2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2009.09.006
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Structural correlates of female homicide: A cross-national analysis

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Cited by 68 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…In an analysis of gender disaggregated total conviction rates in 10 countries, Hunnicutt and Broidy () found that indicators of both women's liberation and economic marginalization increased women's conviction rates more than those of men. By contrast, Agha () found little evidence of gender difference in societal predictors of homicide.…”
Section: The Research Contextmentioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In an analysis of gender disaggregated total conviction rates in 10 countries, Hunnicutt and Broidy () found that indicators of both women's liberation and economic marginalization increased women's conviction rates more than those of men. By contrast, Agha () found little evidence of gender difference in societal predictors of homicide.…”
Section: The Research Contextmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…A more recent generation of studies has been aimed at examining variation by gender in macro-level correlates of criminal offending (Agha, 2009;Chernoff and Simon, 2000;Hunnicutt and Broidy, 2004). In an analysis of gender disaggregated total conviction rates in 10 countries, Hunnicutt and Broidy (2004) found that indicators of both women's liberation and economic marginalization increased women's conviction rates more than those of men.…”
Section: Cross-national Comparative Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, I control for the nation's per capita gross domestic product (GDP) in US$. GDP, which is considered an indicator of the overall economic prosperity of a country, is commonly found to be negatively related to homicide rates (Agha 2009;Altheimer 2008Altheimer , 2013Barber 2009; Pridemore 2011). The measure comes from the World Bank.…”
Section: Stjórnmál and Stjórnsýslamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent data from the United Nations show, however, that men represent 95 percent of those convicted of lethal violence worldwide (UNOCD 2013). Moreover, a cross-national study of homicide arrest rates reported that males had a much higher rate of homicide offending than females: 12.5 per 100,000 population for males compared to 1.1 for females (Agha 2009). The…”
Section: Stjórnmál and Stjórnsýslamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although few in number, the more recent studies using disaggregated homicide rates by gender and age groups did find statistically significant differences. For example, Agha (2009) found that gross domestic product (GDP), people per household, and the human development index were all negatively related to female and male homicide rates, but that the percent of homicide cases cleared was only statistically significant for female homicide rates (negative association). Butchart and Engstrom (2002) found that GDP and inequality were both negatively related to homicide rates for females and males, but when percent change in GDP, female economic activity, and economic development were added to the model, the significance varied by age groups and gender.…”
Section: Disaggregated Homicide Ratesmentioning
confidence: 99%