Criminalising coercive control : family violence and the criminal law / Marilyn McMahon and Paul McGorrery, editors.

Title

Criminalising coercive control : family violence and the criminal law / Marilyn McMahon and Paul McGorrery, editors.

Description

Title from PDF of title page (viewed, Jan. 28, 2021)
This book considers whether coercive control (particularly non-physical forms of family violence) should be prohibited by the criminal law. Based on the premise that traditional understandings of family violence are severely limited, it considers whether the core of family violence is power-based controlling or coercive behavior: attempts by men to psychologically dominate their partners. Such behavior can cause significant psychological, physical and economic harms to victims and is increasingly recognized as a form of human rights abuse. The book considers the new offences that have been introduced in England and Wales (controlling or coercive behavior), Ireland (controlling behavior) and Scotland (domestic abuse). It invites consideration of three key questions: Do conventional criminal laws adequately regulate non-physical abuse? Is the criminal law an appropriate mechanism for responding to the coercive control of family members? And if a new and distinctive offence is warranted, what is the optimal form of that offence?

Publisher

Springer,

Date

Contributor

McMahon, Marilyn (Law teacher)
McGorrery, Paul.
SpringerLink (Online service)

Relation

https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-15-0653-6

Format

1 online resource (xv, 260 p.)

Language

eng

Type

a

Access Rights

Publisher's Web site. Access restricted to the University of Catania community.

DOI

10.1007/978-981-15-0653-6 doi

ISBN

9789811506529 (print)
9789811506536 electronic book
9811506531 electronic book
9789811506529 (print)

Files

2020_Book_CriminalisingCoerciveControl.pdf

Citation

“Criminalising coercive control : family violence and the criminal law / Marilyn McMahon and Paul McGorrery, editors.,” Lex e-books - Collana, accessed November 16, 2024, http://ebooks.unict.it/omeka/items/show/650.