Sentences with phrase «for sexual humiliation»

Outside of Jason Biggs, whose Jim Levinstein character is the poster boy for sexual humiliation, we don't remember squat about the Pie universe.

Not exact matches

178 c. thinning silver hair clean shaven into safe sane b.d.s.m. with some verbal humiliation thrown in, like men in gear or uniforms [I have 2 uniforms] into role playing I am only a sub now looking for a man or men to use me for their sexual pleasure, I am retired so can meet...
love being dehumanized and used as a toy for entertainment, humiliation and sexual service.
No steps were taken to move the adults to a safer area until they had been imprisoned, together with their children, in their flat for a weekend and subject to gross physical and sexual abuse and humiliation.
The Canada Labour Code defines sexual harassment as «any conduct, comment, gesture, or contact of a sexual nature that is likely to cause offence or humiliation to any employee; or that might, on reasonable grounds, be perceived by that employee as placing a condition of a sexual nature on employment or on any opportunity for training or promotion.»
Looking at the two different aspects of sexual harassment as defined by the Canada Labour Code, more than half of working women in Canada (54 %) say they have experienced conduct, comments, gestures or contact of a sexual nature that caused them offence or humiliation, while three - in - ten (30 %) experienced conduct, comments, gestures or contact of a sexual nature that they perceived as placing a condition of a sexual nature on their employment or on any opportunity they might have for training or promotion.
Abusers often employ a variety of tactics in their quest to control their targets, including physical abuse (e.g., pushing, hitting, choking), sexual abuse (e.g., forced sexual activities), emotional abuse (e.g., name - calling, insults, public or private humiliation), economic abuse (e.g., controlling finances, preventing the partner from having a job), coercion and threats (e.g., threatening to harm or leave the partner), intimidation (e.g., destroying the partner's property, harming the partner's pet), social isolation (e.g., monitoring or limiting the partner's social contacts and outside activities), and denial (e.g., denying or minimizing the abuse, blaming the partner for the abuse)(see Hines, Brown, & Dunning, 2007; National Domestic Violence Hotline, 2015; Pence & Paymar, 1993; U.S. Department of Justice, 2008, 2014).
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