A Reexamination of the Concept of Victim-Precipitated Homicide
- 1 May 1997
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Homicide Studies
- Vol. 1 (2) , 141-168
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1088767997001002004
Abstract
This article draws on a qualitative analysis of homicide in Victoria, Australia, to examine the concept of “victim precipitated homicide.” Despite the enduring popularity of the term, there are many problems in its use for the present-day study of homicide, including the lack of adequate detail in files for the determination of the role of the victim for a large number of cases, as well as the fact that inevitably, the various actors in a homicide scene have different views of what happened, so it may be difficult to establish the facts of the case (especially given that the voice of the victim will not be present). Understanding the nature of the interactions that link victims, offenders, and bystanders in unfolding homicide scenarios may prove theoretically richer than focusing on what may be the unanswerable question of “who started it?”Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Just Boys Doing Business?Published by Taylor & Francis ,2013
- Murder in Space CityPublished by Elsevier ,1999
- CROSS-NATIONAL COMPARISONS AND CONTEXT-SPECIFIC TRENDS IN CRIMINAL HOMICIDEJournal of Crime and Justice, 1991
- BEGINNING WITH WOLFGANG: AN AGENDA FOR HOMICIDE RESEARCHJournal of Crime and Justice, 1991
- Situational Factors in Disputes Leading to Criminal ViolenceCriminology, 1983
- Victim Precipitation and Violent CrimeSocial Problems, 1974
- Patterns in Criminal Homicide in ChicagoThe Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology, and Police Science, 1968
- Patterns in Criminal HomicidePublished by University of Pennsylvania Press ,1958