Three victim-survivors of coercive control have shared their stories to help others spot the signs and act. The Northamptonshire Serious Violence Prevention Partnership (NSVPP) said the "It's Not Love ...
The article explains that traditional domestic abuse laws focus on visible violence, missing coercive control—psychological and financial abuse that leaves no scars but is equally harmful. New York ...
11don MSN
What is economic abuse?
Charity found that issue is a factor in more than half of deaths related to domestic abuse ...
The Brave Pen launches “Love’s Hidden Abuse: One Woman’s Journey from Silence to Strength,” a mini-memoir by Lyndal Ash that underpins a broader global advocacy platform, funding retreats, education ...
Are we still blaming victims for not leaving their abusers in 2025? The recent verdict in the Sean "Diddy" Combs trial indicates we are. Didn't we all see the same 2016 video footage of Diddy brutally ...
Opinion
Mamamia on MSNOpinion
GED KEARNEY MP: 'I said "he never hit me", but he trapped me in silence and control.'
For too long, coercive control has been the "invisible" reality of domestic abuse, leaving thousands of Australian women without clear legal recognition of their experiences. While NSW, Queensland and ...
“I had sex with him last night because I was scared not to.” Those were the words of a woman shaking at the other end of a Zoom call with me. As a divorce coach, I’ve heard this many times before — ...
A victim of economic abuse at the hands of an ex or current partner dies every three weeks across England and Wales, according to analysis said to show the danger posed by this form of coercive ...
I first met “Diane” in a parking lot. That’s where she handed me a stack of cash outside her car. To a passerby it probably looked like a drug deal. But the kind of “escape” Diane desperately wanted ...
Television plays a central role in shaping cultural attitudes towards relationships. On reality TV, we encounter behaviour that gradually shifts what we accept as normal — watched weekly and packaged ...
Hosted on MSN
Coercive control still under the radar, study shows
According to new research, 42% of Australians still have low awareness of coercive control. The study, published in the Australian Journal of Social Issues, revealed that nearly half of respondents ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results