Publication | Closed Access
Evolutionary Social Psychology and Family Homicide
626
Citations
42
References
1988
Year
Behavioral SciencesMinimal Reporting BiasViolent CrimeSocial BehaviorEvolutionary BiologyGenetic EpidemiologySociologyChild AbuseHomicideSocial SciencesEvolutionary Social PsychologyExtreme ManifestationPublic HealthAggressionSocial MotivesCriminal BehaviorKin Selection
Homicide is an extreme manifestation of interpersonal conflict with minimal reporting bias and can thus be used as a conflict "assay." Evolutionary models of social motives predict that genetic relationship will be associated with mitigation of conflict, and various analyses of homicide data support this prediction. Most "family" homicides are spousal homicides, fueled by male sexual proprietariness. In the case of parent-offspring conflict, an evolutionary model predicts variations in the risk of violence as a function of the ages, sexes, and other characteristics of protagonists, and these predictions are upheld in tests with data on infanticides, parricides, and filicides.
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