Evolution and study of a copycat effect in intimate partner homicides: A lesson from Spanish femicides.

PLoS One

Gabinete de Coordinación y Estudios, Secretaría de Estado de Seguridad, Ministerio del Interior, Madrid, Spain.

Published: February 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • This paper studies intimate partner violence, especially the killings of women, and looks for patterns in how these events happen over time.
  • It analyzes data from femicides in Spain between 2007 and 2017 to understand if there are trends or if each death leads to more deaths (called a "copycat effect").
  • The findings show that femicides have been decreasing, but there’s no evidence of the copycat effect, meaning there's no need to censor news about these tragic events.

Article Abstract

Objectives: This paper focuses on the issue of intimate partner violence and, specifically, on the distribution of femicides over time and the existence of copycat effects. This is the subject of an ongoing debate often triggered by the social alarm following multiple intimate partner homicides (IPHs) occurring in a short span of time. The aim of this research is to study the evolution of IPHs and provide a far-reaching answer by rigorously analyzing and searching for patterns in data on femicides.

Methods: The study analyzes an official dataset, provided by the system VioGén of the Secretaría de Estado de Seguridad (Spanish State Secretariat for Security), including all the femicides occurred in Spain in 2007-2017. A statistical methodology to identify temporal interdependencies in count time series is proposed and applied to the dataset. The same methodology can be applied to other contexts.

Results: There has been a decreasing trend in the number of femicides per year. No interdependencies among the temporal distribution of femicides are observed. Therefore, according to data, the existence of copycat effect in femicides cannot be claimed.

Conclusions: Around 2011 there was a clear change in the average number of femicides which has not picked up. Results allow for an informed answer to the debate on copycat effect in Spanish femicides. The planning of femicides prevention activities should not be a reaction to a perceived increase in their occurrence. As a copycat effect is not detected in the studied time period, there is no evidence supporting the need to censor media reports on femicides.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6553786PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0217914PLOS

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