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  1. Jul 27, 2023 · Section 1(3)(c) of the 2021 Act created a statutory definition of domestic abuse which encompasses a range of abusive behaviours, including controlling or coercive behaviour.

  2. This chapter provides a discussion on the widely held view that law — positive law — is essentially coercive. It offers an analysis of the concept of coercion, and then discusses the questions of whether law does actually, and whether law must tautologically, involve coercion in any of the senses analysed. This chapter starts by reflecting ...

  3. Jan 19, 2010 · For the legal use of coercion is not limited to punishments imposed under the criminal law, since it stands behind all legal arrangements that are enforced, including “civil remedies” in other branches of law, such as the law of property, torts, and contracts.

    • David Lyons
    • 1983
  4. Jan 6, 2020 · This article examines the definitions of power, freedom, and coercion in behavior analysis, comparing them to philosophical views of power, freedom, and coercion. Two extensions to the definition of coercion are suggested.

    • Sonia M. Goltz
    • 2020
  5. Aug 1, 2014 · Two of these concepts are ‘coercion’ and ‘manipulation.’. People can be wrongfully coerced to do something for others that they don’t want to do, even something they shouldn’t have to do (such as turning a purse or wallet over to an armed robber on a dark street).

  6. May 16, 2021 · There I present two main ways to interpret the claim that law is coercivewhat I call the broad and strict senses—and give some examples of confusions that have emerged in virtue of philosophers conflating these two readings.

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  8. The main issue in this chapter concerns the place of coercion in a social amount of law. Keywords: coercion, forms of law, sovereign state, legal systems, institutions, structures. Collection: Oxford Scholarship Online.

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