Homicide Homicide

Homicide

A Sociological Explanation

    • $41.99
    • $41.99

Publisher Description

The American homicide rate remains dramatically higher than that in other Western nations. News of a murder has become a routine event. How do we explain such high levels of lethal violence in the world's leading democracy?



Echoing Durkheim's Suicide, this book focuses on one important phenomenon to explain larger currents in American society. Leonard Beeghley examines the historical and cross-national dimensions of homicides and evaluates previous attempts to explain it. He finds the sources of America's murder rate in the greater availability of guns, the expansion of illegal drug markets, greater racial discrimination, more exposure to violence, and sharper economic inequalities. He deftly blends the evidence related to each of these factors into a well-reasoned sociological analysis of the nature of American society.



Features



Highlights how sociology can be used to explain problems and seek solutions

Distinguishes between structural and social psychological levels of analysis

Provides a constrasting perspective to Messner & Rosenfeld's widely assigned Crime and the American Dream

Uses metaphors and analogies in order to make sociological ideas meaningful to students

Employs an engaging writing style to place the analysis in the scholarly literature

Offers clear explanations of Durkheim, Weber, Merton, and others, that show their usefulness for understanding modern life

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2004
September 8
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
240
Pages
PUBLISHER
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
SELLER
Bookwire Gesellschaft zum Vertrieb digitaler Medien mbH
SIZE
3.1
MB
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