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Journal Article

Citation

Ganpat SM, van der Leun J, Nieuwbeerta P. J. Interpers. Violence 2017; 32(17): 2535-2565.

Affiliation

Leiden University, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0886260515593297

PMID

26193893

Abstract

When investigating serious violence, studies tend to look primarily at offenders and their background. This study investigates the influence of offenders' and victims' criminal history and immediate situational factors on the likelihood that violent events will end lethally. For this purpose, we compare lethal with non-lethal events, and combine Dutch criminal records with data from court files of those involved in lethal (i.e., homicide, n = 126) versus non-lethal events (i.e., attempted homicide, n = 141).

RESULTS reveal that both criminal history and immediate situational factors clearly matter for the outcome of violent events; however, immediate situational factors have the strongest effect on violent outcomes.


Language: en

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