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Learn the Warning Signs
Most Ontarians feel a personal responsibility for reducing woman abuse...
and recognizing it is the first step.

Take the warning signs seriously.

What types of woman abuse have been identified?

 

Abuse tactics have been categorized in a variety of different ways. The list below groups tactics and gives many examples. No list of examples can be exhaustive. Women who experience abuse may not separate their experiences into distinct categories.

Physical Abuse
Any unnecessary/unwanted physical contact caused by another person resulting in bodily harm, discomfort and/or injury. e.g., slapping, kicking, restraining, choking, and restricting food.

Psychological/Emotional Abuse
Any act that provokes fear, diminishes the individual’s dignity or self-worth, and/or intentionally inflects psychological trauma on another person. (e.g., yelling, intimidating, silence, playing on emotions, degradation, treating her as though she was a child, coming home drunk or stoned, refusing to provide support or help out with the baby/children.)

Sexual Abuse
Any unwelcome or forced sexual activities. (e.g., unwanted sexual contact, forces her to have sex, forcing her to have sex with others, uttering threats to obtain sex, forcing sex when she is sick, after childbirth or surgery, treating her as a sex object, refusing to allow or forcing her to use contraception.)

Verbal Abuse
The use of negative comments that are unwelcome, embarrassing, offensive, threatening
and/or degrading to a woman. (e.g. name calling, false accusations, lying, saying one thing and meaning another.)

Financial Abuse
Any behaviour that reduces/eliminates a woman’s financial independence and/or financial decision-making. (e.g. taking her money, forging her name, withholding money, spending money on addiction, gambling, sexual services, keeping family finances a secret.)

Stalking
While legal definitions of stalking vary from one jurisdiction to another, a good working definition of stalking is a course of conduct directed at a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to feel fear.

Social Abuse
Any behaviour resulting in the isolation and alienation of a woman from friends or family. (e.g. controlling what she does, whom she sees and talks to, failing to pass on messages, treating her like a servant, and making a "scene" in public.)

Religious Abuse
Any tactics that exert power and control over a woman’s spirituality and religious orientation. (e.g. using religion to justify abuse or dominance, using church position to pressure for sex or favours.)

Using Children
The use of threats or actions to harm the children or to take the children from her in order to control what she does, making her feel guilty about the children, using the children to relay messages.

Environmental Abuse
Any tactics used that result in a woman being fearful of her surroundings. (e.g., slamming doors, punching walls, harming pets, driving too fast.)

Using Privilege/Social Status
Any comments or actions that suggest she is inferior because she comes from a different socio-economic background, the use of social status or wealth to hide or deny abusive behaviour, the use of wealth to involve her in expensive legal proceedings or to manipulate or prolong legal proceedings.

The Middlesex-London Health Unit first published this description of types of woman abuse. The Women’s Mental Health and Addictions Action Research Coalition http://wmhaarc.ca revised it in 2007.

 

 

 







~What is Woman Abuse?

~What types of woman abuse have been identified?

~Why does woman abuse occur?

~What are the effects of woman abuse?

~Domestic Violence - Is there a risk of death?

~How many women die as a result of woman abuse?

~What do I need to think about if I try to help an abused woman?

~How can I find supportive services in my community?

~Why doesn’t she just leave?

~When should I call the Police?

~What about abuse and pregnancy?

 
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