Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Temporal Clustering of Child Homicide: Contagion or Illusion?

Temporal Clustering of Child Homicide: Contagion or Illusion? Data available on the characteristics of all Australian homicides over ten years since mid 1989 provide an opportunity to investigate whether child homicide is subject to temporal clustering. If this were found to be the case, then contagion resulting from media publicity might be a possible explanation. This follows from studies indicating some influence from media publicity given to suicides. No temporal clustering could be detected and results indicate that any given child homicide in Australia has no effect on the subsequent rate of child homicides. The study suggests that caution is needed before assuming that proximate events are necessarily related. It remains a possibility that child homicide may be the product of contagion over a longer time frame, as a consequence of intense media publicity given to high profile events. The media should respect community sensibilities in reporting such events and avoid sensational coverage in an ethical and balanced way. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology SAGE

Temporal Clustering of Child Homicide: Contagion or Illusion?

Loading next page...
 
/lp/sage/temporal-clustering-of-child-homicide-contagion-or-illusion-dh5fjoSYxH

References (31)

Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
© 2001 Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology
ISSN
0004-8658
eISSN
1837-9273
DOI
10.1177/000486580103400206
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Data available on the characteristics of all Australian homicides over ten years since mid 1989 provide an opportunity to investigate whether child homicide is subject to temporal clustering. If this were found to be the case, then contagion resulting from media publicity might be a possible explanation. This follows from studies indicating some influence from media publicity given to suicides. No temporal clustering could be detected and results indicate that any given child homicide in Australia has no effect on the subsequent rate of child homicides. The study suggests that caution is needed before assuming that proximate events are necessarily related. It remains a possibility that child homicide may be the product of contagion over a longer time frame, as a consequence of intense media publicity given to high profile events. The media should respect community sensibilities in reporting such events and avoid sensational coverage in an ethical and balanced way.

Journal

Australian & New Zealand Journal of CriminologySAGE

Published: Aug 1, 2001

There are no references for this article.