Stepparents commit filicide at higher rates than do genetic parents. According to M. Daly and M. I. Wilson (1994), motivational differences generate differences in the methods by which stepparents and genetic parents kill a child. Using Canadian and British national-level databases, Daly and Wilson (1994) found that stepfathers were more likely than genetic fathers to commit filicide by beating and bludgeoning, arguably revealing step-parental feelings of bitterness and resentment not present to the same degree in genetic fathers. Genetic fathers, in contrast, were more likely than stepfathers to commit filicide by shooting or asphyxiation, methods which often produce a relatively quick and painless death. We sought to replicate and extend ...
Filicide, the murder of a child by a parent (1), is a rare phe-nomenon, one which many authors have ...
Most child victims of homicide are killed by a parent or step-parent. This large population study pr...
Abstract: Despite the burgeoning literature on filicide, little research exists on parental mur-ders...
The purpose of this paper is to provide a critical review of most recent studies of parental and ste...
Daly and Wilson (1994, 2008) reported that rates of fatal assaults of young children by stepfathers ...
Filicide is the killing of a ward by a parent. Relative to many other types of homicide, filicide is...
In an evolutionary perspective individuals are expected to vary the degree of parental love and care...
Filicide is a crime that conflicts with nature in that it undermines our genetic fitness and parenta...
Familicides have received relatively little attention and are mostly discussed in studies with broad...
Filicide, the murder of a child by a parent, is a multifaceted phenomenon with various causes and ch...
In this retrospective study, relevant demographic, social, and clinical variables were examined in 7...
The scientific study of child abuse and infanticide is a relatively young practice in the field of m...
Although evidence with respect to its prevalence is mixed, it is clear that fathers perpetrate a ser...
Using a sample of siblicides committed in Chicago from 1870 through 1930, the authors tested two pre...
Research on filicide, the killing of a child by a biological or a de facto parent or parents, has la...
Filicide, the murder of a child by a parent (1), is a rare phe-nomenon, one which many authors have ...
Most child victims of homicide are killed by a parent or step-parent. This large population study pr...
Abstract: Despite the burgeoning literature on filicide, little research exists on parental mur-ders...
The purpose of this paper is to provide a critical review of most recent studies of parental and ste...
Daly and Wilson (1994, 2008) reported that rates of fatal assaults of young children by stepfathers ...
Filicide is the killing of a ward by a parent. Relative to many other types of homicide, filicide is...
In an evolutionary perspective individuals are expected to vary the degree of parental love and care...
Filicide is a crime that conflicts with nature in that it undermines our genetic fitness and parenta...
Familicides have received relatively little attention and are mostly discussed in studies with broad...
Filicide, the murder of a child by a parent, is a multifaceted phenomenon with various causes and ch...
In this retrospective study, relevant demographic, social, and clinical variables were examined in 7...
The scientific study of child abuse and infanticide is a relatively young practice in the field of m...
Although evidence with respect to its prevalence is mixed, it is clear that fathers perpetrate a ser...
Using a sample of siblicides committed in Chicago from 1870 through 1930, the authors tested two pre...
Research on filicide, the killing of a child by a biological or a de facto parent or parents, has la...
Filicide, the murder of a child by a parent (1), is a rare phe-nomenon, one which many authors have ...
Most child victims of homicide are killed by a parent or step-parent. This large population study pr...
Abstract: Despite the burgeoning literature on filicide, little research exists on parental mur-ders...