Violence is often defined as the use of physical force by humans to cause harm and degradation to other living beings, such as humiliation, pain, injury, disablement, damage to property and ultimately death, as well as destruction to a civilization society's living environment.[1] There's growing recognition among researchers and practitioners of the need to include violence that does not necessarily result in injury or death.[2]: 5  The World Health Organization (WHO) defines it as "the intentional use of physical force or power, threatened or actual, against oneself, another person, or against a group or community, which either results in or has a high likelihood of resulting in injury, death, psychological harm, maldevelopment, or deprivation."[2]: 5 

Cain slaying Abel, by Peter Paul Rubens, c. 1600

Injuries and violence are a significant cause of death and burden of disease in all countries; however, they are not evenly distributed across or within countries.[3] Violence-related injuries kill 1.25 million people every year, as of 2024.[3] This is relatively similar to 2014 (1.3 million people or 2.5% of global mortality), 2013 (1.28 million people) and 1990 (1.13 million people).[4]: 2 [5] For people aged 15–44 years, violence is the fourth leading cause of death worldwide, as of 2014.[4]: 2  Between 1990 and 2013, age-standardised death rates fell for self-harm and interpersonal violence.[5]: 139  Of the deaths in 2013, roughly 842,000 were attributed to self-harm (suicide), 405,000 to interpersonal violence (homicide), and 31,000 to collective violence (war) and legal intervention.[5] For each single death due to violence, there are dozens of hospitalizations, hundreds of emergency department visits, and thousands of doctors' appointments.[6] Furthermore, violence often has lifelong consequences for physical and mental health and social functioning and can slow economic and social development. It's particularly the case if it happened in childhood.[3]

In 2013, of the estimated 405,000 deaths due to interpersonal violence globally, assault by firearm was the cause in 180,000 deaths, assault by sharp object was the cause in 114,000 deaths, and the remaining 110,000 deaths from other causes.[5]

Violence in many forms can be preventable. There is a strong relationship between levels of violence and modifiable factors in a country such as concentrated (regional) poverty, income and gender inequality, the harmful use of alcohol, and the absence of safe, stable, and nurturing relationships between children and parents. Strategies addressing the underlying causes of violence can be relatively effective in preventing violence, although mental and physical health and individual responses, personalities, etc. have always been decisive factors in the formation of these behaviors.[7]

Types

edit
 
Typology of violence[2]

The World Health Organization (WHO) divides violence into three broad categories:[2]

  • self-directed violence
  • interpersonal violence
  • collective violence

This initial categorization differentiates between violence that a person inflicts upon themself, violence inflicted by another individual or by a small group of individuals, and violence inflicted by larger groups such as states, organized political groups, militia groups and terrorist organizations.

Alternatively, violence can primarily be classified as either instrumental or reactive / hostile.[8]

Self-directed

edit

Self-directed violence is subdivided into suicidal behaviour and self-abuse. The former includes suicidal thoughts, attempted suicides—also called para suicide or deliberate self-injury in some countries—and suicide itself. Self-abuse, in contrast, includes acts such as self-mutilation.

Collective

edit
 
Massacre of Polish civilians during Nazi Germany's occupation of Poland, December 1939

Collective violence is the instrumental use of violence by people who identify themselves as members of a group – whether this group is transitory or has a more permanent identity – against another group or set of individuals in order to achieve political, economic or social objectives.[4]: 82 

Unlike the other two broad categories, the subcategories of collective violence suggest possible motives for violence committed by larger groups of individuals or by states. Collective violence that is committed to advance a particular social agenda includes, for example, crimes of hate committed by organized groups, terrorist acts and mob violence. Political violence includes war and related violent conflicts, state violence and similar acts carried out by armed groups. There may be multiple determinants of violence against civilians in such situations.[9] Economic violence includes attacks motivated by economic gain—such as attacks carried out with the purpose of disrupting economic activity, denying access to essential services, or creating economic division and fragmentation. Clearly, acts committed by domestic and subnational groups can have multiple motives.[10] Slow violence is a long-duration form of violence which is often invisible (at least to those not impacted by it), such as environmental degradation, pollution and climate change.[11]

Warfare

edit
 
A United States M8 Greyhound armoured car in Paris during World War II

War is a state of prolonged violent large-scale conflict involving two or more groups of people, usually under the auspices of government. It is the most extreme form of collective violence.[12] War is fought as a means of resolving territorial and other conflicts, as war of aggression to conquer territory or loot resources, in national self-defence or liberation, or to suppress attempts of part of the nation to secede from it. There are also ideological, religious and revolutionary wars.[13]

Since the Industrial Revolution the lethality of modern warfare has grown. World War I casualties were over 40 million and World War II casualties were over 70 million.

Interpersonal

edit
 
Saul attacks David (who had been playing music to help Saul feel better), 1860 woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld

Interpersonal violence is divided into two subcategories: Family and intimate partner violence—that is, violence largely between family members and intimate partners, usually, though not exclusively, taking place in the home. Community violence—violence between individuals who are unrelated, and who may or may not know each other, generally taking place outside the home. The former group includes forms of violence such as child abuse and child corporal punishment, intimate partner violence and abuse of the elderly. The latter includes youth violence, random acts of violence, rape or sexual assault by strangers, and violence in institutional settings such as schools, workplaces, prisons and nursing homes. When interpersonal violence occurs in families, its psychological consequences can affect parents, children, and their relationship in the short- and long-terms.[14]

Violence against children

edit

Violence against children includes all forms of violence against people under 18 years old, whether perpetrated by parents or other caregivers, peers, romantic partners, or strangers.[15]

Exposure to any form of trauma, particularly in childhood, can increase the risk of mental illness and suicide; smoking, alcohol and substance abuse; chronic diseases like heart disease, diabetes and cancer; and social problems such as poverty, crime and violence.[3]

Globally, it is estimated that up to 1 billion children aged 2–17 years, have experienced physical, sexual, or emotional violence or neglect in the past year.[15] Most violence against children involves at least one of six main types of interpersonal violence that tend to occur at different stages in a child’s development.[15]

Maltreatment
edit

Maltreatment (including violent punishment) involves physical, sexual and psychological/emotional violence; and neglect of infants, children and adolescents by parents, caregivers and other authority figures, most often in the home but also in settings such as schools and orphanages.

It includes all types of physical and/or emotional ill-treatment, sexual abuse, neglect, negligence and commercial or other child exploitation, which results in actual or potential harm to the child's health, survival, development or dignity in the context of a relationship of responsibility, trust, or power. Exposure to intimate partner violence is also sometimes included as a form of child maltreatment.[16]

Child maltreatment is a global problem with serious lifelong consequences.[17][pages needed] It is complex and difficult to study.[17][pages needed]

There are no reliable global estimates for the prevalence of child maltreatment. Data for many countries, especially low- and middle-income countries, are lacking. Current estimates vary widely depending on the country and the method of research used. Approximately 20% of women and 5–10% of men report being sexually abused as children, while 25–50% of all children report being physically abused.[2][18]

Consequences of child maltreatment include impaired lifelong physical and mental health, and social and occupational functioning (e.g. school, job, and relationship difficulties). These can ultimately slow a country's economic and social development.[19][20] Preventing child maltreatment before it starts is possible and requires a multisectoral approach. Effective prevention programmes support parents and teach positive parenting skills. Ongoing care of children and families can reduce the risk of maltreatment reoccurring and can minimize its consequences.[21][22]

Bullying
edit

Bullying (including cyber-bullying) is unwanted aggressive behaviour by another child or group of children who are neither siblings nor in a romantic relationship with the victim. It involves repeated physical, psychological or social harm, and often takes place in schools and other settings where children gather, and online.[15]

Youth violence
edit
 
The Kids off the Block memorial featuring hundreds of simple stone blocks, one for each child killed by violence in Roseland, Chicago

Following the World Health Organization, youth are defined as people between the ages of 10 and 29 years.[15] Youth violence refers to violence occurring between youths, and includes acts that range from bullying and physical fighting, through more severe sexual and physical assault to homicide.[23][24]

Worldwide some 250,000 homicides occur among youth 10–29 years of age each year, which is 41% of the total number of homicides globally each year ("Global Burden of Disease", World Health Organization, 2008). For each young person killed, 20–40 more sustain injuries requiring hospital treatment.[23] Youth violence has a serious, often lifelong, impact on a person's psychological and social functioning. Youth violence greatly increases the costs of health, welfare and criminal justice services; reduces productivity; decreases the value of property; and generally undermines the fabric of society.[vague]

Prevention programmes shown to be effective or to have promise in reducing youth violence include life skills and social development programmes designed to help children and adolescents manage anger, resolve conflict, and develop the necessary social skills to solve problems; schools-based anti-bullying prevention programmes; and programmes to reduce access to alcohol, illegal drugs and guns.[25] Also, given significant neighbourhood effects on youth violence, interventions involving relocating families to less poor environments have shown promising results.[26] Similarly, urban renewal projects such as business improvement districts have shown a reduction in youth violence.[27]

Different types of youth on youth violence include witnessing or being involved in physical, emotional and sexual abuse (e.g. physical attacks, bullying, rape), and violent acts like gang shootings and robberies. According to researchers in 2018, "More than half of children and adolescents living in cities have experienced some form of community violence." The violence "can also all take place under one roof, or in a given community or neighborhood and can happen at the same time or at different stages of life."[28] Youth violence has immediate and long term adverse impact whether the individual was the recipient of the violence or a witness to it.[29]

Youth violence impacts individuals, their families, and society. Victims can have lifelong injuries which means ongoing doctor and hospital visits, the cost of which quickly add up. Since the victims of youth-on-youth violence may not be able to attend school or work because of their physical and/or mental injuries, it is often up to their family members to take care of them, including paying their daily living expenses and medical bills. Their caretakers may have to give up their jobs or work reduced hours to provide help to the victim of violence. This causes a further burden on society because the victim and maybe even their caretakers have to obtain government assistance to help pay their bills. Recent research has found that psychological trauma during childhood can change a child's brain. "Trauma is known to physically affect the brain and the body which causes anxiety, rage, and the ability to concentrate. They can also have problems remembering, trusting, and forming relationships."[30] Since the brain becomes used to violence it may stay continually in an alert state (similar to being stuck in the fight or flight mode). "Researchers claim that the youth who are exposed to violence may have emotional, social, and cognitive problems. They may have trouble controlling emotions, paying attention in school, withdraw from friends, or show signs of post-traumatic stress disorder".[28]

It is important for youth exposed to violence to understand how their bodies may react so they can take positive steps to counteract any possible short- and long-term negative effects (e.g., poor concentration, feelings of depression, heightened levels of anxiety). By taking immediate steps to mitigate the effects of the trauma they've experienced, negative repercussions can be reduced or eliminated. As an initial step, the youths need to understand why they may be feeling a certain way and to understand how the violence they have experienced may be causing negative feelings and making them behave differently. Pursuing a greater awareness of their feelings, perceptions, and negative emotions is the first step that should be taken as part of recovering from the trauma they have experienced. "Neuroscience research shows that the only way we can change the way we feel is by becoming aware of our inner experience and learning to befriend what is going on inside ourselves".[31]

Some of the ways to combat the adverse effects of exposure to youth violence would be to try various mindfulness and movement activities, deep breathing exercises and other actions that enable youths to release their pent up emotions. Using these techniques will teach body awareness, reduce anxiety and nervousness, and reduce feelings of anger and annoyance.[32]

Youth who have experienced violence benefit from having a close relationship with one or more people.[31] This is important because the trauma victims need to have people who are safe and trustworthy that they can relate and talk to about their horrible experiences. Some youth do not have adult figures at home or someone they can count on for guidance and comfort. Schools in bad neighborhoods where youth violence is prevalent should assign counselors to each student so that they receive regular guidance. In addition to counseling/therapy sessions and programs, it has been recommended that schools offer mentoring programs where students can interact with adults who can be a positive influence on them. Another way is to create more neighborhood programs to ensure that each child has a positive and stable place to go when school in not in session. Many children have benefited from formal organizations now which aim to help mentor and provide a safe environment for the youth especially those living in neighborhoods with higher rates of violence. This includes organizations such as Becoming a Man, CeaseFire Illinois, Chicago Area Project, Little Black Pearl, and Rainbow House".[33] These programs are designed to help give the youth a safe place to go, stop the violence from occurring, offering counseling and mentoring to help stop the cycle of violence. If the youth do not have a safe place to go after school hours they will likely get into trouble, receive poor grades, drop out of school and use drugs and alcohol. The gangs look for youth who do not have positive influences in their life and need protection. This is why these programs are so important for the youth to have a safe environment rather than resorting to the streets.[34]

Intimate partner violence
edit

Intimate partner violence (or domestic violence) involves physical, sexual and emotional violence by an intimate partner or ex-partner. Although males can also be victims, intimate partner violence disproportionately affects females. It commonly occurs against girls within child marriages and early/forced marriages. Among romantically involved but unmarried adolescents it is sometimes called “dating violence”.[15]

Sexual violence
edit

Sexual violence includes non-consensual completed or attempted sexual contact and acts of a sexual nature not involving contact (such as voyeurism or sexual harassment); acts of sexual trafficking committed against someone who is unable to consent or refuse; and online exploitation.[15]

Emotional or psychological violence
edit

Emotional or psychological violence includes restricting a child’s movements, denigration, ridicule, threats and intimidation, discrimination, rejection and other non-physical forms of hostile treatment.[15]

Intimate partner

edit
 
Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall (JBM-HH) roundtable addressing digital stalking, ties to intimate partner violence

Population-level surveys based on reports from victims provide the most accurate estimates of the prevalence of intimate partner violence and sexual violence in non-conflict settings. A study conducted by WHO in 10 mainly developing countries[35] found that, among women aged 15 to 49 years, between 15% (Japan) and 70% (Ethiopia and Peru) of women reported physical and/or sexual violence by an intimate partner. A growing body of research on men and intimate partner violence focuses on men as both perpetrators and victims of violence, as well as on how to involve men and boys in anti-violence work.[36]

Intimate partner and sexual violence have serious short- and long-term physical, mental, sexual and reproductive health problems for victims and for their children, and lead to high social and economic costs. These include both fatal and non-fatal injuries, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, unintended pregnancies, sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.[37]

Factors associated with the perpetration and experiencing of intimate partner violence are low levels of education, history of violence as a perpetrator, a victim or a witness of parental violence, harmful use of alcohol, attitudes that are accepting of violence as well as marital discord and dissatisfaction. Factors associated only with perpetration of intimate partner violence are having multiple partners, and antisocial personality disorder.

A recent theory named "The Criminal Spin" suggests a mutual flywheel effect between partners that is manifested by an escalation in the violence.[38] A violent spin may occur in any other forms of violence, but in Intimate partner violence the added value is the mutual spin, based on the unique situation and characteristics of intimate relationship.

The primary prevention strategy with the best evidence for effectiveness for intimate partner violence is school-based programming for adolescents to prevent violence within dating relationships.[39] Evidence is emerging for the effectiveness of several other primary prevention strategies—those that: combine microfinance with gender equality training;[40] promote communication and relationship skills within communities; reduce access to, and the harmful use of alcohol; and change cultural gender norms.[41]

Sexual

edit
 
Meeting of victims of sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Sexual violence is any sexual act, attempt to obtain a sexual act, unwanted sexual comments or advances, or acts to traffic, or otherwise directed against a person's sexuality using coercion, by any person regardless of their relationship to the victim, in any setting. It includes rape, defined as the physically forced or otherwise coerced penetration of the vulva or anus with a penis, other body part or object.[42]

Population-level surveys based on reports from victims estimate that between 0.3 and 11.5% of women reported experiencing sexual violence.[43] Sexual violence has serious short- and long-term consequences on physical, mental, sexual and reproductive health for victims and for their children as described in the section on intimate partner violence. If perpetrated during childhood, sexual violence can lead to increased smoking,[44] drug and alcohol misuse, and risky sexual behaviors in later life. It is also associated with perpetration of violence and being a victim of violence.

Many of the risk factors for sexual violence are the same as for domestic violence. Risk factors specific to sexual violence perpetration include beliefs in family honor and sexual purity, ideologies of male sexual entitlement and weak legal sanctions for sexual violence.

Few interventions to prevent sexual violence have been demonstrated to be effective. School-based programmes to prevent child sexual abuse by teaching children to recognize and avoid potentially sexually abusive situations are run in many parts of the world and appear promising, but require further research. To achieve lasting change, it is important to enact legislation and develop policies that protect women; address discrimination against women and promote gender equality; and help to move the culture away from violence.[41]

Elder maltreatment

edit

Elder maltreatment is a single or repeated act, or lack of appropriate action, occurring within any relationship where there is an expectation of trust which causes harm or distress to an older person.

While there is little information regarding the extent of maltreatment in elderly populations, especially in developing countries, it is estimated that 4–6% of elderly people in high-income countries have experienced some form of maltreatment at home[45][46] However, older people are often afraid to report cases of maltreatment to family, friends, or to the authorities. Data on the extent of the problem in institutions such as hospitals, nursing homes and other long-term care facilities are scarce. Elder maltreatment can lead to serious physical injuries and long-term psychological consequences. Elder maltreatment is predicted to increase as many countries are experiencing rapidly ageing populations.

Many strategies have been implemented to prevent elder maltreatment and to take action against it and mitigate its consequences including public and professional awareness campaigns, screening (of potential victims and abusers), caregiver support interventions (e.g. stress management, respite care), adult protective services and self-help groups. Their effectiveness has, however, not so far been well-established.[47][48]

Targeted

edit

Several rare but painful episodes of assassination, attempted assassination and school shootings at elementary, middle, high schools, as well as colleges and universities in the United States, led to a considerable body of research on ascertainable behaviors of persons who have planned or carried out such attacks. These studies (1995–2002) investigated what the authors called "targeted violence," described the "path to violence" of those who planned or carried out attacks and laid out suggestions for law enforcement and educators. A major point from these research studies is that targeted violence does not just "come out of the blue".[49][50][51][52][53][54]

Everyday

edit

As an anthropological concept, "everyday violence" may refer to the incorporation of different forms of violence (mainly political violence) into daily practices.[55][56] Latin America and the Caribbean, the region with the highest murder rate in the world,[57] experienced more than 2.5 million murders between 2000 and 2017.[58]

Philosophical perspectives

edit

Some philosophers have argued that any interpretation of reality is intrinsically violent.[a] Slavoj Žižek in his book Violence stated that "something violent is the very symbolization of a thing."[citation needed] An ontological perspective considers the harm inflicted by the very interpretation of the world as a form of violence that is distinct from physical violence in that it is possible to avoid physical violence whereas some ontological violence is intrinsic to all knowledge.[b][citation needed]

Both Foucault and Arendt considered the relationship between power and violence but concluded that while related they are distinct.[59]: 46 

In feminist philosophy, epistemic violence is the act of causing harm by an inability to understand the conversation of others due to ignorance. Some philosophers think this will harm marginalized groups.[c][citation needed]

Brad Evans states that violence "represents a violation in the very conditions constituting what it means to be human as such", "is always an attack upon a person's dignity, their sense of selfhood, and their future", and "is both an ontological crime ... and a form of political ruination".[61]

Factors and models of understanding

edit

Violence cannot be attributed to solely protective factors or risk factors. Both of these factor groups are equally important in the prevention, intervention, and treatment of violence as a whole. The CDC outlines several risk and protective factors for youth violence at the individual, family, social and community levels.[62]

Individual risk factors include poor behavioral control, high emotional stress, low IQ, and antisocial beliefs or attitudes.[63] Family risk factors include authoritarian childrearing attitudes, inconsistent disciplinary practices, low emotional attachment to parents or caregivers, and low parental income and involvement.[63] Social risk factors include social rejection, poor academic performance and commitment to school, and gang involvement or association with delinquent peers.[63] Community risk factors include poverty, low community participation, and diminished economic opportunities.[63]

On the other hand, individual protective factors include an intolerance towards deviance, higher IQ and GPA, elevated popularity and social skills, as well as religious beliefs.[63] Family protective factors include a connectedness and ability to discuss issues with family members or adults, parent/family use of constructive coping strategies, and consistent parental presence during at least one of the following: when awakening, when arriving home from school, at dinner time, or when going to bed.[63] Social protective factors include quality school relationships, close relationships with non-deviant peers, involvement in prosocial activities, and exposure to school climates that are: well supervised, use clear behavior rules and disciplinary approaches, and engage parents with teachers.[63]

With many conceptual factors that occur at varying levels in the lives of those impacted, the exact causes of violence are complex. To represent this complexity, the ecological, or social ecological model is often used. The following four-level version of the ecological model is often used in the study of violence:

The first level identifies biological and personal factors that influence how individuals behave and increase their likelihood of becoming a victim or perpetrator of violence: demographic characteristics (age, education, income), genetics, brain lesions, personality disorders, substance abuse, and a history of experiencing, witnessing, or engaging in violent behaviour.[64][65]

The second level focuses on close relationships, such as those with family and friends. In youth violence, for example, having friends who engage in or encourage violence can increase a young person's risk of being a victim or perpetrator of violence. For intimate partner violence, a consistent marker at this level of the model is marital conflict or discord in the relationship. In elder abuse, important factors are stress due to the nature of the past relationship between the abused person and the care giver.

The third level explores the community context—i.e., schools, workplaces, and neighbourhoods. Risk at this level may be affected by factors such as the existence of a local drug trade, the absence of social networks, and concentrated poverty. All these factors have been shown to be important in several types of violence.

Finally, the fourth level looks at the broad societal factors that help to create a climate in which violence is encouraged or inhibited: the responsiveness of the criminal justice system, social and cultural norms regarding gender roles or parent-child relationships, income inequality, the strength of the social welfare system, the social acceptability of violence, the availability of weapons, the exposure to violence in mass media, and political instability.

Child-rearing

edit

While studies showing associations between physical punishment of children and later aggression cannot prove that physical punishment causes an increase in aggression, a number of longitudinal studies suggest that the experience of physical punishment has a direct causal effect on later aggressive behaviors.[66] Cross-cultural studies have shown that greater prevalence of corporal punishment of children tends to predict higher levels of violence in societies. For instance, a 2005 analysis of 186 pre-industrial societies found that corporal punishment was more prevalent in societies which also had higher rates of homicide, assault, and war.[67] In the United States, domestic corporal punishment has been linked to later violent acts against family members and spouses.[68] The American family violence researcher Murray A. Straus believes that disciplinary spanking forms "the most prevalent and important form of violence in American families", whose effects contribute to several major societal problems, including later domestic violence and crime.[69]

Psychology

edit

The causes of violent behavior in people are often a topic of research in psychology. Neurobiologist Jan Vodka emphasizes that, for those purposes, "violent behavior is defined as overt and intentional physically aggressive behavior against another person."[70]

Based on the idea of human nature, scientists do agree violence is inherent in humans. Among prehistoric humans, there is archaeological evidence for both contentions of violence and peacefulness as primary characteristics.[71]

Since violence is a matter of perception as well as a measurable phenomenon, psychologists have found variability in whether people perceive certain physical acts as "violent". For example, in a state where execution is a legalized punishment we do not typically perceive the executioner as "violent", though we may talk, in a more metaphorical way, of the state acting violently. Likewise, understandings of violence are linked to a perceived aggressor-victim relationship: hence psychologists have shown that people may not recognise defensive use of force as violent, even in cases where the amount of force used is significantly greater than in the original aggression.[72]

The concept of violence normalization is known as socially sanctioned, or structural violence and is a topic of increasing interest to researchers trying to understand violent behavior. It has been discussed at length by researchers in sociology,[73][74] medical anthropology,[75][76] psychology,[77] psychiatry,[78] philosophy,[79] and bioarchaeology.[80][81]

Evolutionary psychology offers several explanations for human violence in various contexts, such as sexual jealousy in humans,[82] child abuse,[83] and homicide.[84] Goetz (2010) argues that humans are similar to most mammal species and use violence in specific situations. He writes that "Buss and Shackelford (1997a) proposed seven adaptive problems our ancestors recurrently faced that might have been solved by aggression: co-opting the resources of others, defending against attack, inflicting costs on same-sex rivals, negotiating status and hierarchies, deterring rivals from future aggression, deterring mate from infidelity, and reducing resources expended on genetically unrelated children."[85]

Goetz writes that most homicides seem to start from relatively trivial disputes between unrelated men who then escalate to violence and death. He argues that such conflicts occur when there is a status dispute between men of relatively similar status. If there is a great initial status difference, then the lower status individual usually offers no challenge and if challenged the higher status individual usually ignores the lower status individual. At the same an environment of great inequalities between people may cause those at the bottom to use more violence in attempts to gain status.[85]

Media

edit

Research into the media and violence examines whether links between consuming media violence and subsequent aggressive and violent behaviour exists. Although some scholars had claimed media violence may increase aggression,[86] this view is coming increasingly in doubt both in the scholarly community[87] and was rejected by the US Supreme Court in the Brown v EMA case, as well as in a review of video game violence by the Australian Government (2010) which concluded evidence for harmful effects were inconclusive at best and the rhetoric of some scholars was not matched by good data.

Mental disorders

edit

Despite public or media opinion, national studies have indicated that severe mental illness does not independently predict future violent behavior, on average, and is not a leading cause of violence in society. There is a statistical association with various factors that do relate to violence (in anyone), such as substance use and various personal, social, and economic factors.[88] A 2015 review found that in the United States, about 4% of violence is attributable to people diagnosed with mental illness,[89] and a 2014 study found that 7.5% of crimes committed by mentally ill people were directly related to the symptoms of their mental illness.[90] The majority of people with serious mental illness are never violent.[91]

In fact, findings consistently indicate that it is many times more likely that people diagnosed with a serious mental illness living in the community will be the victims rather than the perpetrators of violence.[92][93] In a study of individuals diagnosed with "severe mental illness" living in a US inner-city area, a quarter were found to have been victims of at least one violent crime over the course of a year, a proportion eleven times higher than the inner-city average, and higher in every category of crime including violent assaults and theft.[94] People with a diagnosis may find it more difficult to secure prosecutions, however, due in part to prejudice and being seen as less credible.[95]

However, there are some specific diagnoses, such as childhood conduct disorder or adult antisocial personality disorder or psychopathy, which are defined by, or are inherently associated with, conduct problems and violence. There are conflicting findings about the extent to which certain specific symptoms, notably some kinds of psychosis (hallucinations or delusions) that can occur in disorders such as schizophrenia, delusional disorder or mood disorder, are linked to an increased risk of serious violence on average. The mediating factors of violent acts, however, are most consistently found to be mainly socio-demographic and socio-economic factors such as being young, male, of lower socioeconomic status and, in particular, substance use (including alcohol use) to which some people may be particularly vulnerable.[96][92][97][98]

High-profile cases have led to fears that serious crimes, such as homicide, have increased due to deinstitutionalization, but the evidence does not support this conclusion.[98][99] Violence that does occur in relation to mental disorder (against the mentally ill or by the mentally ill) typically occurs in the context of complex social interactions, often in a family setting rather than between strangers.[100] It is also an issue in health care settings[101] and the wider community.[102]

Prevention

edit

The threat and enforcement of physical punishment has been a tried and tested method of preventing some violence since civilisation began.[103] It is used in various degrees in most countries.

Public awareness campaigns

edit

Cities and counties throughout the United States organize "Violence Prevention Months" where the mayor, by proclamation, or the county, by a resolution, encourage the private, community and public sectors to engage in activities that raise awareness that violence is not acceptable through art, music, lectures and events. For example, Violence Prevention Month coordinator, Karen Earle Lile in Contra Costa County, California created a Wall of Life, where children drew pictures that were put up in the walls of banks and public spaces, displaying a child's view of violence they had witnessed and how it affected them, in an effort to draw attention to how violence affects the community, not just the people involved.[104]

Interpersonal violence

edit

A review of scientific literature by the World Health Organization on the effectiveness of strategies to prevent interpersonal violence identified the seven strategies below as being supported by either strong or emerging evidence for effectiveness.[105] These strategies target risk factors at all four levels of the ecological model.

Child–caregiver relationships

edit

Among the most effective such programmes to prevent child maltreatment and reduce childhood aggression are the Nurse Family Partnership home-visiting programme[106] and the Triple P (Parenting Program).[107] There is also emerging evidence that these programmes reduce convictions and violent acts in adolescence and early adulthood, and probably help decrease intimate partner violence and self-directed violence in later life.[108][109]

Life skills in youth

edit

Evidence shows that the life skills acquired in social development programmes can reduce involvement in violence, improve social skills, boost educational achievement and improve job prospects. Life skills refer to social, emotional, and behavioural competencies which help children and adolescents effectively deal with the challenges of everyday life.

Gender equality

edit

Evaluation studies are beginning to support community interventions that aim to prevent violence against women by promoting gender equality. For instance, evidence suggests that programmes that combine microfinance with gender equity training can reduce intimate partner violence.[110][111] School-based programmes such as Safe Dates programme in the United States of America[112][113] and the Youth Relationship Project in Canada[114] have been found to be effective for reducing dating violence.

Cultural norms

edit

Rules or expectations of behaviour – norms – within a cultural or social group can encourage violence. Interventions that challenge cultural and social norms supportive of violence can prevent acts of violence and have been widely used, but the evidence base for their effectiveness is currently weak. The effectiveness of interventions addressing dating violence and sexual abuse among teenagers and young adults by challenging social and cultural norms related to gender is supported by some evidence.[115][116]

Support programmes

edit

Interventions to identify victims of interpersonal violence and provide effective care and support are critical for protecting health and breaking cycles of violence from one generation to the next. Examples for which evidence of effectiveness is emerging includes: screening tools to identify victims of intimate partner violence and refer them to appropriate services;[117] psychosocial interventions—such as trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy—to reduce mental health problems associated with violence, including post-traumatic stress disorder;[118] and protection orders, which prohibit a perpetrator from contacting the victim,[119][120] to reduce repeat victimization among victims of intimate partner violence.

Collective violence

edit

Not surprisingly, scientific evidence about the effectiveness of interventions to prevent collective violence is lacking.[121] However, policies that facilitate reductions in poverty, that make decision-making more accountable, that reduce inequalities between groups, as well as policies that reduce access to biological, chemical, nuclear and other weapons have been recommended. When planning responses to violent conflicts, recommended approaches include assessing at an early stage who is most vulnerable and what their needs are, co-ordination of activities between various players and working towards global, national and local capabilities so as to deliver effective health services during the various stages of an emergency.[122]

Criminal justice

edit
 
A sign that calls to stop violence

One of the main functions of law is to regulate violence.[123] Sociologist Max Weber stated that the state claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of force to cause harm practised within the confines of a specific territory. Law enforcement is the main means of regulating nonmilitary violence in society. Governments regulate the use of violence through legal systems governing individuals and political authorities, including the police and military. Civil societies authorize some amount of violence, exercised through the police power, to maintain the status quo and enforce laws.

However, German political theorist Hannah Arendt noted: "Violence can be justifiable, but it never will be legitimate ... Its justification loses in plausibility the farther its intended end recedes into the future. No one questions the use of violence in self-defence, because the danger is not only clear but also present, and the end justifying the means is immediate".[124] Arendt made a clear distinction between violence and power. Most political theorists regarded violence as an extreme manifestation of power whereas Arendt regarded the two concepts as opposites.[125] In the 20th century in acts of democide governments may have killed more than 260 million of their own people through police brutality, execution, massacre, slave labour camps, and sometimes through intentional famine.[126][127]

Violent acts that are not carried out by the military or police and that are not in self-defense are usually classified as crimes, although not all crimes are violent crimes. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) classifies violence resulting in homicide into criminal homicide and justifiable homicide (e.g. self-defense).[128]

The criminal justice approach sees its main task as enforcing laws that proscribe violence and ensuring that "justice is done". The notions of individual blame, responsibility, guilt, and culpability are central to criminal justice's approach to violence and one of the criminal justice system's main tasks is to "do justice", i.e. to ensure that offenders are properly identified, that the degree of their guilt is as accurately ascertained as possible, and that they are punished appropriately. To prevent and respond to violence, the criminal justice approach relies primarily on deterrence, incarceration and the punishment and rehabilitation of perpetrators.[129]

The criminal justice approach, beyond justice and punishment, has traditionally emphasized indicated interventions, aimed at those who have already been involved in violence, either as victims or as perpetrators. One of the main reasons offenders are arrested, prosecuted, and convicted is to prevent further crimes—through deterrence (threatening potential offenders with criminal sanctions if they commit crimes), incapacitation (physically preventing offenders from committing further crimes by locking them up) and through rehabilitation (using time spent under state supervision to develop skills or change one's psychological make-up to reduce the likelihood of future offences).[130]

In recent decades in many countries in the world, the criminal justice system has taken an increasing interest in preventing violence before it occurs. For instance, much of community and problem-oriented policing aims to reduce crime and violence by altering the conditions that foster it—and not to increase the number of arrests. Indeed, some police leaders have gone so far as to say the police should primarily be a crime prevention agency.[131] Juvenile justice systems—an important component of criminal justice systems—are largely based on the belief in rehabilitation and prevention. In the US, the criminal justice system has, for instance, funded school- and community-based initiatives to reduce children's access to guns and teach conflict resolution. Despite this, force is used routinely against juveniles by police.[132] In 1974, the US Department of Justice assumed primary responsibility for delinquency prevention programmes and created the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, which has supported the "Blueprints for violence prevention" programme at the University of Colorado Boulder.[133]

Public health

edit

The public health approach is a science-driven, population-based, interdisciplinary, intersectoral approach based on the ecological model which emphasizes primary prevention.[2] Rather than focusing on individuals, the public health approach aims to provide the maximum benefit for the largest number of people, and to extend better care and safety to entire populations. The public health approach is interdisciplinary, drawing upon knowledge from many disciplines including medicine, epidemiology, sociology, psychology, criminology, education and economics. Because all forms of violence are multi-faceted problems, the public health approach emphasizes a multi-sectoral response. It has been proved time and again that cooperative efforts from such diverse sectors as health, education, social welfare, and criminal justice are often necessary to solve what are usually assumed to be purely "criminal" or "medical" problems. The public health approach considers that violence, rather than being the result of any single factor, is the outcome of multiple risk factors and causes, interacting at four levels of a nested hierarchy (individual, close relationship/family, community and wider society) of the Social ecological model.

From a public health perspective, prevention strategies can be classified into three types:

  • Primary prevention – approaches that aim to prevent violence before it occurs.
  • Secondary prevention – approaches that focus on the more immediate responses to violence, such as pre-hospital care, emergency services or treatment for sexually transmitted infections following a rape.
  • Tertiary prevention – approaches that focus on long-term care in the wake of violence, such as rehabilitation and reintegration, and attempt to lessen trauma or reduce long-term disability associated with violence.

A public health approach emphasizes the primary prevention of violence, i.e. stopping them from occurring in the first place. Until recently, this approach has been relatively neglected in the field, with the majority of resources directed towards secondary or tertiary prevention. Perhaps the most critical element of a public health approach to prevention is the ability to identify underlying causes rather than focusing upon more visible "symptoms". This allows for the development and testing of effective approaches to address the underlying causes and so improve health.

The public health approach is an evidence-based and systematic process involving the following four steps:

  1. Defining the problem conceptually and numerically, using statistics that accurately describe the nature and scale of violence, the characteristics of those most affected, the geographical distribution of incidents, and the consequences of exposure to such violence.
  2. Investigating why the problem occurs by determining its causes and correlates, the factors that increase or decrease the risk of its occurrence (risk and protective factors) and the factors that might be modifiable through intervention.
  3. Exploring ways to prevent the problem by using the above information and designing, monitoring and rigorously assessing the effectiveness of programmes through outcome evaluations.
  4. Disseminating information on the effectiveness of programmes and increasing the scale of proven effective programmes. Approaches to prevent violence, whether targeted at individuals or entire communities, must be properly evaluated for their effectiveness and the results shared. This step also includes adapting programmes to local contexts and subjecting them to rigorous re-evaluation to ensure their effectiveness in the new setting.

In many countries, violence prevention is still a new or emerging field in public health. The public health community has started only recently to realize the contributions it can make to reducing violence and mitigating its consequences. In 1949, Gordon called for injury prevention efforts to be based on the understanding of causes, in a similar way to prevention efforts for communicable and other diseases.[134] In 1962, Gomez, referring to the WHO definition of health, stated that it is obvious that violence does not contribute to "extending life" or to a "complete state of well-being". He defined violence as an issue that public health experts needed to address and stated that it should not be the primary domain of lawyers, military personnel, or politicians.[135]

However, it is only in the last 30 years that public health has begun to address violence, and only in the last fifteen has it done so at the global level.[136] This is a much shorter period of time than public health has been tackling other health problems of comparable magnitude and with similarly severe lifelong consequences.

The global public health response to interpersonal violence began in earnest in the mid-1990s. In 1996, the World Health Assembly adopted Resolution WHA49.25[137] which declared violence "a leading worldwide public health problem" and requested that the World Health Organization (WHO) initiate public health activities to (1) document and characterize the burden of violence, (2) assess the effectiveness of programmes, with particular attention to women and children and community-based initiatives, and (3) promote activities to tackle the problem at the international and national levels. The World Health Organization's initial response to this resolution was to create the Department of Violence and Injury Prevention and Disability and to publish the World report on violence and health (2002).[2]

The case for the public health sector addressing interpersonal violence rests on four main arguments.[138] First, the significant amount of time health care professionals dedicate to caring for victims and perpetrators of violence has made them familiar with the problem and has led many, particularly in emergency departments, to mobilize to address it. The information, resources, and infrastructures the health care sector has at its disposal are an important asset for research and prevention work. Second, the magnitude of the problem and its potentially severe lifelong consequences and high costs to individuals and wider society call for population-level interventions typical of the public health approach. Third, the criminal justice approach, the other main approach to addressing violence (link to entry above), has traditionally been more geared towards violence that occurs between male youths and adults in the street and other public places—which makes up the bulk of homicides in most countries—than towards violence occurring in private settings such as child maltreatment, intimate partner violence and elder abuse—which makes up the largest share of non-fatal violence. Fourth, evidence is beginning to accumulate that a science-based public health approach is effective at preventing interpersonal violence.

Human rights

edit
 
Bahrain's pro-democracy protesters killed by military, February 2011

The human rights approach is based on the obligations of states to respect, protect and fulfill human rights and therefore to prevent, eradicate and punish violence. It recognizes violence as a violation of many human rights: the rights to life, liberty, autonomy and security of the person; the rights to equality and non-discrimination; the rights to be free from torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment; the right to privacy; and the right to the highest attainable standard of health. These human rights are enshrined in international and regional treaties and national constitutions and laws, which stipulate the obligations of states, and include mechanisms to hold states accountable. The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, for example, requires that countries party to the Convention take all appropriate steps to end violence against women. The Convention on the Rights of the Child in its Article 19 states that States Parties shall take all appropriate legislative, administrative, social and educational measures to protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse, neglect or negligent treatment, maltreatment or exploitation, including sexual abuse, while in the care of parent(s), legal guardian(s) or any other person who has the care of the child.

Geographical context

edit

Violence, as defined in the dictionary of human geography, "appears whenever power is in jeopardy" and "in and of itself stands emptied of strength and purpose: it is part of a larger matrix of socio-political power struggles".[139] Violence can be broadly divided into three broad categories—direct violence, structural violence and cultural violence.[139] Thus defined and delineated, it is of note, as Hyndman says, that "geography came late to theorizing violence"[139] in comparison to other social sciences. Social and human geography, rooted in the humanist, Marxist, and feminist subfields that emerged following the early positivist approaches and subsequent behavioral turn, have long been concerned with social and spatial justice.[140] Along with critical geographers and political geographers, it is these groupings of geographers that most often interact with violence. Keeping this idea of social/spatial justice via geography in mind, it is worthwhile to look at geographical approaches to violence in the context of politics.

Derek Gregory and Alan Pred assembled the influential edited collection Violent Geographies: Fear, Terror, and Political Violence, which demonstrates how place, space, and landscape are foremost factors in the real and imagined practices of organized violence both historically and in the present.[141] Evidently, political violence often gives a part for the state to play. When "modern states not only claim a monopoly of the legitimate means of violence; they also routinely use the threat of violence to enforce the rule of law",[139] the law not only becomes a form of violence but is violence.[139] Philosopher Giorgio Agamben's concepts of state of exception and homo sacer are useful to consider within a geography of violence. The state, in the grip of a perceived, potential crisis (whether legitimate or not) takes preventative legal measures, such as a suspension of rights (it is in this climate, as Agamben demonstrates, that the formation of the Social Democratic and Nazi government's lager or concentration camp can occur). However, when this "in limbo" reality is designed to be in place "until further notice…the state of exception thus ceases to be referred to as an external and provisional state of factual danger and comes to be confused with juridical rule itself".[142] For Agamben, the physical space of the camp "is a piece of land placed outside the normal juridical order, but it is nevertheless not simply an external space".[142] At the scale of the body, in the state of exception, a person is so removed from their rights by "juridical procedures and deployments of power"[142] that "no act committed against them could appear any longer as a crime";[142] in other words, people become only homo sacer. Guantanamo Bay could also be said to represent the physicality of the state of exception in space, and can just as easily draw man as homo sacer.

In the 1970s, genocides in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge and Pol Pot resulted in the deaths of over two million Cambodians (which was 25% of the Cambodian population), forming one of the many contemporary examples of state-sponsored violence.[143] About fourteen thousand of these murders occurred at Choeung Ek, which is the best-known of the extermination camps referred to as the Killing Fields.[143] The killings were arbitrary; for example, a person could be killed for wearing glasses, since that was seen as associating them with intellectuals and therefore as making them part of the enemy. People were murdered with impunity because it was no crime; Cambodians were made homo sacer in a condition of bare life. The Killing Fields—manifestations of Agamben's concept of camps beyond the normal rule of law—featured the state of exception. As part of Pol Pot's "ideological intent…to create a purely agrarian society or cooperative",[143] he "dismantled the country's existing economic infrastructure and depopulated every urban area".[143] Forced movement, such as this forced movement applied by Pol Pot, is a clear display of structural violence. When "symbols of Cambodian society were equally disrupted, social institutions of every kind…were purged or torn down",[143] cultural violence (defined as when "any aspect of culture such as language, religion, ideology, art, or cosmology is used to legitimize direct or structural violence"[139]) is added to the structural violence of forced movement and to the direct violence, such as murder, at the Killing Fields. Vietnam eventually intervened and the genocide officially ended. However, ten million landmines left by opposing guerillas in the 1970s[143] continue to create a violent landscape in Cambodia.

Human geography, though coming late to the theorizing table, has tackled violence through many lenses, including anarchist geography, feminist geography, Marxist geography, political geography, and critical geography. However, Adriana Cavarero notes that, "as violence spreads and assumes unheard-of forms, it becomes difficult to name in contemporary language".[144] Cavarero proposes that, in facing such a truth, it is prudent to reconsider violence as "horrorism"; that is, "as though ideally all the…victims, instead of their killers, ought to determine the name".[144] With geography often adding the forgotten spatial aspect to theories of social science, rather than creating them solely within the discipline, it seems that the self-reflexive contemporary geography of today may have an extremely important place in this current (re)imaging of violence, exemplified by Cavarero.[clarification needed]

Epidemiology

edit
 
Estimates of disability-adjusted life years from physical violence, per 100,000 inhabitants in 2002.[145]
  No data
  <200
  200–400
  400–600
  600–800
  800–1,000
  1,000–1,200
  1,200–1,400
  1,400–1,600
  1,600–1,800
  1,800–2,000
  2,000–3,000
  >3,000
 
Deaths due to interpersonal violence per million persons in 2012
  0–8
  9–16
  17–24
  25–32
  33–54
  55–75
  76–96
  97–126
  127–226
  227–878

As of 2010, all forms of violence resulted in about 1.34 million deaths up from about 1 million in 1990.[146] Suicide accounts for about 883,000, interpersonal violence for 456,000 and collective violence for 18,000.[146] Deaths due to collective violence have decreased from 64,000 in 1990.[146]

By way of comparison, the 1.5 millions deaths a year due to violence is greater than the number of deaths due to tuberculosis (1.34 million), road traffic injuries (1.21 million), and malaria (830'000), but slightly less than the number of people who die from HIV/AIDS (1.77 million).[147]

For every death due to violence, there are numerous nonfatal injuries. In 2008, over 16 million cases of non-fatal violence-related injuries were severe enough to require medical attention. Beyond deaths and injuries, forms of violence such as child maltreatment, intimate partner violence, and elder maltreatment have been found to be highly prevalent.

Self-directed violence

edit

In the last 45 years, suicide rates have increased by 60% worldwide.[148] Suicide is among the three leading causes of death among those aged 15–44 years in some countries, and the second leading cause of death in the 10–24 years age group.[149] These figures do not include suicide attempts which are up to 20 times more frequent than suicide.[148] Suicide was the 16th leading cause of death worldwide in 2004 and is projected to increase to the 12th in 2030.[150] Although suicide rates have traditionally been highest among the male elderly, rates among young people have been increasing to such an extent that they are now the group at highest risk in a third of countries, in both developed and developing countries.[151]

Interpersonal violence

edit

Rates and patterns of violent death vary by country and region. In recent years, homicide rates have been highest in developing countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean and lowest in East Asia, the western Pacific, and some countries in northern Africa.[152] Studies show a strong, inverse relationship between homicide rates and both economic development and economic equality. Poorer countries, especially those with large gaps between the rich and the poor, tend to have higher rates of homicide than wealthier countries. Homicide rates differ markedly by age and sex. Gender differences are least marked for children. For the 15 to 29 age group, male rates were nearly six times those for female rates; for the remaining age groups, male rates were from two to four times those for females.[153]

Studies in a number of countries show that, for every homicide among young people age 10 to 24, 20 to 40 other young people receive hospital treatment for a violent injury.[2]

Forms of violence such as child maltreatment and intimate partner violence are highly prevalent. Approximately 20% of women and 5–10% of men report being sexually abused as children, while 25–50% of all children report being physically abused.[154] A WHO multi-country study found that between 15 and 71% of women reported experiencing physical and/or sexual violence by an intimate partner at some point in their lives.[155]

Collective violence

edit

Wars grab headlines, but the individual risk of dying violently in an armed conflict is today relatively low—much lower than the risk of violent death in many countries that are not suffering from an armed conflict. For example, between 1976 and 2008, African Americans were victims of 329,825 homicides.[156][157] Although there is a widespread perception that war is the most dangerous form of armed violence in the world, the average person living in a conflict-affected country had a risk of dying violently in the conflict of about 2.0 per 100,000 population between 2004 and 2007. This can be compared to the average world homicide rate of 7.6 per 100,000 people. This illustration highlights the value of accounting for all forms of armed violence rather than an exclusive focus on conflict related violence. Certainly, there are huge variations in the risk of dying from armed conflict at the national and subnational level, and the risk of dying violently in a conflict in specific countries remains extremely high. In Iraq, for example, the direct conflict death rate for 2004–07 was 65 per 100,000 people per year and, in Somalia, 24 per 100,000 people. This rate even reached peaks of 91 per 100,000 in Iraq in 2006 and 74 per 100,000 in Somalia in 2007.[158]

History

edit

Scientific evidence for warfare has come from settled, sedentary communities.[159] Some studies argue humans have a predisposition for violence (chimpanzees, also great apes, have been known to kill members of competing groups for resources like food).[160] A comparison across mammal species found that humans have a paleolithic adult homicide rate of about 2%. This would be lower than some other animals, but still high.[161] However, this study took into account the infanticide rate by some other animals such as meerkats, but not of humans, where estimates of children killed by infanticide in the Mesolithic and Neolithic eras vary from 15 to 50 percent.[162] Other evidence suggests that organized, large-scale, militaristic, or regular human-on-human violence was absent for the vast majority of the human timeline,[163][164][165] and is first documented to have started only relatively recently in the Holocene, an epoch that began about 11,700 years ago, probably with the advent of higher population densities due to sedentism.[164] Social anthropologist Douglas P. Fry writes that scholars are divided on the origins of possible increase of violence—in other words, war-like behavior:

There are basically two schools of thought on this issue. One holds that warfare... goes back at least to the time of the first thoroughly modern humans and even before then to the primate ancestors of the hominid lineage. The second positions on the origins of warfare sees war as much less common in the cultural and biological evolution of humans. Here, warfare is a latecomer on the cultural horizon, only arising in very specific material circumstances and being quite rare in human history until the development of agriculture in the past 10,000 years.[166]

Jared Diamond in his books Guns, Germs and Steel and The Third Chimpanzee posits that the rise of large-scale warfare is the result of advances in technology and city-states. For instance, the rise of agriculture provided a significant increase in the number of individuals that a region could sustain over hunter-gatherer societies, allowing for development of specialized classes such as soldiers, or weapons manufacturers.

 
The percentages of men killed in war in eight tribal societies. (Lawrence H. Keeley, Archeologist, War Before Civilization)

In academia, the idea of the peaceful pre-history and non-violent tribal societies gained popularity with the post-colonial perspective. The trend, starting in archaeology and spreading to anthropology reached its height in the late half of the 20th century.[167] However, some newer research in archaeology and bioarchaeology may provide evidence that violence within and among groups is not a recent phenomenon.[168] According to the book "The Bioarchaeology of Violence" violence is a behavior that is found throughout human history.[169]

Lawrence H. Keeley at the University of Illinois writes in War Before Civilization that 87% of tribal societies were at war more than once per year, and that 65% of them were fighting continuously. He writes that the attrition rate of numerous close-quarter clashes, which characterize endemic warfare, produces casualty rates of up to 60%, compared to 1% of the combatants as is typical in modern warfare. "Primitive Warfare" of these small groups or tribes was driven by the basic need for sustenance and violent competition.[170]

Fry explores Keeley's argument in depth and counters that such sources erroneously focus on the ethnography of hunters and gatherers in the present, whose culture and values have been infiltrated externally by modern civilization, rather than the actual archaeological record spanning some two million years of human existence. Fry determines that all present ethnographically studied tribal societies, "by the very fact of having been described and published by anthropologists, have been irrevocably impacted by history and modern colonial nation states" and that "many have been affected by state societies for at least 5000 years."[171]

The relatively peaceful period since World War II is known as the Long Peace.

The Better Angels of Our Nature

edit

Steven Pinker's 2011 book, The Better Angels of Our Nature, argued that modern society is less violent than in periods of the past, whether on the short scale of decades or long scale of centuries or millennia. He argues for a paleolithic homicide rate of 15%.

Steven Pinker argues that by every possible measure, every type of violence has drastically decreased since ancient and medieval times. A few centuries ago, for example, genocide was a standard practice in all kinds of warfare and was so common that historians did not even bother to mention it. Cannibalism and slavery have been greatly reduced in the last thousand years, and capital punishment is now banned in many countries. According to Pinker, rape, murder, warfare and animal cruelty have all seen drastic declines in the 20th century.[172] Pinker's analyses have also been criticized, concerning the statistical question of how to measure violence and whether it is in fact declining.[173][174][175]

Pinker's observation of the decline in interpersonal violence echoes the work of Norbert Elias, who attributes the decline to a "civilizing process", in which the state's monopolization of violence, the maintenance of socioeconomic interdependencies or "figurations", and the maintenance of behavioural codes in culture all contribute to the development of individual sensibilities, which increase the repugnance of individuals towards violent acts.[176] According to a 2010 study, non-lethal violence, such as assaults or bullying appear to be declining as well.[177]

Some scholars disagree with the argument that all violence is decreasing arguing that not all types of violent behaviour are lower now than in the past. They suggest that research typically focuses on lethal violence, often looks at homicide rates of death due to warfare, but ignore the less obvious forms of violence.[178]

Society and culture

edit
 
A sculpture in Petah Tikva, Israel of a padlock on the warped barrel of a semi-automatic pistol, with the inscription "stop violence!" in (Hebrew: !די לאלימות)

Beyond deaths and injuries, highly prevalent forms of violence (such as child maltreatment and intimate partner violence) have serious lifelong non-injury health consequences. Victims may engage in high-risk behaviours such as alcohol and substance misuse and smoking, which in turn can contribute to cardiovascular disorders, cancers, depression, diabetes and HIV/AIDS, resulting in premature death.[179] The balances of prevention, mitigation, mediation and exacerbation are complex, and vary with the underpinnings of violence.

Economic effects

edit

In countries with high levels of violence, economic growth can be slowed down, personal and collective security eroded, and social development impeded. Families edging out of poverty and investing in schooling their sons and daughters can be ruined through the violent death or severe disability of the main breadwinner. Communities can be caught in poverty traps where pervasive violence and deprivation form a vicious circle that stifles economic growth. For societies, meeting the direct costs of health, criminal justice, and social welfare responses to violence diverts many billions of dollars from more constructive societal spending. The much larger indirect costs of violence due to lost productivity and lost investment in education work together to slow economic development, increase socioeconomic inequality, and erode human and social capital.

Additionally, communities with high level of violence do not provide the level of stability and predictability vital for a prospering business economy. Individuals will be less likely to invest money and effort towards growth in such unstable and violent conditions. One of the possible proves might be the study of Baten and Gust that used "regicide" as measurement unit to approximate the influence of interpersonal violence and depict the influence of high interpersonal violence on economic development and level of investments. The results of the research prove the correlation of the human capital and the interpersonal violence.[180]

In 2016, the Institute for Economics and Peace, released the Economic Value of Peace Archived 2017-11-15 at the Wayback Machine report, which estimates the economic impact of violence and conflict on the global economy, the total economic impact of violence on the world economy in 2015 was estimated to be $13.6 trillion[181] in purchasing power parity terms.

Religion and politics

edit
 
Taliban beating woman in public
 
The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre of French Protestants, 1572

Religious and political ideologies have been the cause of interpersonal violence throughout history.[182] Ideologues often falsely accuse others of violence, such as the ancient blood libel against Jews, the medieval accusations of casting witchcraft spells against women, and modern accusations of satanic ritual abuse against day care center owners and others.[183]

Both supporters and opponents of the 21st-century War on terrorism regard it largely as an ideological and religious war.[184][pages needed][185][pages needed][186][pages needed][187][pages needed] In 2007, US politician John Edwards said "the War on Terror was nothing more than a "slogan" and "a bumper sticker.""[188] In 1992, former research fellow with the US Cato Institute, Leon Hadar, considered that it wasn't "in America's interest to launch a crusade for democracy, neither is it in her interest to be perceived as the guarantor of the status quo and the major obstacle to reform".[189]

Vittorio Bufacchi describes two different modern concepts of violence, one the "minimalist conception" of violence as an intentional act of excessive or destructive force, the other the "comprehensive conception" which includes violations of rights, including a long list of human needs.[190]

Anti-capitalists say that capitalism is violent, that private property and profit survive only because police violence defends them, and that capitalist economies need war to expand.[191] In this view, capitalism results in a form of structural violence that stems from inequality, environmental damage, and the exploitation of women and people of colour.[192][193]

Frantz Fanon critiqued the violence of colonialism and wrote about the counter violence of the "colonized victims."[194][195][196]

Throughout history, most religions and individuals like Mahatma Gandhi have preached that humans are capable of eliminating individual violence and organizing societies through purely nonviolent means. Gandhi himself once wrote: "A society organized and run on the basis of complete non-violence would be the purest anarchy."[197] Modern political ideologies which espouse similar views include pacifist varieties of voluntarism, mutualism, anarchism and libertarianism.

Luther Seminary Old Testament scholar Terence E. Fretheim wrote about the Old Testament:

For many people, ... only physical violence truly qualifies as violence. But, certainly, violence is more than killing people, unless one includes all those words and actions that kill people slowly. The effect of limitation to a "killing fields" perspective is the widespread neglect of many other forms of violence. We must insist that violence also refers to that which is psychologically destructive, that which demeans, damages, or depersonalizes others. In view of these considerations, violence may be defined as follows: any action, verbal or nonverbal, oral or written, physical or psychical, active or passive, public or private, individual or institutional/societal, human or divine, in whatever degree of intensity, that abuses, violates, injures, or kills. Some of the most pervasive and most dangerous forms of violence are those that are often hidden from view (against women and children, especially); just beneath the surface in many of our homes, churches, and communities is abuse enough to freeze the blood. Moreover, many forms of systemic violence often slip past our attention because they are so much a part of the infrastructure of life (e.g., racism, sexism, ageism).[198]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ 'any interpretation of reality is always a form of violence in the sense that knowledge "can only be a violation of the things to be known" ... Several philosophers following Nietzsche, Heidegger, Foucault, and Derrida have emphasized and explicated this fundamental violence.'[59]
  2. ^ "While the ontological violence of language does, in significant ways, sustain, enable, and encourage physical violence, it is a serious mistake to conflate them. [...] Violence is understood to be ineliminable in the first sense, and this leads to its being treated as a fundamental in the second sense, too.""[59]: 36 
  3. ^ "Epistemic violence in testimony is a refusal, intentional or unintentional, of an audience to communicatively reciprocate a linguistic exchange owing to pernicious ignorance"[60]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Violence". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Krug, Etienne G.; Dahlberg, Linda L.; Mercy, James A.; Zwi, Anthony B.; Lozano, Rafael (3 October 2002). World report on violence and health. Geneva: World Health Organization (published 2002). p. 360. hdl:10665/42495. ISBN 92 4 154561 5.
  3. ^ a b c d "Injuries and violence". World Health Organization. 19 June 2024. Retrieved 23 November 2024.
  4. ^ a b c Global status report on violence prevention 2014. Geneva: World Health Organization (published 2014). 9 January 2014. p. 274. hdl:10665/145086. ISBN 9789241564793.
  5. ^ a b c d GBD 2013 Mortality and Causes of Death Collaborators (10 January 2015). "Global, regional, and national age-sex specific all-cause and cause-specific mortality for 240 causes of death, 1990–2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013". The Lancet. 385 (9963): 117–71. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(14)61682-2. PMC 4340604. PMID 25530442.
  6. ^ "Global Burden of Disease" Archived 2015-10-09 at the Wayback Machine, World Health Organization, 2008.
  7. ^ WHO / Liverpool JMU Centre for Public Health, "Violence Prevention: The evidence" Archived 2012-08-30 at the Wayback Machine, 2010.
  8. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-15. Retrieved 2015-11-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ Balcells, Laia; Stanton, Jessica A. (11 May 2021). "Violence Against Civilians During Armed Conflict: Moving Beyond the Macro- and Micro-Level Divide". Annual Review of Political Science. 24 (1): 45–69. doi:10.1146/annurev-polisci-041719-102229.
  10. ^ "Country Reports on Terrorism 2019". United States Department of State. Retrieved 2023-10-19.
  11. ^ Nixon, Rob (2011). Slow violence and the environmentalism of the poor. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-06119-4. OCLC 754842110.
  12. ^ Šmihula, Daniel (2013): The Use of Force in International Relations, p. 64, ISBN 978-8022413411.
  13. ^ Šmihula, Daniel (2013): The Use of Force in International Relations, p. 84, ISBN 978-8022413411.
  14. ^ Schechter DS, Willheim E, McCaw J, Turner JB, Myers MM, Zeanah CH (2011). "The relationship of violent fathers, posttraumatically stressed mothers, and symptomatic children in a preschool-age inner-city pediatrics clinic sample". Journal of Interpersonal Violence. 26 (18): 3699–3719. doi:10.1177/0886260511403747. PMID 22170456. S2CID 206562093.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h "Violence against children". World Health Organization. 29 November 2022. Retrieved 23 November 2024.
  16. ^ World Health Organization (2006). "Preventing child maltreatment: a guide to taking action and generating evidence" Archived 2012-07-19 at the Wayback Machine Geneva: WHO and International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect.
  17. ^ a b Schechter DS, Willheim E (2009). The Effects of Violent Experience and Maltreatment on Infants and Young Children. In CH Zeanah (Ed.). Handbook of Infant Mental Health, 3rd Edition. New York: Guilford Press, Inc. pp. 197–214.
  18. ^ Stoltenborgh M.; Van IJzendoorn M.H.; Euser E.M.; Bakermans-Kranenburg M.J. (2011). "A global perspective on child abuse: Meta-analysis of prevalence around the world". Child Maltreatment. 26 (2): 79–101. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.1029.9752. doi:10.1177/1077559511403920. PMID 21511741. S2CID 30813632.
  19. ^ Gilbert R.; Spatz Widom C.; Browne K.; Fergusson D.; Webb E.; Janson J. (2009). "Burden and consequences of child maltreatment in high-income countries". The Lancet. 373 (9657): 68–81. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(08)61706-7. PMID 19056114. S2CID 1464691.
  20. ^ "Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)". 21 May 2021.
  21. ^ MacMillan HL, Wathen CN, Barlow J, Fergusson DM, Leventhal JM, Taussig HN (2009). "Interventions to prevent child maltreatment and associated impairment". Lancet. 373 (9659): 250–66. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(08)61708-0. PMID 19056113. S2CID 23012537.
  22. ^ Mikton Christopher; Butchart Alexander (2009). "Child maltreatment prevention: a systematic review of reviews". Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 87 (5): 353–61. doi:10.2471/blt.08.057075. PMC 2678770. PMID 19551253.
  23. ^ a b Mercy, J.A., Butchart, A., Farrington, D., Cerda, M. (2002). Youth violence. In Etienne Krug, L.L. Dahlberg, J.A. Mercy, A.B. Zwi & R. Lozano (Eds.), World Report on Violence and Health Archived 2015-08-22 at the Wayback Machine pp 23–56. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization
  24. ^ "Teen Violence". medlineplus.gov. Retrieved 2020-04-30.
  25. ^ World Health Organization and Liverpool John Moores University."Violence prevention: the evidence: overview" Archived 2013-01-22 at the Wayback Machine Geneva, WHO, 2009.
  26. ^ Leventhal Tama (2003). "Children and youth in neighborhood contexts". Current Directions in Psychological Science. 12: 27–31. doi:10.1111/1467-8721.01216. S2CID 145110900.
  27. ^ MacDonald, John; Bluthenthal, Ricky N.; Golinelli, Daniela; Kofner, Aaron; Stokes, Robert J.; Sehgal, Amber; Fain, Terry; Beletsky, Leo (2009). "Neighborhood Effects on Crime and Youth Violence: The Role of Business Improvement Districts in Los Angeles" (PDF). RAND Infrastructure, Safety, and Environment. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2014-10-20. Retrieved 2015-03-17.
  28. ^ a b Darby Saxbe (June 15, 2018). "Living with Neighborhood Violence May Shape Teens' Brains". The Conversation US. Scientific American. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  29. ^ "Consequences Youth Violence". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Archived from the original on 2019-12-21. Retrieved 2018-11-16.
  30. ^ Van Der Kolk, M.D., Bessel (2015). The Body Keeps The Score. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 464. ISBN 978-0143127741. Retrieved November 24, 2018.
  31. ^ a b Van Der Kolk, M.D., Bessel (2015). The Body Keeps The Score. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 464. ISBN 978-0143127741. Retrieved December 2, 2018.
  32. ^ Van Der Kolk, M.D., Bessel (2015). The Body Keeps The Score. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 464. ISBN 978-0143127741.
  33. ^ "WCL: Stop the Violence Resources for Illinois". ABC 7 Windy City Live. Archived from the original on 19 November 2018. Retrieved 19 November 2018.
  34. ^ Flores, Rosa (24 May 2017). "Why parents in tough Chicago neighborhoods fear after-school program cuts". CNN. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
  35. ^ Garcia-Moreno, C. et al. (2005). "WHO multi-country study on women's health and domestic violence against women" Archived 2011-02-24 at Wikiwix Geneva: WHO
  36. ^ Gottzén, L.; Bjørnholt, M.; Boonzaier, F. (2020). "What has masculinity to do with intimate partner violence?". In Gottzén, L.; Bjørnholt, M.; Boonzaier, F. (eds.). Men, Masculinities and Intimate Partner Violence. Routledge. pp. 1–15. ISBN 9781000217995.
  37. ^ Stith SM; et al. (2004). "Intimate partner physical abuse perpetration and victimization risk factors: a meta-analytic review" (PDF). Aggression and Violent Behavior. 10 (1): 65–98. doi:10.1016/j.avb.2003.09.001. hdl:2097/14851.
  38. ^ Bensimon M.; Ronel N. (2012). "The flywheel effect of intimate partner violence: A victim-perpetrator interactive spin". Aggression and Violent Behavior. 17 (5): 423–29. doi:10.1016/j.avb.2012.05.004.
  39. ^ Foshee V.A.; et al. (2004). "Assessing the long-term effects of the Safe Dates program and a booster in preventing and reducing adolescent dating violence victimization and perpetration". American Journal of Public Health. 94 (4): 619–24. doi:10.2105/ajph.94.4.619. PMC 1448308. PMID 15054015.
  40. ^ Kim J; et al. (2009). "Assessing the incremental effects of combining economic and health interventions: the IMAGE study in South Africa". Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 87 (11): 824–32. doi:10.2471/blt.08.056580. PMC 2770274. PMID 20072767.
  41. ^ a b WHO(2010)."Preventing intimate partner and sexual violence against women: Taking action and generating evidence" Archived 2011-11-12 at the Wayback Machine World Health Organization: Geneva
  42. ^ Krug et al.,"World report on violence and health" Archived 2015-08-22 at the Wayback Machine, World Health Organization, 2002, p. 149.
  43. ^ Garcia-Moreno, C. et al. (2005)."WHO multi-country study on women's health and domestic violence against women" Archived 2013-01-22 at the Wayback Machine Geneva: WHO
  44. ^ Ford, S.E. et al. (2011). "Adverse childhood experiences and smoking status in five states". Preventive Medicine: 43, 3, 188–93.
  45. ^ Sethi et al. "WHO European report on preventing elder maltreatment" Archived 2013-01-22 at the Wayback Machine, 2011
  46. ^ Cooper C, Selwood A, Livingston G (2008). "The prevalence of elder abuse and neglect: a systematic review". Age Ageing. 37 (2): 151–60. doi:10.1093/ageing/afm194. PMID 18349012.
  47. ^ Ploeg Jenny; Fear Jana; Hutchison Brian; MacMillan Harriet; Bolan Gale (2009). "A Systematic Review of Interventions for Elder Abuse". Journal of Elder Abuse & Neglect. 21 (3): 187–210. doi:10.1080/08946560902997181. PMID 19827325. S2CID 42017274.
  48. ^ Pillemer K et al. "Interventions to prevent elder mistreatment". In: Doll LS et al., eds. Handbook of injury and violence prevention. New York, Springer, 2008.
  49. ^ Fein, R.A., Vossekuil, B. & Holden, G. Threat Assessment: an approach to prevent targeted violence. NCJ 155000. Research in Action, September 1995, U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute of Justice, Washington, D.C.
  50. ^ Fein, R.A. & Vossekuil, B. "Assassination in the United States: an operational study of recent assassins, attackers, and near-lethal approaches". Journal of Forensic Sciences, 1999. 50: pp. 321–33
  51. ^ Vossekuil B.; Borum R.; Fein R.A.; Reddy M. "Preventing targeted violence against judicial officials and courts". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 2001 (576): 78–90.
  52. ^ Fein, R.A., Vossekuil, B., Pollack, W., Borum, R., Reddy, M.,& Modzeleski, W. Threat assessment in schools: A guide to managing threatening situations and creating safe school climates. U.S. Department of Education and U.S. Secret Service, May 2002
  53. ^ Reddy, M., Borum, R., Vossekuil, B., Fein, R.A., Berglund, J., & Modzeleski, W. "Evaluating risk for targeted violence in schools: Comparing risk assessment, threat assessment, and other approaches" in Psychology in the Schools, 2001. 38 (2): pp. 157–72
  54. ^ Borum, R., Fein, R.A., Vossekuil, B. & Berglund, J. "Threat assessment: Defining an approach for evaluating risk of targeted violence". Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 1999. 17: pp. 323–37
  55. ^ Gammeltoft, Tine M. (2016-12-01). "Silence as a Response to Everyday Violence: Understanding Domination and Distress Through the Lens of Fantasy". Ethos. 44 (4): 427–47. doi:10.1111/etho.12140. ISSN 1548-1352.
  56. ^ Philippe Bourgois. "The Power of Violence in War and Peace". istmo.denison.edu. Archived from the original on 2016-04-23. Retrieved 2018-02-13.
  57. ^ "Violent crime has undermined democracy in Latin America". Financial Times. 9 July 2019. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10.
  58. ^ "Latin America Is the Murder Capital of the World". The Wall Street Journal. 20 September 2018.
  59. ^ a b c Johanna Oksala (2012). Foucault, Politics, and Violence. Northwestern University Press. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-0810128026.
  60. ^ Dotson, Kristie (2011). "Tracking Epistemic Violence, Tracking Practices of Silencing". Hypatia. 26 (2). Cambridge University Press (CUP): 236–57. doi:10.1111/j.1527-2001.2011.01177.x. ISSN 0887-5367. S2CID 144313735.
  61. ^ The Histories of Violence project
  62. ^ "Risk and Protective Factors |Violence Prevention|Injury Center|CDC". www.cdc.gov. 2023-08-25. Retrieved 2023-12-18.
  63. ^ a b c d e f g "Risk and Protective Factors |Violence Prevention|Injury Center|CDC". www.cdc.gov. 2020-05-07. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
  64. ^ Patrick, C. J. (2008). "Psychophysiological correlates of aggression and violence: An integrative review". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 363 (1503): 2543–55. doi:10.1098/rstb.2008.0028. PMC 2606710. PMID 18434285.
  65. ^ McCrory, E.; De Brito, S. A.; Viding, E. (2012). "The link between child abuse and psychopathology: A review of neurobiological and genetic research". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 105 (4): 151–56. doi:10.1258/jrsm.2011.110222. PMC 3343716. PMID 22532655.
  66. ^ Durrant, Joan; Ensom, Ron (4 September 2012). "Physical punishment of children: lessons from 20 years of research". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 184 (12): 1373–77. doi:10.1503/cmaj.101314. PMC 3447048. PMID 22311946.
  67. ^ "Corporal Punishment" Archived 2010-10-31 at the Wayback Machine (2008). International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences.
  68. ^ Gershoff, E.T. (2008). Report on Physical Punishment in the United States: What Research Tells Us About Its Effects on Children (PDF). Columbus, OH: Center for Effective Discipline. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-01-27. Retrieved 2015-12-15.
  69. ^ Straus Murray A (2000). "Corporal punishment by parents: The cradle of violence in the family and society" (PDF)" (PDF). Virginia Journal of Social Policy & the Law. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2011-11-10.
  70. ^ The Neurobiology of Violence, An Update, Journal of Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 11:3, Summer 1999. As Mexican Biologist and Scientologist Adri Rodriguez says, Violence is a recurring motif in today's society.
  71. ^ Heather Whipps,Peace or War? How early humans behaved Archived 2007-07-15 at the Wayback Machine, LiveScience.Com, March 16, 2006.
  72. ^ Rowan, John (1978). The Structured Crowd. Davis-Poynter.
  73. ^ Galtung Johan (1969). "Violence, Peace and Peace Research". Journal of Peace Research. 6 (3): 167–91. doi:10.1177/002234336900600301. S2CID 143440399.
  74. ^ Galtung Johan; Höivik Tord (1971). "Structural and Direct Violence: A Note on Operationalization". Journal of Peace Research. 8 (1): 73–76. doi:10.1177/002234337100800108. S2CID 109656035.
  75. ^ Farmer, Paul, M. Connors, and J. Simmons, eds. Women, Poverty, and Aids: Sex, Drugs, and Structural Violence. Monroe: Common Courage Press, 1996.
  76. ^ Scheper-Hughes, Nancy. Death without Weeping: The Violence of Everyday Life in Brazil. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992.
  77. ^ Winter, Deborah DuNann, and Dana C. Leighton. "Section II: Structural Violence." Peace, Conflict, and Violence: Peace Psychology for the 21st Century. Eds. Christie, Daniel J., Richard V. Wagner and Deborah DuNann Winter. New York: Prentice-Hall, 2001. 99–101.
  78. ^ Lee, Bandy X. (May–June 2016). "Causes and cures VII: Structural violence". Aggression and Violent Behavior. 28: 109–14. doi:10.1016/j.avb.2016.05.003.
  79. ^ Parsons Kenneth (2007). "Structural Violence and Power". Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice. 19 (2): 1040–2659.
  80. ^ Walker Phillip L (2001). "A Bioarchaeological Perspective on the History of Violence". Annual Review of Anthropology. 30: 573–96. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.30.1.573.
  81. ^ Martin, Debra L., Ryan P. Harrod, and Ventura R. Pérez, eds. 2012. The Bioarchaeology of Violence. Edited by C. S. Larsen, Bioarchaeological Interpretations of the Human Past: Local, regional, and global perspectives Gainesville: University Press of Florida. "University Press of Florida: The Bioarchaeology of Violence". Archived from the original on 2013-11-04. Retrieved 2013-11-14.
  82. ^ Daly Martin; Wilson Margo (1982). "Male Sexual Jealousy". Ethology and Sociobiology. 3 (1): 11–27. doi:10.1016/0162-3095(82)90027-9. S2CID 40532677.
  83. ^ Daly Martin; Wilson Margo I (1981). "Child Maltreatment from a Sociobiological Perspective". New Directions for Child Development. 1981 (11): 93–112. doi:10.1002/cd.23219811107.
  84. ^ Wilson, Margo, and Martin Daly. Homicide. Hawthorne: Aldine de Gruyter, 1988.
  85. ^ a b Goetz, A. T. (2010). "The evolutionary psychology of violence". Psicothema. 22 (1): 15–21. PMID 20100422.
  86. ^ Anderson Craig A.; Berkowitz Leonard; Donnerstein Edward; Huesmann L. Rowell; Johnson James D.; Linz Daniel; Malamuth Neil M.; Wartella Ellen (2003). "The Influence of Media Violence on Youth". Psychological Science in the Public Interest. 4 (3): 81–110. doi:10.1111/j.1529-1006.2003.pspi_1433.x. hdl:2027.42/83429. PMID 26151870.
  87. ^ Ferguson Christopher J (2010). "Blazing Angels or Resident Evil? Can Violent Video Games Be a Force for Good?". Review of General Psychology. 14 (2): 68–81. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.360.3176. doi:10.1037/a0018941. S2CID 3053432.
  88. ^ Elbogen EB, Johnson SC (February 2009). "The intricate link between violence and mental disorder: results from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions". Archives of General Psychiatry. 66 (2): 152–61. doi:10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2008.537. PMID 19188537.
  89. ^ Metzl JM, MacLeish KT (February 2015). "Mental illness, mass shootings, and the politics of American firearms". American Journal of Public Health. 105 (2): 240–9. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2014.302242. PMC 4318286. PMID 25496006.
  90. ^ Peterson JK, Skeem J, Kennealy P, Bray B, Zvonkovic A (October 2014). "How often and how consistently do symptoms directly precede criminal behavior among offenders with mental illness?". Law and Human Behavior. 38 (5): 439–49. doi:10.1037/lhb0000075. PMID 24730388. S2CID 2228512.
  91. ^ Swanson JW, McGinty EE, Fazel S, Mays VM (May 2015). "Mental illness and reduction of gun violence and suicide: bringing epidemiologic research to policy". Annals of Epidemiology. 25 (5): 366–76. doi:10.1016/j.annepidem.2014.03.004. PMC 4211925. PMID 24861430.
  92. ^ a b Stuart H (June 2003). "Violence and mental illness: an overview". World Psychiatry. 2 (2): 121–4. PMC 1525086. PMID 16946914.
  93. ^ Brekke JS, Prindle C, Bae SW, Long JD (October 2001). "Risks for individuals with schizophrenia who are living in the community". Psychiatric Services. 52 (10): 1358–66. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.52.10.1358. PMID 11585953.
  94. ^ Teplin LA, McClelland GM, Abram KM, Weiner DA (August 2005). "Crime victimization in adults with severe mental illness: comparison with the National Crime Victimization Survey". Archives of General Psychiatry. 62 (8): 911–21. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.62.8.911. PMC 1389236. PMID 16061769.
  95. ^ Petersilia JR (2001). "Crime Victims with Developmental Disabilities: A Review Essay". Criminal Justice and Behavior. 28 (6): 655–94. doi:10.1177/009385480102800601. S2CID 145599816.
  96. ^ Pilgrim D, Rogers A (2005). A sociology of mental health and illness (3rd ed.). Milton Keynes: Open University Press. ISBN 978-0-335-21583-6.[page needed]
  97. ^ Steadman HJ, Mulvey EP, Monahan J, Robbins PC, Appelbaum PS, Grisso T, et al. (May 1998). "Violence by people discharged from acute psychiatric inpatient facilities and by others in the same neighborhoods". Archives of General Psychiatry. 55 (5): 393–401. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.55.5.393. PMID 9596041.
  98. ^ a b Fazel S, Gulati G, Linsell L, Geddes JR, Grann M (August 2009). McGrath J (ed.). "Schizophrenia and violence: systematic review and meta-analysis". PLOS Medicine. 6 (8): e1000120. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1000120. PMC 2718581. PMID 19668362.
  99. ^ Taylor PJ, Gunn J (January 1999). "Homicides by people with mental illness: myth and reality". The British Journal of Psychiatry. 174 (1): 9–14. doi:10.1192/bjp.174.1.9. eISSN 1472-1465. ISSN 0007-1250. LCCN 89649366. OCLC 1537306. PMID 10211145. S2CID 24432329.
  100. ^ Solomon PL, Cavanaugh MM, Gelles RJ (January 2005). "Family violence among adults with severe mental illness: a neglected area of research". Trauma, Violence & Abuse. 6 (1): 40–54. doi:10.1177/1524838004272464. PMID 15574672. S2CID 20067766.
  101. ^ Chou KR, Lu RB, Chang M (December 2001). "Assaultive behavior by psychiatric in-patients and its related factors". The Journal of Nursing Research. 9 (5): 139–51. doi:10.1097/01.JNR.0000347572.60800.00. PMID 11779087.
  102. ^ Lögdberg B, Nilsson LL, Levander MT, Levander S (August 2004). "Schizophrenia, neighbourhood, and crime". Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 110 (2): 92–7. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0047.2004.00322.x. PMID 15233709. S2CID 12605241.
  103. ^ "Code of Hammurabi | Summary & History". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on 2017-03-13. Retrieved 2017-04-30.
  104. ^ Melvin, Gayle Vassar (3 April 1996). "Kids Help Draw Line on Hitting: Beyond the primary colors and the stick figures, there's a harrowing message: Some children are growing up on a diet of violence". Newspaper. Contra Costa Newspapers. Contra Costa Times. Retrieved 16 Jan 2021.[permanent dead link]
  105. ^ "Violence Prevention: the evidence" Archived 2012-08-30 at the Wayback Machine, World Health Organization/Liverpool John Moores University, 2009.
  106. ^ Olds DL, Sadler L, Kitzman H (2007). "Programs for parents of infants and toddlers: recent evidence from randomized trials". Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 48 (3–4): 355–91. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7610.2006.01702.x. PMID 17355402. S2CID 1083174.
  107. ^ Prinz; et al. (2009). "Population-based prevention of child maltreatment: the US Triple P system population trial". Prevention Science. 10 (1): 1–12. doi:10.1007/s11121-009-0123-3. PMC 4258219. PMID 19160053.
  108. ^ Caldera D, et al. (2007). "Impact of a statewide home visiting program on parenting and on child health and development". Child Abuse and Neglect. 31 (8): 829–52. doi:10.1016/j.chiabu.2007.02.008. PMID 17822765.
  109. ^ Caldera; et al. (1997). "Long-term effects of home visitation on maternal life course and child abuse and neglect: 15 year follow-up of a randomized trial". Journal of the American Medical Association. 278 (8): 637–43. doi:10.1001/jama.1997.03550080047038.
  110. ^ Pronyk PM, et al. (2006). "Effect of a structural intervention for the prevention of intimate-partner violence and HIV in rural South Africa: a cluster randomised trial". Lancet. 368 (9551): 1973–83. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(06)69744-4. PMID 17141704. S2CID 14146492.
  111. ^ Kim JC, Watts CH, Hargreaves JR, et al. (2007). "Understanding the impact of a microfinance-based intervention on women's empowerment and the reduction of intimate partner violence in South Africa". American Journal of Public Health. 97 (10): 1794–1802. doi:10.2105/ajph.2006.095521. PMC 1994170. PMID 17761566.
  112. ^ Foshee VA, et al. (1998). "An evaluation of safe dates an adolescent dating violence prevention programme". American Journal of Public Health. 1998 (88): 45–50. doi:10.2105/ajph.88.1.45. PMC 1508378. PMID 9584032.
  113. ^ Foshee; et al. (2005). "Safe Dates" using random coefficient regression modelling". Prevention Science. 6 (3): 245–57. doi:10.1007/s11121-005-0007-0. PMID 16047088. S2CID 21288936.
  114. ^ Wolfe D, et al. (2009). "Dating violence prevention with at risk youth: a controlled outcome evaluation". Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. 71 (2): 279–91. doi:10.1037/0022-006x.71.2.279. PMID 12699022. S2CID 11004108.
  115. ^ Fabiano P; et al. (2003). "Engaging men as social justice allies in ending violence against women: evidence for a social norms approach". Journal of American College Health. 52 (3): 105–12. doi:10.1080/07448480309595732. PMID 14992295. S2CID 28099487.
  116. ^ Bruce S. The "A Man" campaign: marketing social norms to men to prevent sexual assault. The report on social norms. Working paper number 5. July 2002. Little Falls, NJ, PaperClip Communications, 2002.
  117. ^ Olive P (2007). "Care for emergency department patients who have experienced domestic violence: a review of the evidence base". Journal of Clinical Nursing. 16 (9): 1736–48. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2702.2007.01746.x. PMID 17727592. S2CID 37110679.
  118. ^ Roberts GL; et al. (1997). "Impact of an education program about domestic violence on nurses and doctors in an Australian emergency department". Journal of Emergency Nursing. 23 (3): 220–26. doi:10.1016/s0099-1767(97)90011-8. PMID 9283357.
  119. ^ Holt VL, et al. (2003). "Do protection orders affect the likelihood of future partner violence and injury?". American Journal of Preventive Medicine. 2003 (24): 16–21. doi:10.1016/s0749-3797(02)00576-7. PMID 12554019.
  120. ^ McFarlane J, et al. (2004). "Protection orders and intimate partner violence: an 18-month study of 150 Black, Hispanic, and White women". American Journal of Public Health. 2004 (94): 613–18. doi:10.2105/ajph.94.4.613. PMC 1448307. PMID 15054014.
  121. ^ Zwi, Garfield, & Loretti (2002) Collective violence, In Krug et al. (Eds) World report on violence and health, WHO
  122. ^ Zwi, Garfield, & Loretti (2002) "Collective violence", In Krug et al. (Eds) World report on violence and health
  123. ^ David Joseph E (2006). "The One who is More Violent Prevails – Law and Violence from a Talmudic Legal Perspective". Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence. 19 (2): 385–406. doi:10.1017/S0841820900004161. S2CID 231891531.
  124. ^ Arendt, Hannah. On Violence. Harvest Book. p. 52..
  125. ^ Arendt, H. (1972) On Violence in Crises in the Republic, Florida, Harcourt, Brace and Company, pp. 134–55.
  126. ^ "20th Century Democide". Archived from the original on 2006-03-01.
  127. ^ "Atlas – Wars and Democide of the Twentieth Century". Archived from the original on 2007-11-10.
  128. ^ "Uniform Crime Reporting Handbook" (PDF). Federal Bureau of Investigation. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-05-03..
  129. ^ M. Moore "Public Health and Criminal Justice Approaches to Prevention."1992. In Vol. 16 of Crime and Justice: A Review of Research, edited by M. Tonry. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
  130. ^ Prothrow-Stith D (2004). "Strengthening the collaboration between public health and criminal justice to prevent violence". Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics. 32 (1): 82–94. doi:10.1111/j.1748-720x.2004.tb00451.x. PMID 15152429. S2CID 11995691.
  131. ^ Bratton W (with Knobler P). Turnaround: how America's top cop reversed the crime epidemic. New York: Random House, 1998
  132. ^ Morrow, Weston J.; Nuño, Lidia E.; Mulvey, Philip (2018). "Examining the Situational- and Suspect-Level Predictors of Police Use of Force Among a Juvenile Arrestee Population" (PDF). Justice Policy Journal. 15 (1).
  133. ^ Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence "Blueprints for violence prevention/ Archived 2012-01-03 at the Wayback Machine
  134. ^ Gordon JE, "The epidemiology of accidents," American Journal of Public Health, 1949; 504–15.
  135. ^ Abad Gomez H (1962). "Violence requires epidemiological studies". Tribuna Medica. 2: 1–12.
  136. ^ Dahlberg L.; Mercy J. (2009). "History of violence as a public health issue". Virtual Mentor. 11 (2): 167–72. doi:10.1001/virtualmentor.2009.11.2.mhst1-0902. PMID 23190546.
  137. ^ "WHA49.25 Prevention of violence: a public health priority" Archived 2013-01-22 at the Wayback Machine
  138. ^ Prothrow-Stith D (2004). "Strengthening the collaboration between public health and criminal justice to prevent violence". Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics. 32 (1): 82–88. doi:10.1111/j.1748-720x.2004.tb00451.x. PMID 15152429. S2CID 11995691.
  139. ^ a b c d e f Hyndman, J. (2009) Violence in Gregory, D., Johnston, R., Pratt, G., Watts, M. and Whatmore, S. eds. Dictionary of Human Geography, Wiley-Blackwell, NJ: 798–99.
  140. ^ Bowlby, S. (2001) "Social Geography", in Smelser, N. and Baltes, P. eds. International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Oxford, Elsevier, 14293–99.
  141. ^ Gregory, Derek and Pred, Alan, 2006 Violent Geographies: Fear, Terror, and Political Violence. London: Routledge.
  142. ^ a b c d Agamben, G. (1998) Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, Stanford University Press, Stanford.
  143. ^ a b c d e f Ringer, G. (2002) "Killing Fields", in Christensen, K. and Levinson, D. eds. Encyclopedia of Modern Asia, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York: 368–70.
  144. ^ a b Cavarero, A. (2009) Horrorism: Naming Contemporary Violence, Columbia University Press, New York.
  145. ^ "Mortality and Burden of Disease Estimates for WHO Member States in 2002" (xls). World Health Organization. 2004. Archived from the original on 2013-01-16.
  146. ^ a b c Lozano, R; Naghavi, M; Foreman, K; Lim, S; Shibuya, K; Aboyans, V; Abraham, J; Adair, T; Aggarwal, R; Ahn, SY; Alvarado, M; Anderson, HR; Anderson, LM; Andrews, KG; Atkinson, C; Baddour, LM; Barker-Collo, S; Bartels, DH; Bell, ML; Benjamin, EJ; Bennett, D; Bhalla, K; Bikbov, B; Bin Abdulhak, A; Birbeck, G; Blyth, F; Bolliger, I; Boufous, S; Bucello, C; et al. (Dec 15, 2012). "Global and regional mortality from 235 causes of death for 20 age groups in 1990 and 2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010" (PDF). Lancet. 380 (9859): 2095–128. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61728-0. hdl:10536/DRO/DU:30050819. PMC 10790329. PMID 23245604. S2CID 1541253. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 1, 2020. Retrieved August 31, 2019.
  147. ^ "Global Burden of Disease, Disease and injury regional estimates" Archived 2010-12-24 at the Wayback Machine, World Health Organization, 2008.
  148. ^ a b "Suicide". www.who.int. Retrieved 2023-10-19.
  149. ^ World Health Organization. "Preventing Suicide: A Global Imperative". World Health Organization. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  150. ^ "World Health Statistics" Archived 2011-10-30 at the Wayback Machine World Health Organization, 2008.
  151. ^ Reddy, M. S. (2010). "Suicide Incidence and Epidemiology". Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine. 32 (2): 77–82. doi:10.4103/0253-7176.78501. ISSN 0253-7176. PMC 3122543. PMID 21716862.
  152. ^ "Global Burden of Disease" Archived 2010-12-24 at the Wayback Machine, World Health Organization, 2008.
  153. ^ Rosenberg ML, Butchart A, Mercy J, Narasimhan V, Waters H, Marshall MS. Interpersonal violence. In Jamison DT, Breman JG, Measham AR, Alleyne G, Claeson M, Evans DB, Prabhat J, Mills A, Musgrove P (eds.) Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd Edition. Washington, D.C.: Oxford University Press and The World Bank, 2006: 755–70.
  154. ^ WHO, "Child maltreatment" Archived 2011-12-29 at the Wayback Machine, 2010.
  155. ^ WHO, "Violence against women" Archived 2011-12-28 at the Wayback Machine, 2011.
  156. ^ "Homicide trends in the United States" (PDF). Bureau of Justice Statistics. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-10.
  157. ^ "Homicide Victims by Race and Sex". U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on 2012-03-23.
  158. ^ Keith Krause, Robert Muggah, and Achim Wennmann, "Global Burden of Armed Violence," Geneva Declaration Secretariat, 2008.
  159. ^ "Skeletons from a 10,000-year-old massacre have archaeologists in a fight of their own". 20 January 2016.
  160. ^ Duhaime-Ross, Arielle (2016-01-20). "Skeletons from a 10,000-year-old massacre have archaeologists in a fight of their own". The Verge. Retrieved 2024-02-20.
  161. ^ "Humans evolved to have a taste for murder". The Independent. 2016-09-28. Retrieved 2024-02-20.
  162. ^ Birdsell, Joseph B. (1986). "Some predictions for the Pleistocene based on equilibrium systems among recent hunter gatherers". In Lee, Richard; DeVore, Irven (eds.). Man the Hunter. New York: Aldine Publishing Co. p. 239.
  163. ^ Guthrie, R. Dale (2005). The Nature of Paleolithic Art. University of Chicago Press. p. 422. ISBN 978-0226311265.
  164. ^ a b Kelly, Raymond C. (2005). "The evolution of lethal intergroup violence". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 102 (43): 15294–98. doi:10.1073/pnas.0505955102. PMC 1266108. PMID 16129826.
  165. ^ Horgan, John. "New Study of Prehistoric Skeletons Undermines Claim That War Has Deep Evolutionary Roots". Scientific American.
  166. ^ Fry, Douglas P. (2013). War, Peace, and Human Nature: The Convergence of Evolutionary and Cultural Views. Oxford University Press. p. 168. ISBN 978-0199859009.
  167. ^ Keeley, Lawrence H. War before Civilization. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.
  168. ^ "The fraud of primitive authenticity". Asia Times Online. 4 July 2006. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  169. ^ Martin, Debra L., Ryan P. Harrod, and Ventura R. Pérez, eds. 2012. The Bioarchaeology of Violence. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. "University Press of Florida: The Bioarchaeology of Violence". Archived from the original on 2013-11-04. Retrieved 2013-11-14.
  170. ^ Review of book "War Before Civilization" by Lawrence H. Keeley Archived 2008-05-14 at the Wayback Machine, July 2004.
  171. ^ Fry, Douglas P. (2013). War, Peace, and Human Nature: The Convergence of Evolutionary and Cultural Views. Oxford University Press. pp. 171–73.
  172. ^ Steven Pinker (2011). The Better Angels of Our Nature. Viking. ISBN 978-0670022953.
  173. ^ R Epstein (October 2011). "Book Review". Scientific American. Archived from the original on 2016-09-14.
  174. ^ Laws, Ben (21 March 2012). "Against Pinker's Violence". CTheory. Archived from the original on 12 May 2013.
  175. ^ "The Big Kill – By John Arquilla". Foreign Policy. 2012-12-03. Archived from the original on 2013-01-07. Retrieved 2013-01-22.
  176. ^ Elias, N. (1994). The Civilizing Process. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0631192220.
  177. ^ Finkelhor, D.; Turner, H.; Ormrod, R.; Hamby, S. (2010). "Structural Trends in childhood violence and abuse exposure: Evidence from 2 national surveys". Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. 164 (3): 238–42. doi:10.1001/archpediatrics.2009.283. PMID 20194256.
  178. ^ Gorelik, G., Shackelford, T.K., Weekes-Shackelford, V.A., 2012. Resource Acquisition, Violence, and Evolutionary Consciousness. In: Shackelford, T.K., Weekes- Shackelford, V.A. (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Violence, Homicide, and War. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 506–524
  179. ^ "Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study" Archived 2017-09-20 at Wikiwix, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  180. ^ Baten, Jörg. "Interpersonal violence in South Asia, 900–1900". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  181. ^ "How much does violence really cost our global economy?". World Economic Forum. 5 January 2017. Archived from the original on 2017-09-13. Retrieved 2017-06-30.
  182. ^ "Doctrinal War: Religion and Ideology in International Conflict," in Bruce Kuklick (advisory ed.), The Monist: The Foundations of International Order, Vol. 89, No. 2 (April 2006), p. 46.
  183. ^ 42 M.V.M.O. Court Cases with Allegations of Multiple Sexual And Physical Abuse of Children.
  184. ^ Richard Clarke, Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror, Free Press; 2004
  185. ^ Michael Scheuer, Imperial Hubris: Why the West is Losing the War on Terror, Potomac Books Inc., 2004
  186. ^ Robert Fisk, The Great War for Civilisation – The Conquest of the Middle East, Fourth Estate, London, October 2005
  187. ^ Michelle Malkin, Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week kicks off, October 22, 2007; John L. Esposito, Unholy War: Terror in the Name of Islam, Oxford University Press, USA, September 2003
  188. ^ John Edwards' 'Bumper Sticker' Complaint Not So Off the Mark, New Memo Shows
  189. ^ Leon T. Hadar, The Green Peril: Creating the Islamic Fundamentalist Threat Archived 2007-11-15 at the Wayback Machine, August 27, 1992
  190. ^ Bufacchi, Vittorio (2005). "Two Concepts of Violence". Political Studies Review. 3 (2): 193–204. doi:10.1111/j.1478-9299.2005.00023.x. S2CID 144475865.
  191. ^ Michael Albert Life After Capitalism – And Now Too. Zmag.org, December 10, 2004; Capitalism explained Archived 2007-11-09 at the Wayback Machine.
  192. ^ Gordon, Wally (1 January 1997). "Capitalism and violence". Medicine, Conflict and Survival. 13 (1): 63–66. doi:10.1080/13623699708409316. ISSN 1362-3699.
  193. ^ Büscher, Bram; Fletcher, Robert (4 May 2017). "Destructive creation: capital accumulation and the structural violence of tourism". Journal of Sustainable Tourism. 25 (5): 651–667. Bibcode:2017JSusT..25..651B. doi:10.1080/09669582.2016.1159214. ISSN 0966-9582. S2CID 155376736.
  194. ^ Charles E. Butterworth and Irene Gendzier. "Frantz Fanon and the Justice of Violence. "Middle East Journal, Vol. 28, No. 4 (Autumn, 1974), pp. 451–58
  195. ^ Fanon, Frantz (2007). The Wretched of the Earth. Grove/Atlantic, Inc. p. 44. ISBN 978-0802198853 – via Google Books.
  196. ^ Jinadu Adele (1972). "Fanon: The Revolutionary as Social Philosopher". The Review of Politics. 34 (3): 433–36. doi:10.1017/s0034670500026188. S2CID 144606756.
  197. ^ Bharatan Kumarappa, Editor, "For Pacifists," by M.K. Gandhi, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, India, 1949.
  198. ^ Freitheim, Terence (Winter 2004). "God and Violence in the Old Testament" (PDF). Word & World. 24 (1). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2012-11-19. Retrieved 2010-11-21.

Sources

edit
edit