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  1. Jul 26, 2019 · Through examining core issues including harm, severity and repetition of domestic violence crime victimisation, they argue that Stark’s concept of ‘coercive control’ is obsolete and refute Johnson’s typology of intimate partner violence.

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      Through examining core issues including harm, severity and...

  2. we review new evidence on four dimensions of coercive control: the relationship between ‘control’ and violence;’ coercive control in same sex couples; measuring coercive control; and children’s experience of coercive control.

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  3. What is Coercive Control? Coercive control, which often occurs in domestic abuse contexts, was criminalised within the UK in 2015 under section 76 of the Serious Crime Act (Home Office, 2023). Under this Act, a person is guilty of coercive control if they repeatedly or continuously engage in behaviour towards another person that

  4. May 1, 2023 · This report presents a literature review on coercive control in the context of domestic and family violence, with a particular focus on the understanding of, and responses to coercive...

  5. Dec 16, 2018 · We then review new evidence on four dimensions of coercive control: the relationship between “control” and “violence,” coercive control in same-sex couples, measuring coercive control, and children’s experience of coercive control.

    • Evan Stark, Marianne Hester
    • 2019
  6. Jan 7, 2018 · The concept of coercive control arose out of the debate about the disputed nature, extent and distribution of domestic violence: whether domestic violence is primarily rooted in men’s control of women (Dobash et al., 1992) or is gender symmetrical (Straus, 1979).

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  8. Jan 1, 2019 · We then review new evidence on four dimensions of coercive control: the relationship between “control” and “violence,” coercive control in same-sex couples, measuring coercive control, and...

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