@thetinmen Intimate partner homicide by victim sex, 1976-2015 2,500 Victim sex Male Female 2,000 1,500 8 1,000 ?2? 500- 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Year an unpopular idea ._
@thetinmen Most people don't know it, but up until the mid-seventies; rates of intimate partner homicide between U.S.men and women, were actually fairly similar: Source: VIOLENCE AND GENDER Volume Number 2 2017 Mary Ann Liebert; Inc_ DOI: 10.1089tvio.2017.0016 Original Article Gender Differences in Patterns and Trends in U.S. Homicide, 1976-2015 James Alan Fox; PhD and Emma E. Fridel Abstract In the research literature on homnicide, gender has generally received less attention than other derographic characteristics; specifically the age and race of victims and offenders To some extent; this is understandable because the overwhelming majority , almost three-quarters_ of homicides in the United States involve male killing another male Therefon , the usual pattems of homicide mirror for the most part the patterns of male homicide. However; there an substantial differences in the trends and patterns of ferale offending and victimization that should not be ignored in the aggregate In this article employ national homicide database (the FBT s Supplementary Homicide Reports, SHR) from 1976 through 2015 with multiple imputation of missing information examine gender differences among victims and offenders in terms characteristics such &s age- race, weapon, circumstances, and victim-offender relationship:. Keywords: homnicide. gender; intimate partner homicide
@thetinmen 2,000 ~1,500 Male victims 500 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 'Although the prevalence of intimate partner homicide in the late 1970s was similar for men and women, the number of male victims has steadily declined ever since ( ) In contrast, female intimate partner homicides actually increased up until the early 1990s before experiencing a far more modest decline.' Femalel victims
@thetinmen So what caused this sudden drop in male victimisation during the late seventies onward? 43 FoX AND FRIDEL 20d0 Victim se Mule Falale 17to oe ! ; 0975 190 Tenn ACCu ZuJj 70io 7016 Year Intimate partner homicide by victim Sex 1976 1076 Ivjo Year Wiq 201e FIG. 12. Intinnnte for male nd female 2015. parmer homicide of females by weapon, [976 _ intimate part "halnicidendshowcs Pe bively: (shown in blue} ooth sexes_ L0 involve individu= as expected, and offender age similarity in victim steadily declined ever since: The Ieenerally holds for other types of murders especially drop committed by_ males- pronounced in male victims is Whereas there_is greater age disparity (Fig_ 1). murders homicides involving contrast , firearm often perpetrated by women_ Shown female intimate in red. females. are actually increased partner homicides igplicated in homicides of children; be encing Up until the early 1990s before daughter _ or somne other familvrelati it their own son far modest decline This pattern experi- Weteon
@thetinmen Women's abuse shelters arrive across America Well, some argue that it was in-part due to women's shelters opening: (which also started in the mid seventies) ENEAZ
@thetinmen The theory is, women's shelters, along with other interventions, helped women escape from abusive relationships__ allowing them to break the cycle of violence, rather than killing their partner (meaning women's shelters might have actually saved men)
@thetinmen 'Some researchers argue that the reduction in male intimate partner victimization,a decline of nearly 60% over the past four decades, is because of an increase in the availability of social and legal interventions, liberalized divorce laws, greater economic independence of women, as well as a reduction in the stigma of being the victim of domestic violence.
@thetinmen 'Although at an earlier time a woman may have felt compelled to kill her abusive spouse as her only defence, she now has more opportunities to escape the relationship through means such as protective orders and shelters (Dugan et al. 1999; Fox et al.2012) As a tragic irony,the wider availability of support services for abused women did not appear to have quite the intended effect, at least through the 1980s,as only male victimization declined:' Source: Gender Differences in Patterns and Trends in U.S. Homicide 1976-2015
@thetinmen So if women's shelters, saved men:.. Could more abuse shelters for male victims, help save women? (only 2% of those served by abuse shelters are men) Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Biennial Report, 2024
@thetinmen How do we break the cycle of violence? What do you think? @thetinmen
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Most people don’t know it, and others refuse to admit it, but in America, until about fifty years ago, men and women killed their partners at nearly equal rates. That was until the mid seventies, when the rate of men being killed by their partners suddenly dropped (by around 60%), whilst women’s slowly increased, before seeing a much slower, delayed decline in the nineties. And now, today, a large disparity has opened up, with three times more women being killed by a partner than men are. Many researchers have attempted to explain this, with varying levels of success; but one theory presented a surprising, albeit unpopular idea to explain this gap, that challenges our very core understanding of partner violence. Because – what also happened in the mid seventies, was shelters for abused women arrived in America, at the exact same time that the intimate partner homicide rate against men suddenly plummeted… And so the antithetical theory suggested that women’s shelters gave abused women an opportunity to flee, escaping abusive households, rather than staying within the cycle of escalating violence, where the woman might have otherwise killed her partner. Controversial, certainly, but the data tracks. So… did shelters for women end up actually saving men? And more pertinent, could the complete lack of refuge for men in America be having the opposite effect, with an even larger detrimental impact on women? What do you think? ~ Gender Differences in Patterns and Trends in U.S. Homicide, 1976–2015 https://tinyurl.com/2s3emfv5 Bilennial Report, Refuges https://tinyurl.com/2pt4s34d

2025-12-01

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