The battle against domestic violence has focused primarily on incidents of extreme physical abuse and the resulting trauma to the victim. While there is a growing understanding of some forms of psychological abuse, such as stalking, there is less understanding of the pattern of abuse where physical attacks are combined with isolation, intimidation, and control. Stark argues that coercive control, which may not include any physical abuse, is actually the more prevalent anddevastating form of domestic abuse, yet remains largely invisible to the helping professionals and has no legal standing. He contends that interventions are ineffective for a large number of battered women due to the gap between what these women experience and the singular emphasis on male violence and victimtrauma. Drawing extensively on case studies, Stark identifies the problems with our current approach to domestic violence, outlines the components of coercive control, and then uses this alternate framework to analyse the cases of battered women charged with criminal offenses directed at their abusers. He presents the controversial notion that coercive control should be a legal defense for women who attack or kill their abusers.
I. The Domestic Violence Revolution: Promise and Disappointment; The Revolution Unfolds; The Revolution Stalled; II. Enigmas of Abuse; The Proper Measure of Abuse; The Entrapment Enigma; Representing Battered Women; III. From Domestic Violence to Coercive Control; Up to Inequality; The Theory of Coercive Control; The Technology of Coercive Control; IV. Living with Coercive Control; When Battered Women Kill; For Love or Money; The Special Reasonableness of Battered Women; Conclusion: Freedom is Not Free;
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