NYAS Conferences
New York Academy of Sciences
left end
Search
divider divider feedback right end
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences login

Main

Browse Volumes

Forthcoming Volumes

Annals PrePrints

Annals Extra

E-mail Alerts

Subscriptions & Orders

New Proposals

Author Guidelines

About Annals

Help

Get free Annals volume as a NYAS member: http://www.nyas.org/annalsreaderhw
Issue 1036 coverYouth Violence: Scientific Approaches to Prevention Volume 1036 published December 2004
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1036: 1–12 (2004). doi: 10.1196/annals.1330.001
Copyright © 2004 by the New York Academy of Sciences
description | purchase volume purchase this volume

This Volume
Table of Contents
Description
This Article
Full Text
Full Text (PDF)
Services
Similar articles in this journal
Similar articles in PubMed
Alert me to new issues of the journal
Download to citation manager
Citing Articles
Citing Articles via HighWire
Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Articles by WILKINSON, R.
Search for Related Content
PubMed
PubMed Citation
Articles by WILKINSON, R.
Why is Violence More Common Where Inequality is Greater?

RICHARD WILKINSON

Division of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Nottingham Medical School, Nottingham, UK

Address for correspondence: University of Nottingham Medical School, Division of Epidemiology & Public Health, Room D1408, Nottingham NG7 2UH, U.K. Phone: 44-0-115-970-9326; fax: 44-0-115-970-9316. richard.wilkinson{at}nottingham.ac.uk

The most well-established environmental determinant of levels of violence is the scale of income differences between rich and poor. More unequal societies tend to be more violent. If this is a relation between institutional violence and personal violence, how does it work and why is most of the violence a matter of the poor attacking the poor rather than the rich? This paper begins by showing that the tendency for rates of violent crime and homicide to be higher where there is more inequality is part of a more general tendency for the quality of social relations to be poorer in more hierarchical societies. Research on the social determinants of health is used to explore these relationships. It is a powerful source of insights because health is also harmed by greater inequality. Because epidemiological research has gone some way towards identifying the nature of our sensitivity to the social environment and to social status differentials in particular, it provides important insights into why violence is related to inequality. The picture that emerges substantiates and explains the common intuition that inequality is socially corrosive. With an evolutionary slant, and informed by work on ranking systems in non-human primates, this paper focuses on the sharp distinction between competitive social strategies appropriate to dominance hierarchies and the more affiliative social strategies associated with more egalitarian social structures. The implications for policy seem to echo the importance to the quality of life of the three inter-related dimensions of the social environment expressed in the demand for "liberty, equality, fraternity."

Key Words: violence • homicide • inequality




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
BMJHome page
K. E Pickett and R. G Wilkinson
Child wellbeing and income inequality in rich societies: ecological cross sectional study
BMJ, November 24, 2007; 335(7629): 1080 - 1080.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Inj. Prev.Home page
I Roberts and M Hillman
Climate change: the implications for policy on injury control and health promotion
Inj. Prev., December 1, 2005; 11(6): 326 - 329.
[Full Text] [PDF]



footerLeft footerRight