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Book Cover
E-book
Author Whittington, Richard (Richard Charles), author.

Title Violence rewired : evidence and strategies for public health action / Richard Whittington, James McGuire
Published Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2020
©2020

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Description 1 online resource (xvii, 301 pages) : illustrations
Contents Introduction and overview -- PART I. ORIGINS. 1. The prospect of human violence: pessimism or realism? -- 2. The roots of human violence: in search of the "hard wired" -- 3. The biology of violence: possibilities and limitations -- 4. Developmental factors in violence propensity: the learning of violence -- 5. Structural violence: social and political factors in understanding violence -- PART II. SOLUTIONS. 6. Advancing a global public health response to violence -- 7. Risk assessment: can violence be predicted? -- 8. Pharmaceutical interventions: medication, violence, and the public health -- 9. Psychosocial interventions: the unlearning of violence -- 10. Changing structures: integrated interventions for violence -- Rewiring our expectations: lessons and prospects -- Appendix: Major UN initiatives to address violence, 1986-2018
Summary "Is violence "hard-wired"? Is the tendency to be violent, in other words, a fixed and elemental feature of the human brain which cannot be significantly changed and which will always exert a destructive influence on human behaviour? This is one of the fundamental questions of philosophy which has been debated over the last two millennia. It is also a key topic for the biological, psychological and social sciences and any conclusion has substantial implications for how societies organise and police themselves. A decisive answer to this question is still unavailable and may remain out of reach for many years to come. But the persistent and pessimistic tendency to view some people as born with a predisposition to act aggressively towards others and beyond a "cure" is open to serious challenge. Such a view of human nature can lead to unnecessarily restrictive and punitive interventions which are unjust for the individual and needlessly costly for society. Current scientific research and international policy developments actually suggest that much can be done to prevent and intervene successfully with many kinds of violent behaviour. This supports the idea that violence as a concept can itself be "rewired" to enable new possibilities in constructing a safer and more peaceful world. This book focuses on that major issue and has three main aims. The first is to draw together and evaluate the implications of recently acquired knowledge about human violence from across the full spectrum of scientific disciplines. This knowledge offers fresh perspectives and a new understanding of why violence occurs and what the main approaches to reducing it should be. The second aim is 21 to address the pessimism which often pervades discussions about this problem by emphasising the potential for greater confidence about effectively intervening with violent people and in violent situations. It is true that we are a long way from eradicating violence and we may ultimately never succeed in doing so, but nevertheless we have made much progress in the past few decades in designing new ways of successfully understanding and working with those who act violently. The third aim here is to link the full range of interventions currently being developed and tested around the world to a global strategy for tackling the problem, which has been established by the World Health Organisation. This strategy offers the opportunity to integrate and implement effective interventions on a scale that has not been considered before. Taken together, the potential synthesis of new knowledge, greater confidence and innovative international policy makes it timely for a "new look" at the old problem of human violence and offers the prospect of a major step forward in producing a safer world"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on April 20, 2020)
Subject Violence.
Violence -- Prevention
Mathematical models.
Violence -- prevention & control
Violence -- psychology
Public Health Practice
Behavior Therapy
Models, Theoretical
Violence
violence.
mathematical models.
Mathematical models
Violence
Violence -- Prevention
Form Electronic book
Author McGuire, James, 1948- author.
LC no. 2019038662
ISBN 9781108850940
1108850944
9781139086486
1139086480