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How perpetrators of domestic violence use drugs and alcohol to control their victims


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How perpetrators of domestic ********* use drugs and alcohol to control their victims

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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

At least three decades of research on the intersection of

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with domestic and family ********* consistently shows the frequency, severity and impact of ********* increases in the context of the perpetrator using alcohol and other drugs.

Some 24%–54% of domestic and family ********* incidents

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in Australia are classified as alcohol-related, while other drugs are implicated in 1%–9% of incidents. This is consistent with international evidence which shows substance use occurs with domestic and family ********* in
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.

Several studies have also pointed to the

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of domestic and family ********* when substances are involved. An
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, which looked at 240 women murdered by a current or former male partner between 2010 and 2018, reports more than 60% of the male perpetrators were affected by alcohol or drugs during the fatal episode.

Other research indicates

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is two to three times more likely to involve severe physical ********* such as life-threatening injuries and broken bones, compared to domestic and family ********* where alcohol is not involved.

Our research, however, is interested specifically in the role alcohol and other drugs play in perpetrators’ tactics of ********* and ******. This is sometimes called “

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” and is a type of
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.

Understanding substance use coercion

Coercive control is a repeated pattern of emotional, verbal, *******, financial or technology-enabled ****** that creates ***** and exerts control over another person.

A set of

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seeking to address coercive control in family and domestic ********* recognize that substance use can be exploited in the same way as technology or financial ******.

Our work identifies several ways perpetrators may use

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as a form of coercive control, or, in other words, exploit their own substance use to gain more power. These include:

  • to excuse their ********* (“The drink made me do it”)
  • to shift the focus from their ****** to other issues (“I have a ***** problem, that’s more important”)
  • to control others through their substance use. For example, when a person using ********* is intoxicated or in withdrawal, victim-survivors often comply with their demands or
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    to de-escalate the *********.

Perpetrators may also weaponize victim-survivors’ substance use. Research shows that, to numb the physical and emotional pain of family *********, victim-survivors may start using substances.

Perpetrators often

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to increase their power and control over the victim-survivor and to undermine their credibility if authorities become involved.

Likewise, perpetrators may exacerbate victim-survivors’ existing substance use, such as by pressuring them to drink or take drugs

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. Alternatively they might sabotage victim-survivors’ recovery efforts, preventing their access to
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.

Another tactic involves lying about the nature and extent of the victim-survivor’s substance use. This can

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with authorities such as child protection services or the family court.

Children suffer too

On a basic level, children are terrified when they hear their father come home ****** and abusive. They ***** for both themselves and their mothers, often finding the ****** that follows leaves them with neither parent in a position to look after their needs.

They may also be implicated in their father’s substance-use coercion. For example:

“Unless you shut those kids up, I’m going to drink.”

The severe impact on children living with ********* where either or both parents are substance-affected can be seen through child protection data.

A recent

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reported on children living in situations of domestic and family *********. Children where one or both parents had either substance-use issues or poor mental health were three times more likely to be identified as at risk of harm warranting statutory intervention, than in cases of domestic and family ********* alone.

Children in situations where substance use and domestic and family ********* intersect are some of the most vulnerable in Australia.

What can we do?

Policy and practice responses to the intersection of domestic ********* and substance use, both in

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and
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, have tended to focus on single issues: domestic ********* or substance use.

While many families experience domestic ********* and substance use as profoundly intertwined, service systems often fragment their experiences, treating the two as disconnected problems.

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is exploring how these two highly siloed sectors can work together, in the form of a
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for fathers who used ********* and ****** in the context of substance use. These men had more significant histories of ********* and ****** than men in a similar program targeting ********* only.

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shows programs that address both substance use and domestic ********* are developed but rarely sustained, despite evidence of their effectiveness.

We would like to see more nuanced policy and practice that recognizes the complex crossover between domestic and family ********* and substance use. Importantly, these approaches must address children’s experiences of these intersecting issues, and provide tailored responses to promote their safety.

Provided by
The Conversation


This article is republished from

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under a Creative Commons license. Read the
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Citation:
How perpetrators of domestic ********* use drugs and alcohol to control their victims (2024, September 17)
retrieved 17 September 2024
from

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#perpetrators #domestic #********* #drugs #alcohol #control #victims

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