"Read this if…" the harm you are seeing does not always look violent, but someone's life seems to be shrinking — rules, monitoring, punishments, and fear.
Coercive control is a pattern of domination: regulating someone's behaviour, isolating them, creating dependency, and punishing independence until they live around the controller's rules.
It is a core feature of many GBV situations — sometimes more damaging than isolated acts of violence because it trains the target to self-censor.
Coercive control is not "a strict partner"
Healthy boundaries exist in good relationships. Coercive control is different:
| Healthy boundary | Coercive control |
|---|---|
| "Please let me know if you'll be late" | "Send location photos every hour or I'll punish you" |
| discussing money together | taking your pay and giving an "allowance" |
| disagreeing respectfully | rage, threats, or days of silence until you comply |
| privacy agreed by both | reading every message and deleting contacts |
The difference is fear, punishment, and loss of agency — not mutual standards.
Common tactics
Controllers may:
- dictate clothing, food, friends, or faith
- sabotage work or study — lateness "accidents," hiding keys
- use cameras, tracking apps, or shared passwords as surveillance
- threaten pets, children, reputation, or immigration status
- alternate cruelty and affection so the target clings to "good days"
- rewrite history — see Understanding Gaslighting
Why leaving is not simple
Targets stay for reasons outsiders underestimate:
- economic dependence
- fear of escalation or murder
- children, housing, or visa ties
- shame, faith, or family pressure
- hope that love will return
- no trusted alternative
"Just leave" without safety planning can increase risk. See Safety Planning and Getting Help for GBV.
Coercive control beyond romance
Similar patterns appear when:
- elders control adult children's finances and movement
- community leaders punish gender non-conformity
- employers tie housing or migration to sexual access
- bullies and gangs enforce loyalty through fear
Gendered power is often present even when the relationship is not romantic.
What helpers should do
- believe reported control patterns
- avoid reuniting parties for "talks" when fear is real
- connect to specialised GBV services — not only generic counselling
- document facts if you are a professional with that duty
Supporting Someone Experiencing GBV goes deeper on ally conduct.
Final thought
Violence is not the only proof of GBV. A life made small by rules and fear is harm.
Name coercive control for what it is: a strategy to own someone else's choices. That naming is often the beginning of freedom — and the reason safety plans matter.