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The Currents of Lethal Violence

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Building on past work, the authors outline an integrated model for linking suicide and homicide and show how that research from this perspective can further our understanding of violence. Specifica...
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  • 11 October 1994
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Building on past work, the authors outline an integrated model for linking suicide and homicide and show how that research from this perspective can further our understanding of violence. Specifically, they show that research based on this model provides new insights into how structural and cultural factors combine to produce high homicide levels in the American South and cross-national difference in lethal violence rates. In conclusion, they evaluate the model's utility, address possible criticisms of this perspective, and suggest avenues for further investigations of lethal violence.

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Price: £25.50
Pages: 230
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Violence
Publication Date: 11 October 1994
ISBN: 9780791420522
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

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"This book is a nice blend of theorizing and empirical assessment. The authors use some sophisticated analysis techniques including nonlinear regression, J. W. betas, Cook's D test for outliers, and ridge regressions. It provides excellent reviews of the theory and literature most relevant to the problems at hand." — Steven Stack, Wayne State University

"This book reviews, defends, and extends an important research and theoretical tradition in the social and behavioral sciences. It makes a valuable contribution not only to that tradition but to general theories of lethal violence. The level of theoretical and methodological sophistication evidenced in the book is exemplary. The authors have done an excellent job of recognizing and overcoming theoretical weaknesses of previous studies that have used the stream of lethal violence analogy." — James F. Short, Jr., Washington State University

Foreword
James F. Short, Jr.

Preface

Acknowledgments

1. To Every Good Thing There Must Be a Beginning
Jay Corzine, Lin Huff-Corzine, Hugh P. Whitt, and N. Prabha Unnithan

2. Old Theories Never Die
Hugh P. Whitt

3. Old Wine in a New Wineskin
Hugh P. Whitt

4. Reinventing the Wheel
Lin Huff-Corzine, Jay Corzine, Hugh P. Whitt, and N. Prabha Unnithan

5. Social-Psychological Underpinnings of the Integrated Model
Hugh P. Whitt

6. The Integrated Model
Hugh P. Whitt

7. Cross-National Patterns of Lethal Violence
N. Prabha Unnithan, Lin Huff-Corzine, and Hugh P. Whitt

8. Deadly Connections n the United States
Jay Corzine and Lin Huff-Corzine

9. Charting the Currents of Lethal Violence
N. Prabha Unnithan, Hugh P. Whitt, Lin Huff-Corzine, and Jay Corzine

Notes

References

Index