This paper examines how coercive control underlies financial abuse as men re-interpret the gender of money, stripping it of its moral safeguards. Financial abuse denies women access and agency over money. It works through male reinterpretation of how money is gendered–that is the way men and women own, inherit, use, manage and control money. Recent Indian migrant women experience coercive control when the male control of money is exercised without responsibility for the welfare of the wife and children. The family boundary of money becomes a way of extorting money from the wife’s family. Sending money home, a sign of filial responsibility, becomes abusive when the wife is not consulted, leaving the family in Australia without sufficient mon...
Indian mothers-in law are consistently legally implicated in violence against their daughters-in-law...
This paper deals with the changing idea of money and the transnational Indian family across generati...
Financial abuse based around gendered issues of power, coercion and control may have severe, long te...
Indian migration changed money flows and the gender of money. Money flowed one-way from the early In...
In this article, I present a cross-generational analysis of the gendered meanings and politics surro...
Existing literature on financial abuse focuses on men’s control over money, goods, assets and over w...
In this paper we use the case study of professional Indian migrants in Australia to explore how fami...
Introduction Violence against women is a serious human rights violation. While much attention has be...
This paper argues for the need to understand dowry-related abuse through a lens that focuses not onl...
Morals are at the centre of international remittances. Sending money home defines being part of a fa...
People who have migrated with their families from the Indian diaspora to Australia send money home a...
Like other colonial countries, Australia has long governed its First Peoples with intrusive paternal...
Financial abuse refers to men’s control over money, assets, and women’s education or paid work. As a...
Based on life-history narratives of 57 women in India who married Indian-origin men settled (primar...
Apparently against the grain of evidence of the expanding dimensions of dowry in India, the matrilin...
Indian mothers-in law are consistently legally implicated in violence against their daughters-in-law...
This paper deals with the changing idea of money and the transnational Indian family across generati...
Financial abuse based around gendered issues of power, coercion and control may have severe, long te...
Indian migration changed money flows and the gender of money. Money flowed one-way from the early In...
In this article, I present a cross-generational analysis of the gendered meanings and politics surro...
Existing literature on financial abuse focuses on men’s control over money, goods, assets and over w...
In this paper we use the case study of professional Indian migrants in Australia to explore how fami...
Introduction Violence against women is a serious human rights violation. While much attention has be...
This paper argues for the need to understand dowry-related abuse through a lens that focuses not onl...
Morals are at the centre of international remittances. Sending money home defines being part of a fa...
People who have migrated with their families from the Indian diaspora to Australia send money home a...
Like other colonial countries, Australia has long governed its First Peoples with intrusive paternal...
Financial abuse refers to men’s control over money, assets, and women’s education or paid work. As a...
Based on life-history narratives of 57 women in India who married Indian-origin men settled (primar...
Apparently against the grain of evidence of the expanding dimensions of dowry in India, the matrilin...
Indian mothers-in law are consistently legally implicated in violence against their daughters-in-law...
This paper deals with the changing idea of money and the transnational Indian family across generati...
Financial abuse based around gendered issues of power, coercion and control may have severe, long te...