
Identifying a coercive controlling relationship...
In many ways, a coercive/controlling relationship is like a two-person cult as the partner or family member attempts to gain control of a person like a cult leader gains control of their followers.
According to the Crown Prosecution Service, behaviours that one might experience at the hands of a perpetrator in a coercive/controlling relationship are as follows (You may see some of those in cult groups too):
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Isolating a person from their friends and family
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Depriving them of their basic needs
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Monitoring their time
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Monitoring a person via online communication tools or using spyware
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Using digital systems such as smart devices or social media to coerce, control, or upset the victim including posting triggering material
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Taking control over aspects of their everyday life, such as where they can go, who they can see, what to wear and when they can sleep – this can be intertwined with the suspect saying it is in their best interests, and ‘rewarding’ ‘good behaviour’ e.g. with gifts
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Depriving them of access to support services, such as specialist support or medical services
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Repeatedly putting them down such as telling them they are worthless
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Enforcing rules and activity which humiliate, degrade or dehumanise the victim
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Forcing the victim to take part in criminal activity such as shoplifting, neglect or abuse of children to encourage self-blame and prevent disclosure to authorities
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Economic abuse including coerced debt, controlling spending/bank accounts/investments/mortgages/benefit payments
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Controlling the ability to go to school or place of study
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Taking wages, benefits or allowances
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Threatening to hurt or kill
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Threatening to harm a child
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Threatening to reveal or publish private information
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Threatening to hurt or physically harming a family pet
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Assault
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Physical intimidation e.g. blocking doors, clenching or shaking fists
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Criminal damage (such as destruction of household goods)
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Preventing a person from having access to transport or from working
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Preventing a person from learning or using a language or making friends outside of their ethnic or cultural background
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Family ‘dishonour’
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Reputational damage
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Sexual assault or threats of sexual assault
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Reproductive coercion, including restricting a victim’s access to birth control, refusing to use a birth control method, forced pregnancy, forcing a victim to get an abortion, to undergo in vitro fertilisation (IVF) or other procedure, or denying access to such a procedure
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Using substances such as alcohol or drugs to control a victim through dependency, or controlling their access to substances
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Disclosure of sexual orientation
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Disclosure of HIV status or other medical condition without consent
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Limiting access to family, friends and finances
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Withholding and/or destruction of the victim’s immigration documents, e.g. passports and visas
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Threatening to place the victim in an institution against the victim’s will, e.g. care home, supported living facility, mental health facility, etc (particularly for disabled or elderly victims)
(Crown Prosecution Service 2025)
You may also find that a coercive controlling intimate relationship is happening alongside or within a cult group.
