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  1. Sep 15, 2024 · 3. Organizational Psychology: In the workplace, coercion might take the form of a boss using threats of demotion or termination to force employees to work overtime or meet unrealistic targets. 4. Social Psychology Experiments: Historically, some psychological experiments have used coercive tactics, raising ethical concerns.

    • Limiting autonomy. When a romantic relationship is new, it's common to believe that a person wanting to spend every moment with their partner is a sign that they’re invested in getting to know them.
    • Use of technology to track. A person may insist on placing cameras in the house as a security system, or may use two-way surveillance to speak to their partner.
    • Intimacy and sex used as power or control. Overt signs of coercive control may be based on making “suggestions” on what to wear, what to try, or what to do in the bedroom.
    • Monitoring the partner's health and body. Most tactics of coercive control don’t require immediate medical intervention, which makes them more difficult to track.
  2. Apr 13, 2023 · Coercive control may also involve economic abuse, by threatening economic security and independence (Postmus et al., 2020), intimate partner stalking (Mechanic et al., 2008), as well as reproductive coercion, such as pregnancy coercion or interference with contraception (Miller et al., 2010).

  3. Feb 3, 2015 · Coercion can be defined in terms of its topography and social function. Topographically, coercion has typically referred to a class of overt social behaviors that are perceived as aversive by others (Snyder, 1983). These behaviors may be direct and include physical threats and aggression, verbal threats and disparagement, opposition and ...

  4. The purpose of this article is to examine the concepts of power, coercion, and freedom from a behavior analysis perspective and to suggest the expansion of the definition of coercion in part to account for changing technology and methods of coercion. In particular, the article focuses on addressing limitations of Goldiamond's (1976) definition ...

  5. This chapter discusses the central characteristics of interdependent interaction, reviewing recent research from social psychology. It then explores the repertoire of skill necessary for successful navigation of interdependence, and how rigid coercive aggression might impede success.

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  7. Jul 9, 2021 · Dr. Michael Pittaro is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at American Military University and an adjunct professor with several colleges/universities. Online: , , Coercive control is a ...

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