A comprehensive examination of the causes of, and links between, interpersonal and interspecies violence
Animal Abuse and Interpersonal Violence: A Psycho-Criminological Understanding addresses the many aspects of the link between animal cruelty and human violence. Presenting new theory, research, policy, and practice, this authoritative volume explores the subject through a psycho-criminological lens to describe, explain, and potentially prevent intentional behavior that causes pain, suffering, or death in animals and humans.
With an integrated theoretical-practical approach, Animal Abuse and Interpersonal Violence offers up-to-date research and provides real-world insights into current thinking in the study of animal abuse and interpersonal violence. Sixteen in-depth chapters by a multidisciplinary team of active researchers and experienced field practitioners examine central topics in the field, including different forms of animal exploitation, connections between animal cruelty and substance abuse, the association between childhood animal cruelty and adult interpersonal violence, the role of veterinarians in the identification of animal abuse cases, the complex legal aspects of animal abuse cases, and more.
* Advances scholarship on animal abuse, its relationship with interpersonal violence, and the psycho-criminological mechanisms involved in that relationship
* Introduces readers to contemporary research on a range of topics and issues related to animal abuse and interpersonal violence
* Examines the origins of animal cruelty, its societal implications, and various prevention and treatment approaches
* Defines and describes various types of animal maltreatment and their links to different forms of interpersonal violence
Animal Abuse and Interpersonal Violence: A Psycho-Criminological Understanding is essential reading for practitioners, researchers, scholars, and advanced students in fields such as behavioral science, law, criminology, veterinary forensics, criminal justice, law enforcement, social work, sociology, social sciences, education, and animal welfare.
Author(s): Heng Choon (Oliver) Chan; Rebecca W. Y. Wong
Series: Psycho-criminology of crime, mental health, and the law
Edition: 1
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 272
City: Hoboken
Tags: LCSH: Animal welfare–Psychological aspects; Animal welfare--Psychological aspects; Violence; Criminal Psychology
List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Contributors
Foreword
Endorsements
About the Editors
Introduction: A Psycho-Criminological Understanding of Animal Abuse and Interpersonal Violence
Heng Choon (Oliver) Chan and Rebecca W.Y. Wong
PART 1- Theory and Research
Chapter 2: Animal abuse: Beyond companion animals and domestic households
Rebecca W.Y. Wong
Chapter 3: The animal cruelty-delinquency relationship: Violence graduation, deviance generalization, or antecedent lifestyle?
Glenn D. Walters
Chapter 4: Animal cruelty and the development of "Link" research between nonhuman and human violence
Suzanne E. Tallichet and Elizabeth Perkins
Chapter 5: Attitudes toward animal abuse and interpersonal relating
Michelle Newberry
Chapter 6: A proposed classification of pathological animal maltreatment
Alan R. Felthous and Marissa Hirsch
Chapter 7: How animal abuse related to interpersonal violence: A review of research in Turkey
Seda Akdemir
Chapter 8: Dog ownership, love, and violentization among young people in the United Kingdom
Jennifer A. Maher
Chapter 9: Instrumental harm toward animals in a Milgram-like experiment in France: The role of non-pathological personality traits
Laurent Bègue and Kevin Vezirian
PART 2- Policy and Practice
Chapter 10: Animal cruelty, the link to interpersonal violence, and the law
Brian Holoyda
Chapter 11: Bestiality: Understanding sex with animals and its forensic relevance
Brian Holoyda
Chapter 12: The role of veterinarians in the recognition of animal cruelty: Lessons from a pilot study in the Netherlands
Anton van Wijk and Nienke Endenburg
Chapter 13: Animal abuse, control, and intimate partner violence
Angus Nurse and Nadine Harding
Chapter 14: Substance abuse and animal maltreatment: An overlooked opportunity for intervention?
Lacey Levitt
Chapter 15: The impact of discretion in the criminal justice system on animal cruelty prosecutions in Hong Kong
Amanda Whitfort, Fiona Woodhouse, Shuping Ho, and Marsha Chun
Conclusion
Rebecca W.Y. Wong and Heng Choon (Oliver) Chan