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This post deals with domestic violence and might be triggering for some readers.
This week, Australia’s first standalone coercive control laws came into effect, after NSW became the first jurisdiction to pass the laws to criminalise the behaviour in 2022.
The new laws mean coercive control against a current or former intimate partner is now a crime. If found guilty, perpetrators could be jailed for up to seven years.
Research shows coercive control was a precursor to 97 per cent of intimate partner homicides between 2000 and 2018 in the state.
Historically, most of us hold a standard picture of what family violence looks like: as a quiet woman with an abusive husband who comes home drunk and leaves her bruised and battered…
Watch: Women and violence: the hidden numbers. Post continues below.
Coercive control includes acts and patterns of behaviour and abuse. Perpetrators (usually men) may do things like monitor their partner’s phone, isolate them from their friends and family, limit access to finances, humiliate and gaslight them, and seek to control aspects of who they are and how they live their life.