U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Criminal Violence: Patterns, Causes, and Prevention

NCJ Number
212865
Author(s)
Marc Riedel; Wayne Welsh
Date Published
2002
Length
431 pages
Annotation
This introductory text on criminal violence offers broad coverage of the major topics and controversies on violence.
Abstract
The authors offer a coherent approach for analyzing different types of violence that taps into current research, diverse theoretical perspectives, and data-driven prevention and intervention methods. They argue that any effective violence reduction strategy must balance prevention and punishment approaches and that public policy should be guided by valid information about violence and its prevention. Chapters 1 through 4 introduce students to the concept of criminal violence, examine the major sources of information about violence in the United States, and explore the major theories that are used to explain violence. A historical and comparative perspective on violence in the United States that focuses on the nature and amount of violence in the country is also offered. Chapters 5 through 12 examine the major subtypes of violence including homicide and aggravated assault, urban riots, gang violence, domestic terrorism, family violence, hate crimes, robbery, rape and sexual assault, firearm violence, and drug-related violence. Each subtype of violence is discussed in terms of its patterns, explanations, and interventions. The final chapter focuses in greater detail on the types of violence prevention and intervention strategies employed by criminal justice and public health agencies. Figures, tables, endnotes, references, indexes

Downloads

No download available

Availability