<p>Blending deep empathy with sociological insight, Supriya Singh offers a pathbreaking account of domestic financial abuse. As public visibility of physical violence against women has increased, Singh reveals the equally devastating effects of economic violence. Drawing from poignant interviews, the book’s discoveries will instruct social scientists, inform policy makers, and engage all readers concerned with understanding families, money, and love. </p><p>Viviana A. Zelizer is the Lloyd Cotsen ’50 Professor of Sociology at Princeton University. She is the author of <i>Economic Lives: How Culture Shapes the Economy. </i></p><p>See Supriya Singh's Ted Talk here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=id6kPfzHVr8</p>

Supriya Singh tells the stories of 12 Anglo-Celtic and Indian women in Australia who survived economic abuse. She describes the lived experience of coercive control underlying economic abuse across cultures.

Each story shows how the woman was trapped and lost her freedom because her husband denied her money, appropriated her assets and sabotaged her ability to be in paid work. These stories are about silence, shame and embarrassment that this could happen despite professional and graduate education. Some of the women were the main earners in their household. Women spoke of being afraid, of trying to leave, of losing their sense of self. Many suffered physical and mental ill-health, not knowing what would trigger the violence. Some attempted suicide. None of the women fully realised they were suffering family violence through economic abuse, whilst it was happening to them.

The stories of Anglo-Celtic and Indian women show economic abuse is not associated with a specific system of money management and control. It is when the morality of money is betrayed that control becomes coercive. Money as a medium of care then becomes a medium of abuse.

The women’s stories demonstrate the importance of talking about money and relationships with future partners, across life stages and with their sons and daughters. The women saw this as an essential step for preventing and lessening economic abuse.

A vital read for scholars of domestic abuse and family violence that will also be valuable for sociologists of money.

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Singh tells the stories of 12 Anglo-Celtic and Indian women in Australia who survived economic abuse, describing the lived experience of coercive control underlying economic abuse across cultures.

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1 Introduction: Economic abuse is the untold story of family violence

2 Carol: The joint account becomes a medium of abuse

3 Ekta: The ‘good son’ sends her money to his parents

4 Rina: Dowry is economic, emotional and physical abuse

5 Geeta: He gave me coins, not notes

6 Karen: ‘I’ve been a single mother for most of my married life’

7 Asha: ‘You now belong to my family and your money is mine’

8 Chitra: He and his family abused her for she did not behave ‘like a good wife’

9 Prema: He married her to get permanent residence

10 Betty: After he died she recognised it as economic abuse

11 Heer: She knew she should leave but was in a silent ‘cultural bind’

12 Bala: A story of torture, survival and empowerment

13 Enid: Talking of money

14 Conclusion

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Product details

ISBN
9781032014302
Published
2021-07-26
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Weight
660 gr
Height
216 mm
Width
138 mm
Age
UP, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
128

Author

Biographical note

Supriya Singh is a sociologist of money, migration and family. She is Honorary Professor at the Graduate School of Business and Law, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) University.