Random Violence

Random Violence
Title Random Violence PDF eBook
Author Joel Best
Publisher Univ of California Press
Pages 268
Release 1999-03-02
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9780520921672

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Random Violence is a deft and thought-provoking exploration of the ways we talk about—and why we worry about—new crimes and new forms of victimization. Focusing on so-called random crimes such as freeway shootings, gang violence, hate crimes, stalking, and wilding, Joel Best shows how new crime problems emerge and how some quickly fade from public attention while others spread and become enduring subjects of concern. Best's original and incisive argument illuminates the fact that while these crimes are in actuality neither new, nor epidemic, nor random, the language used to describe them nonetheless shapes both private fears and public policies. Best scrutinizes the melodramatic quality of the American public's attitudes toward crime, exposing the cultural context for the popularity of "random violence" as a catch-all phrase to describe contemporary crime, and the fallacious belief that violence is steadily rising. He points out that the age, race, and sex of homicide victims reveal that violence is highly patterned. Best also details the contemporary ideology of victimization, as well as the social arrangements that create and support a victim industry that can label large numbers of victims. He demonstrates why it has become commonplace to "declare war" on social problems, including drugs, crime, poverty, and cancer, and outlines the complementary influence of media, activists, officials, and experts in institutionalizing crime problems. Intrinsic to all these concerns is the way in which policy choices and outcomes are affected by the language used to describe social problems.

Coping with Random Acts of Violence

Coping with Random Acts of Violence
Title Coping with Random Acts of Violence PDF eBook
Author Rich Mintzer
Publisher The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc
Pages 102
Release 2003-12-15
Genre Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN 9780823944835

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Violence, especially the one that comes unexpectedly and senselessly, has existed since the dawn of time. While it is unfortunately a part of everyday life, steps can be taken to deal and prevent future acts from happening. This book allows the reader to understand the nature of random violence, recognizing the symptoms of a potential act, dealing with peer pressure and gangs, and how to prevent future outbreaks.

Random Violence

Random Violence
Title Random Violence PDF eBook
Author Joel Best
Publisher Univ of California Press
Pages 262
Release 1999-03-02
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0520215729

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"A major contribution to the literature on social problems, crime, and social deviance, and a fine example of what is currently the best-established theoretical approach to this material. It is laudably interdisciplinary, draws admirably from 'high' and 'low' culture, and over all asks some very challenging questions."—Philip Jenkins, Pennsylvania State University "Random Violence extends the growing scholarly literature on the social construction of social problems by showing us how currently trendy folk knowledge obscures the most perplexing problems in American society and how it serves to foster a climate of social distrust."—Donileen Loeske, University of South Florida

Random Acts of Senseless Violence

Random Acts of Senseless Violence
Title Random Acts of Senseless Violence PDF eBook
Author Jack Womack
Publisher
Pages 255
Release 1993
Genre Violence
ISBN 9780246138507

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Senseless Violence and Its Ramifications

Senseless Violence and Its Ramifications
Title Senseless Violence and Its Ramifications PDF eBook
Author Ami Rokach
Publisher Routledge
Pages 116
Release 2018-10-22
Genre Psychology
ISBN 1351609483

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The baby boomer generation grew up in the 1950s when there existed the general belief that the Cold War was the greatest threat to the world order, and a frightening possibility. It was difficult to believe, then, that it could get worse, but the same threat of violence is now a daily occurrence around the globe. People are being shot, slaughtered, maimed, and disappear for a multitude of reasons, none having any connection, most of the time, with the victims. The scale of loss when these tragedies occur is devastating, leaving the public as well as policy makers and legislators scrambling for solutions, clarification, and understanding of how we have become a society where violence is so rampant, so frequent, and so senseless. This book includes contributions by leading experts on violence and its ramifications, who review the devastation, reasons, and consequences of violence which is senseless, cruel, and aims to hurt and destroy anyone in its path. This book was originally published as a special issue of The Journal of Psychology.

Virtuous Violence

Virtuous Violence
Title Virtuous Violence PDF eBook
Author Alan Page Fiske
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 385
Release 2015
Genre Psychology
ISBN 1107088208

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This radical and thought-provoking book argues that violence does not result from a breakdown of morality, but is morally motivated.

Violence, Culture and Identity

Violence, Culture and Identity
Title Violence, Culture and Identity PDF eBook
Author Helen Chambers
Publisher Peter Lang
Pages 442
Release 2006
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9783039102662

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This volume contains selected papers given at the conference 'Violence, Culture and Identity' held at St Andrews University in 2003. It contributes to the debate on the role of culture in propagating, mediating and controlling violence in society, concentrating on the relationship between culture and identity-formation in Germany and Austria from the Middle Ages to the present. Bringing together the work of twenty-two scholars with expertise in different literary and historical periods, the volume probes the complexities of representations of violence enacted and suffered, of affirmative and non-affirmative violence in text and visual form, revealing the often blurred line between victim and victimizer. Violence in its discursive and material forms is investigated, using the theoretical tools of sociology, post-colonial and gender studies, history and psychology as well as of literary criticism. The collection of essays focuses particularly on the relationship between war and identity, on 1970s terrorism and identity, on violence and the construction of gender, and on contemporary writing in German.