“…Studies described economic abuse as a mechanism of coercive control [2, 3, 18-20, 22, 28, 40], an attitude or behavior [38], or an abusive behavior [30]. These strategies hinder a woman's ability to acquire, use, and maintain economic resources [2-4, 18-20, 44], threatening her economic security [2, 3, 18-20, 38, 40, 43, 44], economic self-su ciency [2,3,18,19,26,29,31,38,40,44], and increasing nancial dependence on their abusive partner [4,22,26,40,43]. Some studies described economic abuse in terms of the three constructs identi ed in theoretical and measurement literature [16]: economic control (n = 10), employment sabotage (n = 7), and economic exploitation (n = 4).…”