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The use of firearms in intimate murder-suicide in Australia and New Zealand

Abstract
Although murder-suicide is relatively rare, the number of events per year is fairly constant and often occurs in the context of intimate or family relations. These intimate or familial murder-suicides are, in most cases, perpetrated by males who kill their female partners and/or children and are often preceded by incidents of domestic violence. This paper proposes that murder-suicide can be positioned at the extreme end of a continuum of violence. Using data from Australia and New Zealand for a period of twenty years from 1973¬1992, the article explores the use of firearms to show how domestic violence can culminate in tragic death.
Type
Journal Article
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Barnes, J. (2001). The use of firearms in intimate murder-suicide in Australia and New Zealand. New Zealand Sociology, 16(1), 242-250.
Date
2001
Publisher
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
This article has been published in the journal: New Zealand Sociology. Used with permission.