By cwade on Tuesday, 15 August 2023
Category: Domestic Violence

Without Money, Abusers Think Survivors Will Come Back

Group explores ways to resolve economic dilemmas that hobble survivors

Two weeks after they meet, he insists on moving into her apartment and pooling their funds in a joint bank account. Then he takes away her ATM card.

He forbids her from working. Or he moves her to a rural area where she can't find a job.

He makes her late, trashes her work clothes, or interferes with her transportation or childcare, so she loses her job.

He takes her paycheck and she has to beg him for money to fund basic needs. He drinks, drugs or gambles away their joint funds and deliberately keeps her in a panic about finances.

Sensing she's getting ready to break away, he over-spends on their joint accounts or stops paying their bills; when she tries to move out, she discovers her credit has been ruined.

He steals from her. He destroys her belongings. He interferes with her schooling or promotions. He persuades her to sign checks (or forges her name) or presses her to sign a prenuptial agreement that takes away her basic financial rights.

There are way too many ways for abusers to block their partners' economic independence. And when financially trapped, it is much harder to break free from an abuser's domination. Financial abuse is one weapon of a multi-pronged strategy of asserting power over a partner called: Coercive Control.

"No survivor should have to choose between being homeless or living with a partner who beats her," said Jill Davies, an attorney with the Greater Hartford Legal Aid's Building Comprehensive Solutions to Domestic Violence Initiative.

A recent conference on Economic Justice for Survivors: Exploring Strategies that Work, sponsored by the Massachusetts Rural Domestic and Sexual Violence Project, provided innovative solutions and resources to resolve some of the economic dilemmas that hobble survivors, with a focus on women in rural areas. Here's a taste of what they offered, along with relevant links.


Source: http://domestishelters.org​

Editor's Notes: Lisa Aronson Fontes, PhD, Senior Lecturer, University of Massachusetts and Author of Invisible Chains: Overcoming Coercive Control in Your Intimate Relationship.

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