Working with Domestic Violence and Coercive Control in Clinical Practice: A Practical Guide for Psychologists

Author:   Saira Khan ,  Mou Sultana (Irish College of Humanities and Applied Sciences, Ireland) ,  Katy Lord
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032788173


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   17 February 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Working with Domestic Violence and Coercive Control in Clinical Practice: A Practical Guide for Psychologists


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Author:   Saira Khan ,  Mou Sultana (Irish College of Humanities and Applied Sciences, Ireland) ,  Katy Lord
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
ISBN:  

9781032788173


ISBN 10:   1032788178
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   17 February 2026
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Reviews

""Working with domestic violence and coercive control in clinical practice, by Saira Khan, Mou Sultana, and Katy Lord, reflects the modern position that interactions between people in family systems are the foundation for good relationships as well as for conflicts. Oversimplified views of both marital and parent-child processes can be tempting but are usually wrong. Khan, Sultana, and Lord lay out family clinical issues in all their complexity and update readers on concepts like coercive control, providing a highly informative and concise view of a broad area of interest."" Dr Jean Mercer, Professor Emerita of Psychology at Stockton University ""The growing recognition of coercive control has prompted much-needed conversations within the mental health field. This comprehensive new guidance provides consensus and clear clinical guidance on how to identify and work effectively with coercive control in therapeutic settings. It provides a ‘light in the dark’ to address treatment inconsistencies and profound ethical concerns associated with the continued oppression and institutionalised harm of victim-survivors. The authors skillfully outline the potentials of humanistic, feminist, and trauma-informed frameworks as the foundation for clinical work."" Dr Elizabeth Dalgarno is a victim-survivor advocate, Lecturer at University of Manchester and the Founder and Director of SHERA Research Group. ""This important book fills a critical gap in supporting a deep understanding of coercive control from an intersectional, trauma-informed perspective. It integrates ecological frameworks with practical clinical guidance, offering psychologists essential tools to recognise and respond to the complex dynamics of domestic abuse."" Nic Douglas is the European Regional Manager at the Safe & Together Institute. Her 21 years’ experience in the domestic abuse field has spanned front-line service delivery, project management, and systems change work with national, European, and international reach.


Author Information

Dr Saira Khan earned her license as a clinical social worker (LCSW) in the USA and is now a counselling psychologist in the United Kingdom. Her doctoral research focused on recovery after coercive control. She has over 20 years of clinical work experience in the public and charitable sectors across two countries and now specialises in mind-body approaches to trauma recovery. Dr Mou Sultana is a lecturer, clinical and academic supervisor at the Irish College of Humanities and Applied Sciences. She works as a Chartered Counselling Psychologist (British Psychological Society) and a Psychotherapist (Irish Council of Psychotherapy) at her private practice Need2talk. She has over 10 years of experience working in domestic violence perpetrator programs. Dr Katy Lord is an HCPC registered Counselling Psychologist with extensive experience working in the NHS and private practice, delivering trauma-informed and relational psychotherapies. She has a keen interest in raising awareness of domestic abuse and identifying overt and covert patterns of behaviour that may sometimes be missed or overlooked.

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