Violence and the Prevention of Violence
By (Author) Leonore Loeb Adler
By (author) Florence L. Denmark
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
16th January 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
303.6
Hardback
248
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
482g
Under the aegis of the two grandes dames of international studies in psychology, 23 experts examine violence in all of its multivarious forms around the world. They find that it is present in practically every society, at every socioeconomic level, and in every age group. The first group of essays look at violence as a societal phenomenonits motivational aspects as related to, for example, terrorism or machismo. The second group of essays discuss violence involving childrenincest, trauma, delinquency, school violence, and the death penalty for youths. The last section looks at adult violence, particularly within the family. Marital violence, domestic violence, substance abuse, women and crime, and maltreatment of elders are all presented. The consensus of the study is that the eradication of violence is essential to a better world and is possible. Proof of its possibility is given in the concluding description of life in Ladakh, a peaceable society of Tibetans in northwestern India.
LEONORE LOEB ADLER is Professor Emerita of Psychology and director of the Institute of Cross-Cultural and Cross-Ethnic Studies at Molloy College in New York. She has published 14 books, among them The International Handbook on Gender Roles (Greenwood, 1993), Women in Cross-Cultural Perspective (Praeger, 1991), and Cross-Cultural Research in Human Development: Life-Span Perspectives (Praeger, 1989). FLORENCE L. DENMARK is Robert Scott Pace Professor of Psychology and chair of the department of Psychology at Pace University. She has published 16 books, including Psychology of Women: A Handbook of Issues and Theories (Greenwood, 1993).