advice (ILA) has been obtained; shuttle mediation or separate‑room arrangements are in place; a safety plan is documented.
  • Tier B, Modified process only (shuttle / lawyer‑attended / online with controls). Pattern of controlling behaviour is disclosed but the affected party, after legal advice, elects to attempt mediation; a legally qualified representative attends every session; the mediator conducts separate pre‑session screening; a written process agreement restricts direct communication.
  • Tier C, Mediation unsuitable, refer to court or other pathway. Ongoing physical threats, stalking, weapons involvement, active intervention orders prohibiting contact, or the affected party cannot participate freely despite safeguards.

1.2 Immediate red flags that place a case in Tier C

  • Physical harm or threats. Any recent assault, threat of harm to the party or children, or use of weapons.
  • Active intervention or restraining orders. Where a court has already found the risk sufficient to issue protective orders, mediation that brings both parties into the same process, even online, may breach those orders or expose the affected party to further harm.
  • Stalking, surveillance or technology‑facilitated abuse. GPS tracking, spyware on devices, monitoring of communications, these undermine the confidentiality and voluntariness on which mediation depends.
  • Financial strangulation. Complete control of finances that prevents the affected party from accessing independent legal advice or attending mediation freely.

1.3 When to advise court and when to seek urgent protection

A family lawyer’s duty is to protect the client, not to preserve the mediation pathway. Where coercive control markers place the case in Tier C, the appropriate step is to apply for a section 60I certificate on the ground that mediation is inappropriate, and, if the client faces immediate risk, to seek an urgent intervention order. The Family Relationships service can issue a certificate confirming that FDR is unsuitable due to family violence, which satisfies the pre‑action requirement to attempt mediation before filing parenting proceedings.

2. Risk assessment: a family mediation coercive control screening toolkit

Effective screening is the single most important step in protecting clients from unsafe mediation. The Australian Institute of Family Studies (AIFS) literature review on coercive control confirms that coercive control is frequently invisible to outsiders and may not involve any physical violence at all. A structured screening process, conducted separately with each party, is essential.

2.1 Twelve red‑flag indicators

The following checklist draws on indicators identified by Relationships Australia Victoria and the AIFS literature review. Each indicator should be assessed individually and in combination.

  1. Monitoring or controlling daily movements, communications or social contacts
  2. Restricting access to money, bank accounts or employment
  3. Isolating the party from family, friends or support networks
  4. Controlling decisions about children (schooling, medical care, social activities) as a mechanism of dominance
  5. Repeated degradation, humiliation or name‑calling, especially in front of children
  6. Threats to harm the party, children, pets or property
  7. Using legal processes or threats of litigation as intimidation (“systems abuse”)
  8. Tracking via GPS, spyware or monitoring social media accounts
  9. Controlling appearance, diet or daily routine
  10. Withholding medication, documents (passports, visas) or access to transport
  11. Gaslighting, denying events, minimising abuse or shifting blame
  12. Sexual coercion or reproductive control

2.2 Evidence collection checklist

Proving coercive control requires building a mosaic of evidence, because individual incidents may appear minor in isolation. Lawyers and mediators should guide clients to collect and preserve:

  • Digital records. Screenshots of controlling text messages, emails, social media posts; phone logs showing excessive calls or location‑tracking alerts.
  • Financial records. Bank statements showing restricted access, cancelled cards, withheld funds; evidence that the controlling party monopolises financial decisions.
  • Witness statements. Declarations from family members, friends, counsellors or teachers who have observed controlling behaviour or its effects on the affected party or children.
  • Medical and psychological records. GP notes, hospital records, counselling records that document anxiety, depression or injuries consistent with coercive control.
  • Police reports and intervention order records. Any prior complaints, breaches of orders or conditions imposed by a court.
  • Diary entries and contemporaneous notes. Time‑stamped personal records of incidents, even informal ones, carry weight if consistent and created close to the events described.

2.3 Risk scoring and recommended pathway

Risk level Indicators present Recommended pathway
Low 0–2 indicators; historical; no ongoing pattern Tier A, mediation with standard safeguards and ILA
Medium 3–5 indicators; pattern emerging but affected party willing to proceed with support Tier B, shuttle or lawyer‑attended mediation; enhanced safety plan
High 6+ indicators; ongoing pattern; active threats or intervention orders Tier C, mediation unsuitable; apply for s 60I certificate; consider urgent court application

3. Pre‑mediation safety planning, concrete lawyer actions

Once a case is assessed as Tier A or Tier B, the referring lawyer has a duty to prepare the client for safe participation. Mediation safety in the context of family violence depends on advance planning, not on assumptions that the mediator will manage risk alone.

3.1 Client interview template questions

  • Has the other party ever monitored your phone, email or location?
  • Do you have independent access to money for legal advice and transport?
  • Has the other party ever threatened you, the children or pets?
  • Do you feel safe communicating with the other party, even in writing?
  • Are there any current or past intervention orders?
  • Is anyone else (family, new partner) being used by the other party to exert pressure?

3.2 Safety plan items

  1. Transport. Arrange separate arrival and departure times; organise a support person to accompany the client or be on standby by phone.
  2. Venue. Confirm that the mediation venue has separate waiting areas and exits, or, for online mediation, that the client is attending from a secure, private location.
  3. Code word. Agree on a discreet word or phrase the client can use during the session to signal distress, triggering an immediate adjournment.
  4. Communication rules. All communication between the parties to occur through lawyers or the mediator, no direct contact before, during or after the session.
  5. Post‑session debrief. Schedule a call or meeting immediately after mediation to assess the client’s emotional state and review any proposed terms before anything is signed.

3.3 Documentation and evidentiary preservation

Before mediation commences, the lawyer should create a contemporaneous file note recording the risk assessment, safety plan, ILA provided and the client’s informed consent to proceed. This note becomes critical evidence if the agreement is later challenged on the ground that the client was coerced into participating.

4. FDR practitioner duties, screening obligations and online mediation safety in Australia

Family dispute resolution practitioners carry independent screening obligations under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) and the regulatory framework maintained by the Attorney‑General’s Department. The Law Council of Australia reinforced these obligations in its April 2026 practice guidance, clarifying that mediators must conduct individual, confidential screening interviews with each party before any joint session, and must be prepared to terminate the process at any point if safety concerns emerge.

4.1 Mediator screening script and redaction options

A screening interview should be conducted by phone or video, separately with each party, covering at minimum:

  1. Whether there is a history of family violence or controlling behaviour
  2. Whether there are any current intervention or restraining orders
  3. Whether the party has had access to independent legal advice
  4. Whether the party feels safe to participate and to speak freely
  5. Whether there are any concerns about the other party’s behaviour during or after mediation

The mediator should document responses in a confidential screening record that is not disclosed to the other party. If information disclosed during screening reveals a high‑risk situation, the mediator must decline to proceed and issue a section 60I certificate on the ground that FDR is not appropriate.

4.2 Online mediation: specific risks and mitigations

Online mediation safety in Australia has become a priority as video‑conference mediation normalises post‑pandemic. The convenience of online sessions introduces specific coercive‑control risks that are not present in face‑to‑face settings:

  • Covert presence. The controlling party may be in the same room as the affected party, or listening from an adjacent room. Mitigation: the mediator should ask each party to show the room via camera and confirm they are alone.
  • Recording and screenshot abuse. Sessions may be covertly recorded and used as ammunition. Mitigation: include a clause in the mediation agreement prohibiting recording; remind parties at the start of each session.
  • Platform security. Use platforms with end‑to‑end encryption, waiting rooms and breakout‑room functionality. Avoid consumer‑grade tools that lack access controls.
  • Breakout rooms for shuttle mediation. In Tier B cases, the mediator should use breakout rooms so that parties are never in a shared virtual space, mirroring the separate‑room model used in‑person.
  • Secure communication channels. All follow‑up communication should occur through the mediator or lawyers, not via personal messaging between the parties.

4.3 When the mediator must terminate

A mediator must terminate the session immediately if:

  1. A party discloses or exhibits fear during the session that was not apparent during screening
  2. A party’s behaviour during the session is intimidating, threatening or controlling
  3. It becomes apparent that one party cannot negotiate freely or give informed consent
  4. New information emerges about active intervention orders or recent violence

Termination should be recorded in writing with reasons, and the mediator should provide referrals to legal aid, family violence support services and, where appropriate, police.

5. Converting mediated outcomes into court‑proof agreements

Reaching agreement in mediation is only half the task. Where coercive control is a background factor, even if the case was assessed as Tier A or Tier B, the agreement must be drafted and documented in a way that will withstand challenge. Academic research, including studies published through Taylor & Francis on post‑separation coercive control, demonstrates that controlling parties may later exploit the court process itself (“systems abuse”) by arguing that mediated agreements were made under duress, or, conversely, the affected party may seek to set aside an agreement that was genuinely coerced. Robust drafting and contemporaneous evidence are the antidote to both scenarios.

5.1 Sample wording, parenting arrangements

Include the following elements in any parenting plan or memorandum of understanding (MOU) that will be converted to consent orders:

  • Voluntariness recital. “Each party confirms that they have entered into this agreement freely and voluntarily, without duress, undue influence or coercion, and after having had the opportunity to obtain independent legal advice.”
  • ILA acknowledgment. “Party A confirms that they have received independent legal advice from [solicitor name] on [date] regarding the terms and effect of this agreement. Party B confirms the same from [solicitor name] on [date].”
  • Best‑interests statement. “The parties agree that the arrangements set out below reflect the best interests of the child/ren, having regard to the matters in section 60CC of the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth).”

5.2 Sample wording, financial and asset settlement

  • Full disclosure recital. “Each party has made full and frank disclosure of their financial circumstances as required by law, including all assets, liabilities, superannuation interests and financial resources, and neither party is aware of any material non‑disclosure by the other.”
  • No‑duress clause. “Each party acknowledges that: (a) they have entered into this agreement of their own free will; (b) they have not been subjected to any threat, coercion or undue pressure by the other party or any other person; and (c) they consider the agreement to be just and equitable in all the circumstances.”
  • Cooling‑off period. “The parties agree that this MOU will not be converted into consent orders until [7/14] days after the date of execution, during which time either party may withdraw without penalty.”

5.3 Evidence to file with the application for consent orders

When converting a mediated agreement to court orders, the following evidence strengthens the application against any future challenge:

  1. Affidavits from each party. Confirming voluntariness, ILA received, understanding of terms and absence of duress.
  2. Solicitor certificates of ILA. Signed statements from each party’s independent solicitor confirming that advice was given on the effect, advantages and disadvantages of the agreement.
  3. Mediator attendance notes. Documenting that screening was conducted, that safeguards were in place, and that neither party expressed reluctance or distress during the mediation.
  4. Timestamps and session records. Date‑stamped records showing the duration of mediation, breaks taken and the sequence in which terms were negotiated, countering any later claim that terms were imposed in a single pressured session.
  5. Financial disclosure documents. Annexing balance sheets, valuations and superannuation statements exchanged during mediation.

6. Coercive control mediation Australia, quick reference: roles, obligations and actions

Entity / Role Screening / Obligation Practical Immediate Action
FDR Practitioner / Mediator Mandatory individual screening for family violence and coercive control; duty to terminate if mediation is unsafe (Law Council FDR guidance; Family Law Act 1975 (Cth)) Use structured screening script; offer separate sessions or shuttle mediation; record termination reasons; provide referrals to family violence support services
Family Lawyer Duty to protect client; advise on suitability of mediation; collect and preserve evidence; ensure client has informed consent to participate Conduct safety interview using template questions; prepare affidavit evidence; apply for intervention order if necessary; attend mediation as legal representative in Tier B cases
Court / Registrar (Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia) Review consent orders for voluntariness, ILA and best interests of children; power to require further inquiry if coercion alleged Require affidavits confirming ILA and voluntariness; scrutinise agreements where family violence is disclosed; may decline to make consent orders if satisfied that agreement was not entered freely
Police / Attorney‑General’s Department Enforce intervention orders; investigate breaches; develop national policy (National Principles to Address Coercive Control) Report breaches of intervention orders; refer to AGD coercive control resources for practitioner guidance and victim support pathways

Practitioner resources for further reference:

  • Safety checklist for lawyers preparing clients for family mediation (coercive control present), practitioner checklist template (forthcoming)
  • Drafting clauses to prevent later coercion challenges, sample wording bank (forthcoming)
  • Online family mediation safety checklist, platform and process guidance (forthcoming)
  • FDR screening scripts and consent form templates (forthcoming)

Conclusion, safety first, enforceability second

The intersection of coercive control and mediation in Australia demands that practitioners treat safety as a non‑negotiable threshold, not a box‑ticking exercise. The regulatory landscape, from the Attorney‑General’s National Principles to the Law Council’s April 2026 guidance and the evolving AMDRAS framework, reinforces that message. Early indications suggest that courts will scrutinise mediated agreements with increasing rigour where family violence has been disclosed, making robust screening, safety planning and drafting practices essential rather than optional.

For family lawyers, the immediate steps are clear: screen every case using a structured coercive‑control toolkit, apply the tiered decision model to determine whether mediation can safely proceed, implement a documented safety plan for every client who enters the mediation room, and ensure that every agreement includes the voluntariness recitals, ILA acknowledgments and evidence trail that will make it court‑proof.

For mediators and FDR practitioners, the obligation is equally direct: conduct independent, confidential screening with each party; never allow convenience or party pressure to override safety concerns; and be prepared to terminate the process and issue a section 60I certificate when coercive control mediation in Australia is simply not safe.

If you need guidance on whether mediation is appropriate in a particular case, or require a safety audit of your current mediation processes, consulting an accredited family law specialist with experience in family violence and coercive control is the essential first step.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jodylee Bartal at Schetzer Papaleo Family Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Attorney‑General’s Department, Coercive Control (National Principles)
  2. Law Council of Australia, Practice Guidance
  3. Family Relationships (Australian Government)
  4. Australian Institute of Family Studies, Coercive Control Literature Review
  5. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Coercive Control
  6. Relationships Australia Victoria, What Is Coercive Control?
  7. Mediations Australia, What Hannah’s Law Means
  8. Taylor & Francis, Post‑Separation Coercive Control
  9. WA Family Law Pathways Network, Coercive Control

FAQs

Can mediation go ahead if there has been family violence or coercive control?
It depends on the severity and nature of the violence. Where the risk is low and historical, mediation may proceed with safeguards such as shuttle arrangements, legal representation and a documented safety plan. Where coercive control is ongoing or the affected party cannot participate freely, mediation is unsuitable and the practitioner should issue a section 60I certificate so the matter can proceed directly to court. The AIHW provides further guidance on identifying coercive control patterns.
At a minimum: a separate screening interview for each party conducted by the mediator; confirmation that the client has received independent legal advice; a written safety plan covering transport, venue, communication rules and a distress code word; separate waiting areas or online breakout rooms; and a scheduled post‑session debrief. All arrangements should be documented in a contemporaneous file note.
When the risk assessment places the case in Tier C, meaning active physical threats, stalking, weapons involvement, current intervention orders prohibiting contact, or the client’s inability to negotiate freely despite safeguards. In these circumstances, the lawyer should apply for a section 60I certificate and, if immediate safety is at risk, seek an urgent intervention order. The Family Relationships service can assist with certificate applications.
By building a contemporaneous evidence trail: include no‑duress clauses and ILA acknowledgments in every agreement; obtain solicitor certificates of independent legal advice from both parties; retain mediator attendance notes and session timestamps; and file supporting affidavits when converting the agreement to consent orders. A cooling‑off period before execution adds further protection.
Coercive control is proved through a mosaic of evidence rather than a single incident. Useful evidence includes screenshots of controlling messages, financial records showing restricted access, witness statements, medical or counselling records, police reports and contemporaneous diary entries. The AIFS literature review confirms that the cumulative pattern is more significant than any individual act.
Yes. Online mediation introduces risks that are absent in face‑to‑face settings, including covert presence of the controlling party in the room, unauthorised recording of sessions, and technology‑facilitated monitoring. These risks can be mitigated through platform security controls, mandatory room checks via camera, breakout‑room shuttle arrangements and explicit prohibitions on recording in the mediation agreement.
A mediator who fails to conduct mandatory screening or who proceeds despite clear indicators of coercive control may face professional disciplinary action under the AMDRAS accreditation framework and potential civil liability for breach of duty of care. The Law Council of Australia guidance emphasises that mediators have an independent obligation to assess safety regardless of whether the parties or their lawyers wish to proceed.

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Coercive Control and Family Mediation in Australia: Safety, When to Refuse, and How to Make Agreements Court‑proof

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