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Criminalisation of Coercive Control - Research Brief

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posted on 2020-10-01, 00:36 authored by Kate Fitz-GibbonKate Fitz-Gibbon, Sandra WalklateSandra Walklate, Silke MeyerSilke Meyer

Coercive control is a key feature of intimate partner violence. Framed by Evan Stark (2007) as a 'liberty crime', his conceptualisation of coercive control sought to capture the long-term, ongoing nature of a wide range of forms of violence which are not exclusively physically but can pervade an individual's daily life with devastating impact. It is not a new concept. Coercive control has been articulated in the work of Dobash & Dobash (1979), Schechter (1982), Ptacek (1999) amongst others. Indeed, Hamberger, Larsen & Lehrner, (2017) identify 22 different definitions of coercive control all of which carry with them different implications for research and practice. Importantly as Wangmann (2020: 222) states: 'What is fundamental to all of this theoretical work is that this understanding of control came from the accounts provided by women themselves'.

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September 2020

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    Monash Gender and Family Violence Prevention Centre

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