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Financial Abuse

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24 Mar: How Soft Gambling Rebranded Addiction as Self-Care for Women

Dana Nguyen knows she has a problem.

In 2025, the 27-year-old California resident spent more than $4,000 on Labubu dolls. These dolls are small, furry, “cute,” monster-themed bag charms with pointed ears and wide, toothy smiles (Kwai, 2025). Labubus were manufactured by the Chinese company: Pop Mart. The trendy toys are highly collectible and sold in blind boxes, meaning buyers don’t know which doll they’ve purchased until they open it.

08 Apr: Digital Financial Abuse: The Invisible Chains of Control

Financial Abuse, a longstanding method of control in toxic relationships, has now taken on a more insidious form in the digital age. Digital Financial Abuse represents a contemporary method of coercion, where perpetrators leverage technology to manipulate, monitor, or limit the financial resources of their Victims. In a troubling trend, digital Financial Abuse often goes unnoticed, allowing perpetrators to exert control without drawing immediate attention.

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