MPs vote unanimously to criminalize coercive control
CBC
Members of Parliament have voted unanimously to criminalize coercive control, a pattern of behaviour that can perpetuate domestic abuse.
A private member's bill from New Democrat MP Laurel Collins passed on its third reading on Wednesday, months after she introduced the bill in response to behaviour she had witnessed in her own family.
The bill would criminalize actions like attempting to control an intimate partner's actions, employment, finances or other property, which Collins argues would be a part of a larger pattern of abuse meant to limit a victim's freedom and choices.
Collins' bill will now pass to the Senate, where it will be debated and studied before it can become law. The member of Parliament from Victoria says she hopes that senators see the urgency of her bill and pass it as soon as possible.
She says the issue hit particularly close to home for her, when her sister's partner had taken away her keys, bank cards and cellphone, and tried to prevent her from leaving the house.
"So many survivors and victims of intimate partner violence have expressed that it often starts with their partner controlling their finances, controlling their modes of transportation, tracking their movements, things like controlling what they can wear or what they can eat," she told Jason D'Souza, host of CBC's All Points West.
Collins said it has been over two years since a parliamentary committee recommended that the government criminalize coercive control in order to better support victims of intimate partner violence.
"A woman is killed in Canada every six days from intimate partner violence," the MP said.
"We know that coercive control is one of the most common precursors to femicide, even in situations where there's been no other physical violence."
Janine Benedet, a law professor at the University of B.C. who researches sexual violence against women, said that domestic violence support organizations had been bringing up the topic of coercive control for many years.
"Many of those same women's groups pointed out the way that new technologies were being leveraged to coercively control women," Benedet told CBC News. "The kinds of smartphone apps that can control the heating and cooling in the house, the locks on the door, the ability to use an automobile."
The law professor said she was glad to see cross-party support for the bill, but she worries it is too narrow in scope, given that it primarily references intimate partners.
She says that coercive control can also be exerted by caregivers of disabled people, and fathers of adolescent daughters — situations that can also lead to physical and sexual abuse.
"We want victims who are experiencing that kind of behaviour in other contexts to be able to come forward and to see what is happening to them as abuse," Benedet said.
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