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Journal Article

Citation

Smith A, Chiricos T. Violence Vict. 2003; 18(1): 55-70.

Affiliation

Ramapo College of New Jersey, Mahwah 07430, USA. profasmith@yahoo.com

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Springer Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

12733619

Abstract

This article examines whether the social structural factors predicting violence against women are different from those predicting violence against men. Using sex-specific, aggravated assault rates from Florida counties (n = 60), this regression analysis tests three principal explanations of violent victimization: routine activities, social disorganization, and gender inequality. Although initially some difference in the predictive factors for male and female aggravated assault rates emerged, a test of the equality of regression coefficients revealed no "real" significant differences. Despite this finding, it remains important to assess the influence of societal factors on rates of violent victimization. The national trend indicates that male violent victimization is declining and female violent victimization is relatively stable. It is important to understand why this is the case.


Language: en

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