This article is based on the first Scottish study of survivor perspectives of forced marriage. In-depth interviews were conducted with eight survivors. Our thematic analysis identified five key themes: understandings of forced marriage, the “grooming” process, betrayal, legal responses, and women’s resistance. Utilizing Stark’s framework of coercive control and Kelly’s concept of conducive contexts, we illuminate hitherto under-appreciated dynamics of forced marriage: (a) the conceptualization of forced marriage as a process rather than an event, (b) the role of mothers within patriarchal contexts, and (c) betrayals of family and services as compounding long-term adverse effects of forced marriage
Post-war Scotland remained a deeply patriarchal country. Domestic abuse was common yet widely under-...
With forced marriage, as with so many human rights issues, the sensationalized hides the mundane, an...
By focusing on women’s lived experiences of family abuse, this thesis argues that state policy show...
This article is based on the first Scottish study of survivor perspectives of forced marriage. In-de...
This paper is based on the first Scottish study of survivor perspectives of forced marriage. In-dept...
This article draws from our mixed methods study of forced marriage (FM) in Scotland focusing on poli...
This article draws from our mixed methods study of forced marriage (FM) in Scotland focusing on poli...
In September 2015, the Scottish Government commissioned a 10 month study to better understand forced...
Forced marriage (FM) was criminalised in the UK in 2014 as it was described as little more than slav...
This article examines the use of Forced Marriage Protection Orders (FMPOs) in England and Wales to d...
Our paper is based on a qualitative empirical study of forced marriage in the UK and offers a multid...
Post-war Scotland remained a deeply patriarchal country. Domestic abuse was common yet widely under-...
This paper highlights the importance of recognising forced marriage as a form of violence and draws ...
This article shows how forced marriage arrived on the French political agenda; how it has been frame...
The official response to forced marriage in the majority of European countries has been to criminali...
Post-war Scotland remained a deeply patriarchal country. Domestic abuse was common yet widely under-...
With forced marriage, as with so many human rights issues, the sensationalized hides the mundane, an...
By focusing on women’s lived experiences of family abuse, this thesis argues that state policy show...
This article is based on the first Scottish study of survivor perspectives of forced marriage. In-de...
This paper is based on the first Scottish study of survivor perspectives of forced marriage. In-dept...
This article draws from our mixed methods study of forced marriage (FM) in Scotland focusing on poli...
This article draws from our mixed methods study of forced marriage (FM) in Scotland focusing on poli...
In September 2015, the Scottish Government commissioned a 10 month study to better understand forced...
Forced marriage (FM) was criminalised in the UK in 2014 as it was described as little more than slav...
This article examines the use of Forced Marriage Protection Orders (FMPOs) in England and Wales to d...
Our paper is based on a qualitative empirical study of forced marriage in the UK and offers a multid...
Post-war Scotland remained a deeply patriarchal country. Domestic abuse was common yet widely under-...
This paper highlights the importance of recognising forced marriage as a form of violence and draws ...
This article shows how forced marriage arrived on the French political agenda; how it has been frame...
The official response to forced marriage in the majority of European countries has been to criminali...
Post-war Scotland remained a deeply patriarchal country. Domestic abuse was common yet widely under-...
With forced marriage, as with so many human rights issues, the sensationalized hides the mundane, an...
By focusing on women’s lived experiences of family abuse, this thesis argues that state policy show...