File:White victims of family homicides in the United States by relationship 1980 2008.svg

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Description
English: A line chart presenting data about and depicting trends in intra-family homicides among white individuals, separated by relationship, from the year 1980 to 2008, in the United States. For the most relevant definition of the term "white", refer to race and ethnicity as used in the United States Census.

Based on data from: Alexia D. Cooper, Erica L. Smith, Bureau of Justice Statistics (2011-11-16). Homicide Trends in the United States, 1980-2008. NCJ 236018. Pages 21-22. Archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20180330165915/https://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=2221 Data in this chart appears in the file htus8008f31a.csv included in the “Spreadsheets” link from that web page, which internally lists “Data source: Supplementary Homicide Report.”

The accompanying text reads:

Family homicide

Figure 30
Figure 31a
Figure 31b

Family homicides most often involved spouses or ex-spouses

  • Homicides by a spouse or ex-spouse were an increasingly smaller proportion of all family homicides from 1980 through 2008. In 1980, they made up half (52%) of all family homicides. By 2008, they accounted for just over a third (37%) (figure 30).
  • Children killed by their parents were the second most frequent type of family homicide. These homicides increased from 15% of all family homicides in 1980 to 25% of all family homicides in 2008.
  • Parents killed by one of their children have been an increasing proportion of family homicides, rising steadily from 9.7% of all family homicides in 1980 to 13% in 2008.

The proportion of family homicides that involved a spouse has decreased for both blacks and whites

  • Murders of children by a parent accounted for an increasing percentage of family homicides, regardless of race.
  • In 1980, 16.1% of white family homicides and 13.4% of black family homicides involved a parent who murdered a child.
  • By 2008, 23.5% of white family homicides and 30% of black family homicides involved a child killed by a parent (figures 31a and 31b).

Fathers were more likely than mothers to be killed by their children

  • Teenage sons (16 to 19 years-old) were most often the perpetrators in parental killings (figures 32a and 32b).

Brothers were more likely than sisters to be killed by a sibling

  • About half of brothers who killed their own brother were between 16 and 30 years-old (figure 33a). Relatively few sisters killed their own brother.
  • Sisters killed by a sibling were more likely to be murdered by a brother than a sister (figure 33b). A quarter of all murders of sisters by a sibling were committed by a teenage sibling between 13 and 18 years-old.
(This image corresponds to "figure 31a". See figure 30 at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:United_States_family_homicides_by_relationship_1980_2008.svg and figure 31b at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Black_victims_of_family_homicides_in_the_United_States_by_relationship_1980_2008.svg)
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Author User:Struthious Bandersnatch
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Other versions Figure 30 from the same publication: United States family homicides by relationship 1980 2008.svg) and Figure 31b from the same publication: Black victims of family homicides in the United States by relationship 1980 2008.svg)

Licensing edit

I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following license:
w:en:Creative Commons
attribution
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
You are free:
  • to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
  • to remix – to adapt the work
Under the following conditions:
  • attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.

Data edit

Data:Bjs.gov/Homicide Trends in the United States, 1980-2008/htus8008f31a.tab

Year Spouse/ex-spouse Parent Sibling Child Other family
1980 49.4 12.5 6.4 16.1 15.7
1981 51.9 11.9 7.7 15 13.5
1982 49.4 12 6.5 16.6 15.5
1983 50.1 11.8 7.7 16.4 14
1984 48.3 12.9 8.4 15.8 14.6
1985 50.5 12 6.5 17.9 13.1
1986 51.3 11.7 5.7 17.4 13.9
1987 47.9 11.5 7.8 16.4 16.5
1988 50.5 12.3 6.2 17.7 13.3
1989 45.1 12.5 7.2 20.5 14.7
1990 48.8 11.8 7.3 18.9 13.1
1991 45.4 13 6.7 19.9 15
1992 47.8 11.6 6.7 18.7 15.2
1993 48.4 13.3 6 19.6 12.6
1994 46.8 12.8 6.7 19.5 14.3
1995 44.8 12.6 5.2 22.7 14.7
1996 47.3 11.9 4.3 21.6 14.9
1997 42.7 13.4 5.9 24.1 13.9
1998 46 13.9 5 22.6 12.6
1999 42.8 14.8 5.2 23.3 13.9
2000 46.8 13.4 5.6 20.4 13.8
2001 41.1 12.8 4.5 25.6 16
2002 42.4 13.9 5.3 22.5 15.9
2003 40.3 14.4 5.4 24.2 15.7
2004 43.6 14.3 5.8 23 13.3
2005 42.4 15.1 6 21.5 15
2006 42.5 14.5 4.9 24 14.1
2007 42.9 11.7 5.7 25.1 14.5
2008 39.2 14.9 5.6 23.5 16.9


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current23:27, 18 May 2018Thumbnail for version as of 23:27, 18 May 2018503 × 413 (91 KB)Struthious Bandersnatch (talk | contribs)Corrected description text
14:52, 13 May 2018Thumbnail for version as of 14:52, 13 May 2018503 × 413 (91 KB)Struthious Bandersnatch (talk | contribs){{NoInkscape|tt}} {{translate|switch=yes}} {{Inkscape-hand}} == {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |Description={{en|1=A w:line chart presenting data about and depicting trends in intra-family homicides among white individuals, separated by relationship, from the year 1980 to 2008, in the United States. For the most relevant definition of the term "white", refer to race and ethnicity as used in the United States Census. Based on dat...

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