NCJ Number
136557
Journal
Social Forces Volume: 69 Issue: 4 Dated: (June 1991) Pages: 1223-1239
Date Published
1991
Length
17 pages
Annotation
Efforts to explain regional variations in violent crime rates have frequently cited the southern subculture of violence thesis, but evidence for the existence of such a subculture has been inconclusive.
Abstract
The author contends that a southern subculture of violence exists, although uncovering it requires a measure of violent attitudes that is faithful to the sociological and historical literature on southern violence. An appropriate measure focuses on the approval of defensive or retaliatory acts of violence rather than on attitudes toward more aggressive or indiscriminate forms of violence. Based on data from the 1983 General Social Survey, the current research indicates that native southerners are disproportionately inclined to condone defensive or retaliatory forms of violence. The research also shows that the public religious culture of the South may play a significant role in legitimizing these types of violence. The results are partially consistent with arguments that interregional migration and cohort substitution attenuate regional differences in views toward violence. The fact that younger southern natives are considerably less supportive of violence than are elderly natives seems to validate earlier predictions that the regional subculture of violence will decline with national integration and economic development. Directions for further research are suggested that emphasize individual attitudes toward violence at multiple points in time, the link between aggregate social indicators and crime rates, and procedures for contextual and multilevel analyses. Supplemental research data are appended. 47 references, 6 notes, and 3 tables (Author abstract modified)