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Violence and the Violent Individual - Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Symposium, Texas Research Institute of Mental Sciences, Houston, Texas, November 1-3, 1979

NCJ Number
87659
Editor(s)
J R Hays, T K Roberts, K S Solway
Date Published
1981
Length
444 pages
Annotation
This volume contains 25 papers focusing on various aspects of violence, including the causes of violent behavior, measurement and prediction of violence, and treatment of the violent individual.
Abstract
Major topics considered include the psychological aspects of the etiology of violence, brain dysfunction in prisoners, methodological problems in the prediction of violence, the psychological treatment of imprisoned offenders, and the prevention of violence. The work emphasizes the fact that there are many types of violence, as well as many causes. Although physical and emotional health are a major factor in violent conduct, it is inappropriate to view violence as a sickness which can be cured. The treatment model may be harmful to most who have committed violent crime; surgery, sedation, and behavior modification have not proven helpful. Several papers suggest that healthy children raised in a decent environment among loving people will rarely commit acts of violence toward others. The capacity for interpersonal violence will increase as society varies from this ideal. An index is provided. For individual papers, see NCJ 87660-72.

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