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Journal Article

Citation

DeFronzo J, Prochnow J. Psychol. Rep. 2004; 94(1): 104-108.

Affiliation

Sociology Department, University of Connecticut, Storrs, USA. James.DeFronzo@UCONN.EDU

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15077753

Abstract

Explaining the phenomenon of male serial homicide has usually been approached from a psychiatric perspective. However, recent integrative theory suggests that cultural factors may play a role in shaping the psychology of young males with particular psychiatric and possibly neurological vulnerabilities in such ways as to facilitate converting the motivation to kill into actual behavior. Present results indicated that 34-45% of the interstate variation in rates of serial killer activity could be accounted for by three dimensions of local culture. Higher rates of male serial killer activity were associated with a local state culture supportive of game hunting and military training and a local culture supportive of punitive violence. The findings must be viewed with caution since societal variables are complex and the results are based on correlations which cannot be causally interpreted without more direct evidence of validity.


Language: en

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