This article considers how legal engagement can be an opportunity to exercise coercive control over a former intimate partner. Drawing on interviews with 65 women who engaged with the legal system as a result of violence in their intimate relationships, this article explores how women’s engagement with the legal system is frequently experienced as an extension of an intimate partner’s coercive control. It builds on existing research showing how legal processes provide an opportunity for perpetrators to continue and even expand their repertoire of coercive and controlling behaviours post-separation. I refer to this as legal systems abuse. This article explores women’s reported experiences and considers how expectations of equality of access ...
Moves to criminalise coercive and controlling behaviours are hotly debated. In jurisdictions where t...
Reproductive coercion is increasingly recognised as a common part of women’s experiences of domestic...
The article draws on interviews with 56 women (including 20 women from culturally and linguistically...
Abstract: The role of coercive control in women's offending has been increasingly recognised in law....
In 2015 in England and Wales a new offence of controlling or coercive behaviour was introduced with...
Making sense of intimate partner violence has long been seen through the lens of coercive control. H...
The role of coercive control in women’s offending has been increasingly recognised in law. Yet, ther...
This article examines Evan Stark’s model of coercive control and what this paradigm shift might mean...
This article examines Evan Stark’s model of coercive control and what this paradigm shift might mean...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
Coercive control is increasingly recognized as fundamental to women's experiences of domestic and fa...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
The Domestic Abuse Act 2021 introduced a legal definition of domestic abuse into law for the first t...
The sociological literature on domestic abuse shows that it is more complex than a series of physica...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
Moves to criminalise coercive and controlling behaviours are hotly debated. In jurisdictions where t...
Reproductive coercion is increasingly recognised as a common part of women’s experiences of domestic...
The article draws on interviews with 56 women (including 20 women from culturally and linguistically...
Abstract: The role of coercive control in women's offending has been increasingly recognised in law....
In 2015 in England and Wales a new offence of controlling or coercive behaviour was introduced with...
Making sense of intimate partner violence has long been seen through the lens of coercive control. H...
The role of coercive control in women’s offending has been increasingly recognised in law. Yet, ther...
This article examines Evan Stark’s model of coercive control and what this paradigm shift might mean...
This article examines Evan Stark’s model of coercive control and what this paradigm shift might mean...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
Coercive control is increasingly recognized as fundamental to women's experiences of domestic and fa...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
The Domestic Abuse Act 2021 introduced a legal definition of domestic abuse into law for the first t...
The sociological literature on domestic abuse shows that it is more complex than a series of physica...
This Article examines the development of an inverse relationship in the legal system between the con...
Moves to criminalise coercive and controlling behaviours are hotly debated. In jurisdictions where t...
Reproductive coercion is increasingly recognised as a common part of women’s experiences of domestic...
The article draws on interviews with 56 women (including 20 women from culturally and linguistically...