Violence
Research consistently shows that violence is “connected by a web of actions, behaviours, ideas, perceptions and justifications.”
Culture and Violence - Engaging in Violence in Multiple Spheres
Examples of people engaging in violence in multiple spheres would include:
Culture and Violence - Violence Overlap in Different Context
Examples how violence overlaps in different contexts
Types of Violence
1) Instrumental
2) Expressive
Types of Violence - Instrumental Violence
Violence is means to an end.
Designed to improve the financial or social position of the criminal.
Types of Violence
1) Instrumental: Violence is means to an end.
2) Expressive: Violence that vents, rage, anger or frustration.
3 Interconnected Types of Violence
Iadicola & Shupe
1) Interpersonal
2) Institutional
3) Structural
Violence is any action or structural arrangement that results in physical or non-physical harm to one or more persons.
1) Interpersonal
Person-to-person.
2) Institutional
Violence perpetuated in organizational settings.
3) Structural Violence
Discriminatory social arrangements in light of negative effects on life changes on particular groups.
Definition of Violence - Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary
“exertion of physical force so as to injure or abuse…intense, turbulent, or furious and often destructive action or force.”
Definition of Violence - National Panel on the Understanding & Control of Violent Behaviour
“behaviors by individuals that intentionally threaten, attempt, or inflict physical harm to others.”
Definition of Violence - Newman (1998)
“a series of events, the course of which or the outcomes of which, cause injury or damage to persons or property.”
Definition of Violence - Iadicola & Shupe (2003)
“Violence is any action or structural arrangement that results in physical or non-physical harm to one or more persons”
Strengths of Mainstream Violence Definitions
All definitions agree that violence and aggression are harmful.
- Differ in conceptualizing what kinds of harm count
Limitations of Mainstream Violence Definitions
Violence is about injuring, damaging, destroying, or killing.
Mary Jackman
Range of Injurious Outcomes
Issues that distort understanding of violence:
1) Physical
2) Psychological
3) Material
4) Social
All are highly consequential, sometimes devastating for human beings
- Most profound effects of physical violence often nonphysical
Range of Injurious Outcomes - Physical
Physical outcomes don’t adequately represent range of injuries that human beings find consequential.
Range of Injurious Outcomes - Psychological
Range of Injurious Outcomes - Material
Range of Injurious Outcomes - Social
Injurious Behaviours - Physical
Verbal & written actions may also cause physical injuries
Injurious Behaviours - Verbal & Written
Verbal & written actions can accomplish variety of non-physical injuries as well