
@article{ref1,
title="Armed resistance to crime: the prevalence and nature of self-defense with a gun",
journal="Journal of criminal law and criminology",
year="1995",
author="Kleck, Gary D. and Gertz, Marc G.",
volume="86",
number="1",
pages="150-187",
abstract="<p>Crime victims used to be ignored by criminologists. Then, beginning slowly in the 1940s and more rapidly in the 1970s, interest in the victim's role in crime grew. Yet a tendency to treat the victim as either a passive target of another person's wrongdoing or as a virtual accomplice of the criminal limited this interest The concept of the victim-precipitated homicide highlighted the possibility that victims were not always blameless and passive targets, but that they sometimes initiated or contributed to the escalation of a violent …   See correction of serious errors in J. Crim. Law Criminol. 1996; 86(2):621</p>",
language="en",
issn="0091-4169",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}