This Article is the first legal scholarship to analyze domestic violence civil protection orders and response systems using the Stages of Change Model from the field of psychology. The Stages of Change Model, which describes how domestic violence survivors end relationship violence, includes five stages: (1) pre-contemplation; (2) contemplation; (3) preparation; (4) action; and (5) maintenance. According to the model, ending intimate partner violence is an iterative and complex process, and survivors typically revisit earlier stages as they progress toward maintaining freedom from violence. The model has been validated by numerous studies and is widely accepted in the psychology community. As a result, it is a powerful tool for evaluating t...
One increasingly important resource for victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) is domestic viole...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
This article examines Evan Stark’s model of coercive control and what this paradigm shift might mean...
This Article is the first legal scholarship to analyze domestic violence civil protection orders and...
This Article is the first legal scholarship to analyze domestic violence civil protection orders and...
This Article is the first legal scholarship to analyze domestic violence civil protection orders and...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
Domestic violence is no longer a private matter confined within the four walls of the home. The shif...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
Civil domestic violence laws do not effectively address and redress the harms suffered by women subj...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
Since the 1994 Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) was signed into law, individuals (namely, women) se...
One increasingly important resource for victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) is domestic viole...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
This article examines Evan Stark’s model of coercive control and what this paradigm shift might mean...
This Article is the first legal scholarship to analyze domestic violence civil protection orders and...
This Article is the first legal scholarship to analyze domestic violence civil protection orders and...
This Article is the first legal scholarship to analyze domestic violence civil protection orders and...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
Domestic violence is no longer a private matter confined within the four walls of the home. The shif...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
The dominant theories used in the law to explain domestic violence, namely, the Power and Control Wh...
Civil domestic violence laws do not effectively address and redress the harms suffered by women subj...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
Since the 1994 Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) was signed into law, individuals (namely, women) se...
One increasingly important resource for victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) is domestic viole...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
This article examines Evan Stark’s model of coercive control and what this paradigm shift might mean...