The Government is teaming up with banks to highlight economic abuse behaviours as part of the Enough campaign.
Nearly one in five men aged 18 to 24 do not recognise controlling a partner's spending as a form of abuse, according to new research published by the UK Home Office and Surviving Economic Abuse.
Males aged 18 to 24 three times more likely than older men to dismiss financial coercion as non-abusive, Home Office survey ...
“I felt like my brain was controlled by a computer chip.” “I wasn’t myself.” “I couldn’t think for myself. I really couldn’t think at all.” “I looked in the mirror and felt like I wasn’t there.” “All ...
At first, it looks like love. He's charming. Always generous, always attentive. He remembers your coffee order, listens to your stories, seems to share your pain. He tells you that you're the only one ...
One in 5 young men do not consider controlling someone's spending as abuse, as the government and banks unite as part of the Enough campaign. Victims ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Emotional abuse rarely starts with a slap—it starts with silence, subtle digs, and behaviors that feel off but are hard to name.
Tyler Wilkey from Barnstaple has been sent to prison for more than two years due to abusive behaviour and making threats to ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results