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The
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence defines domestic violence
as a pattern of behavior used to establish power and control over
another person through fear and intimidation, including the threat or
use of violence. Battering occurs when one person believes they are
entitled to dominate and control another. Assault, battering and
domestic violence are crimes.
Abuse can take many forms. Battering may include emotional abuse,
economic abuse, sexual abuse, using children for one's personal
benefit, threats, imposing "male privilege", intimidation, isolation,
and a variety of other behaviors used to maintain fear, intimidation
and power. In all cultures, men are the most common perpetrators of
domestic violence and women are usually the victims. However, men can
be and are victims of domestic violence.
Domestic violence can escalate. It often begins with threats, name
calling, and the destruction of property, such as punching a fist
through a wall, and/or damage to objects or pets. It may escalate to
restraining, pushing, slapping, and pinching. Battering may also
include punching, kicking, biting, sexual assault, tripping, throwing.
It can become life threatening with serious behaviors such as choking,
breaking bones, or the use of weapons. Domestic violence can be fatal.
Domestic violence is not about a loss of control or a bad temper.
Violence is actually a way to take control over another person and is
part of an effective strategy for creating and maintaining power and
control.
Domestic violence is a learned behavior and a conscious choice.
Perpetrators learn that violence is an effective way to get what they
want. Quite simply, it works.
Domestic Violence is a societal problem, learned through living in our culture.
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