
@article{ref1,
title="Cross-National Determinants of Child Homicide",
journal="American sociological review",
year="1988",
author="Fiala, Robert and LaFree, Gary",
volume="53",
number="3",
pages="432-445",
abstract="<p>This paper uses cross-national data on child homicide to develop a societal-level model of child abuse. Analysis of hypotheses emerging from four perspectives on abuse suggests that a focus on economic stress is most useful in explaining cross-national variation in child homicide in developed countries. High levels of female labor-force participation, coupled with low levels of female status and welfare spending, result in high child-homicide rates. No perspective provides hypotheses able to explain cross-national variation in child homicide in less-developed countries. The limitations of the present study are noted and avenues for future empirical and theoretical work are discussed.</p><p />",
language="",
issn="0003-1224",
doi="10.2307/2095650",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2095650"
}