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When Men Murder Women: An Analysis of 1999 Homicide Data
Females Murdered by Males in Single Victim/Single Offender Incidents
Conclusion
Many women�those
in abusive relationships, those who have left such relationships, those
who fear, in general, for their safety�have considered bringing a gun
into their homes as a measure of protection. Yet, gun ownership contains
risks about which women need to be concerned. A 1997 Archives of
Internal Medicine study that examined the risk factors of violent
death for women in the home in three United States counties found that
when there were one or more guns in the home, the risk of homicide increased
more than three times.m The increased risk of homicide associated with
firearms was attributable to homicides at the hands of a spouse, intimate
acquaintance, or close relative.
Often a gun in the
home is a key factor in the escalation of nonfatal spousal abuse to
homicide. In a study of family and intimate assaults for the city of
Atlanta, Georgia, firearm-associated family and intimate assaults were
12 times more likely to result in death than non-firearm associated
assaults between family and intimates.n
The picture that
emerges from When Men Murder Women is that women face the greatest
threat of homicide from someone they know, most often a spouse or intimate
acquaintance, who is armed with a gun. For women in America, guns are
not used to save lives, but to take them.
m) James E. Bailey
et al., "Risk Factors for Violent Death of Women in the Home," Archives
of Internal Medicine 157 (April 14, 1997): 777-782.
n) Linda E. Salzman
et al., "Weapon Involvement and Injury Outcomes in Family and Intimate
Assaults," JAMA 267, no. 22 (1992): 3043-3047.
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All contents � 2001 Violence Policy Center
The Violence Policy Center is a national non-profit educational foundation
that conducts research on violence in America and works to develop violence-reduction
policies and proposals. The Center examines the role of firearms in America,
conducts research on firearms violence, and explores new ways to decrease
firearm-related death and injury. |