Abuse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the ethics-related issue of abuse. For the computer game, see Abuse (computer game). For a similar word (e.g. a make of padlocks), see Abus.
Articles related to Abuse
Concepts

Violence · Coercion
Abuse of power · Persecution

Forms of abuse

Animal abuse
Bullying
Child abuse
Child grooming
Child sexual abuse
... commercially
Coercive persuasion
Cyber-bullying
Cyberstalking
Dating violence
Domestic violence
Elder abuse
Fabricated or Induced Illness
Harassment
Hate mail
Hate speech
Human experimentation
Humiliation
Intimidation
Mobbing
Parental alienation
Police brutality
Prisoner abuse
Prostitution of children
Psychological abuse
Psychological punishment
Rape
Relational aggression
Sexual abuse
... in education
Sexual slavery
Shunning
Slavery
Spousal abuse
Stalking
Street harassment
Torture
Trafficking in human beings
Trafficking of children
White slavery
White torture
Workplace bullying
Workplace violence

Related topics

United Nations
Universal Declaration
of Human Rights

Adult Protective Services
Anti-psychiatry
Brainwashing
Child Protective Services
Comfort women
Corporal punishment
Female genital cutting
Genital integrity
Human rights
Holocaust
Incest
Informed consent
Massacre
Mind control

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Abuse is a general term for the use or treatment of something (person, thing, idea, etc.) that causes some kind of harm (to the abused person or thing, to the abusers themselves, or to someone else) or is unlawful or wrongful. Its close synonyms are mistreatment and maltreatment. The word "misuse" has a more distant meaning of incorrect, uneducated use, not necessarily harmful to a person.

Abuse can be something as simple as damaging a piece of equipment through using it the wrong way, or as serious as severe maltreatment of a person. Abuse may be direct and overt, or it may be disguised and covert. A threshold question is whether the person or people can immediately defend themselves against threatened or actual harm - this goes to the question of power.

Several types of abuse include

Abuser redirects here. See definition of abuser[1].