• Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Contribute
  • Magazine
    • About Forty South
    • Print magazine subscription
    • Advertise
    • Print magazine archive
    • Editorial policy
    • Complaints policy
  • Publishing
    • Publishing
    • Book submissions
  • Shop
    • Books and DVDs
    • Print magazine subscriptions
    • Current and back issues
  • Writing prizes
    • Tasmanian Writers' Prize
    • Young Tasmanian Writers' Prize
  • The Van Diemen Decameron
  • Environment
  • Wilderness
  • Events
    • Stories of Tasmania BOFA
  • Science
  • Epicure
  • Young Tasmania

  • History
  • The Arts
    • Books & writing
    • Portfolio
    • Poet's Corner
    • Artists and Artisans
  • People
  • Travel and tourism
    • Towns of Tasmania
  • Business
  • Voices
    • Tasmanian Voices
    • Young Tasmanian Voices
    • Blogs
    • Columns

  • Environment
  • Wilderness
  • Events
    • Stories of Tasmania BOFA
  • Science
  • Epicure
  • Young Tasmania

  • History
  • The Arts
    • Books & writing
    • Portfolio
    • Poet's Corner
    • Artists and Artisans
  • People
  • Travel and tourism
    • Towns of Tasmania
  • Business
  • Voices
    • Tasmanian Voices
    • Young Tasmanian Voices
    • Blogs
    • Columns
  • Environment
  • Wilderness
  • Events
    • Stories of Tasmania BOFA
  • Science
  • Epicure
  • Young Tasmania
  • History
  • The Arts
    • Books & writing
    • Portfolio
    • Poet's Corner
    • Artists and Artisans
  • People
  • Travel and tourism
    • Towns of Tasmania
  • Business
  • Voices
    • Tasmanian Voices
    • Young Tasmanian Voices
    • Blogs
    • Columns
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Contribute
  • Magazine
    • About Forty South
    • Print magazine subscription
    • Advertise
    • Print magazine archive
    • Editorial policy
    • Complaints policy
  • Publishing
    • Publishing
    • Book submissions
  • Shop
    • Books and DVDs
    • Print magazine subscriptions
    • Current and back issues
  • Writing prizes
    • Tasmanian Writers' Prize
    • Young Tasmanian Writers' Prize
  • The Van Diemen Decameron
 

Deborah
Thomson

Deborah Thomson moved to Tasmania with her daughter in 2010, and now lives with her partner of nine years and a parrot. She moved to escape domestic violence and, inspired by her new partner, wrote her first book, Whose Life Is It Anyway? Recognising and Surviving Domestic Violence, to help others recognise abuse (and in particular coercive control), in the home, and to increase their motivation to leave earlier. After publishing her first book, she became a trained advocate through Engender Equality, a non-government Tasmanian organisation working with people and communities impacted by family violence. Deborah Thomson advocates for survivors of family violence, speaking at domestic violence events across Tasmania, through media channels and podcasts. She recently completed a second book, detailing lived experience with domestic violence by her then husband, spanning 17 years from 1985 to 2003. This book is now used in Tasmania as an information resource for family violence counsellors and students on practicals.


Deborah Thomson moved to Tasmania with her daughter in 2010, and now lives with her partner of nine years and a parrot. She moved to escape domestic violence and, inspired by her new partner, wrote her first book, Whose Life Is It Anyway? Recognising and Surviving Domestic Violence, to help others recognise abuse (and in particular coercive control), in the home, and to increase their motivation to leave earlier. After publishing her first book, she became a trained advocate through Engender Equality, a non-government Tasmanian organisation working with people and communities impacted by family violence. Deborah Thomson advocates for survivors of family violence, speaking at domestic violence events across Tasmania, through media channels and podcasts. She recently completed a second book, detailing lived experience with domestic violence by her then husband, spanning 17 years from 1985 to 2003. This book is now used in Tasmania as an information resource for family violence counsellors and students on practicals.


Tasmanian Voices

Intersectionality: a new term explaining an old problem

by Deborah Thomson
07 Jun 2025

Intersectionality in relation to domestic and family violence is a study of how different categories of identity overlap and interact to create unique experiences of discrimination and its opposite, privilege ...

Tasmanian Voices

The system is failing on coercive control

by Deborah Thomson
28 Apr 2025

What is coercive control and how does a narcissist use this to their own advantage? ...

Tasmanian Voices

Explaining coercive control

by Deborah Thomson
26 Apr 2025

Coercive control is a criminal offence and can be reported to the police ...

Tasmanian Voices

DARVO: When the victim is accused of being the perpetrator

by Deborah Thomson
01 Mar 2025

The misidentifying the victim for a perpetrator, particularly in police callouts to domestic violence incidents, has been discussed in the national media recently. Incidents of this have been seen in Tasmania as well as the mainland ...

SEE MORE
We pay our respects to the Tasmanian Aboriginal people as the traditional and original owners and continuing custodians of lutruwita, and acknowledge elders past and present.

Shop

Print subscriptions Books and DVDs Back issues

Connect

Advertising Contact Us About Forty South

Policies

Editorial policy Complaints policy

Sponsorships

Theatre Royal RHH Research Foundation
© Copyright Forty South 2025
DESIGNED AND POWERED BY PAGEMASTERS PUBLISH
Join our newsletter
Our love letter
– your newsletter –
on all things Tasmanian
Our love letter
– your newsletter –
on all things Tasmanian
sign up