Coercive Control: A New Model for Understanding Domestic Violence
Professor Stark suggests that by failing to recognize the pervasiveness of coercive control and addressing all domestic abuse through the lens of the violence model, current interventions have limited effectiveness. Reframing domestic violence as coercive control will require law and policy changes that recognize its “ongoing” and cumulative effects. It will recognize psychological and emotional abuse by offenders while avoiding manipulation by offenders who claim emotional abuse by their victims. This recognition will result, in turn, in a changed response by police, clinicians and social service providers who will shift their efforts away from encouraging victims to “leave” to denying offenders access to their victims. This shift will have implications for how protective orders are framed and how social services are provided.
The Advocates for Human Rights recommends that laws that include the term "psychological violence" in their definition of domestic violence be amended to omit that term and instead target coercive and controlling behaviors as suggested in Professor Stark's article linked here. Laws that include psychological violence in their definitions have resulted in victims being arrested and charged.