NCJ Number
              187209
          Journal
  Homicide Studies Volume: 5 Issue: 1 Dated: February 2001 Pages: 5-29
Editor(s)
          
                      M. Dwayne Smith
                    
      Date Published
  February 2001
Length
              25 pages
          Annotation
              In this research, the authors tested the hypothesis that deviant homicides in Chicago were more likely among individuals with weak ties to social institutions.
          Abstract
              Data were obtained on 10,729 homicides that occurred in Chicago between 1975 and 1995. The victim-offender relationship was analyzed according to three categories--intimates, acquaintances, and strangers. Motive was coded in the analysis as expressive or instrumental, and several dummy-coded demographic characteristics of both victims and offenders were assessed to determine their potential independent effects on the likelihood of deviant homicides. Results of logistic regression analysis supported the hypothesis that the likelihood of deviant circumstances was significantly greater when homicides involved Hispanics, blacks, and males. In addition, deviant homicides were significantly more likely when they involved gang circumstances and, on the national level, after the appearance of crack cocaine. The findings have important implications for the explanatory power of criminological theory. The authors recommend further research to study homicide events in more meaningful disaggregations. The variable coding schemes used in the analysis are included in an appendix. 43 references, 7 notes, 4 tables, and 1 figure