Domestic violence is violence or other Spousal abuse that occurs in a domestic setting, such as in a marriage or cohabitation.
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Domestic violence is violence or other Spousal abuse that occurs in a domestic setting, such as in a marriage or cohabitation.
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Terms such as wife Spousal abuse, wife beating, wife battering, and battered woman were used, but have declined in popularity due to efforts to include unmarried partners, Spousal abuse other than physical, female perpetrators, and same-sex relationships.
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Physical Spousal abuse is that involving contact intended to cause fear, pain, injury, other physical suffering or bodily harm.
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Emotional or psychological Spousal abuse is a pattern of behavior that threatens, intimidates, dehumanizes or systematically undermines self-worth.
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Emotional Spousal abuse includes minimizing, threats, isolation, public humiliation, unrelenting criticism, constant personal devaluation, coercive control, repeated stonewalling and gaslighting.
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Economic Spousal abuse is a form of Spousal abuse when one intimate partner has control over the other partner's access to economic resources.
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Research shows the key issue for perpetrators of Spousal abuse is their conscious and deliberate decision to offend in the pursuit of self-gratification.
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Various theories suggest that psychopathology is a factor, and that Spousal abuse experienced as a child leads some people to be more violent as adults.
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Spousal abuse argues that social factors are important, while personality traits, mental illness, or psychopathy are lesser factors.
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Spousal abuse cites evidence in support of his argument that, in most cases, abusers are quite capable of exercising control over themselves, but choose not to do so for various reasons.
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The titles of the spokes include coercion and threats, intimidation, emotional Spousal abuse, isolation, minimizing, denying and blaming, using children, economic Spousal abuse, and privilege.
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For example, victims are sometimes beaten after they have been sleeping or have been separated from the batterer, and often the Spousal abuse takes on a financial or emotional form in addition to physical Spousal abuse.
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Spousal abuse's says that males' self-reports of victimization are unreliable, as they consistently underreport their own violence perpetration, and that both men and women use IPV for coercive control.
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Spousal abuse's analysis found that men were more likely to beat up, choke or strangle their partners while women were more likely to throw objects, slap, kick, bite, punch, or hit with an object.
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