Social Science Japan Journal Advance Access published online on October 6, 2005
Social Science Japan Journal, doi:10.1093/ssjj/jyi044
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Hawai’i
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Despite claims about the collapse of public safety in Japan, the country has one of the lowest homicide rates in the world. Moreover, Japans homicide rate has fallen about 80% in the last 50 years. A decline of this magnitude has not been observed in any other nation. The proximate cause of the decrease is young Japanese males, who now commit one-tenth as many homicides as their counterparts did in 1955. This article describes postwar Japans homicide decline and critically examines two attempts to explain it. The conclusion connects homicide to suicide, a second form of lethal violence. Notwithstanding Japans low homicide rate, its total rate of lethal violence (homicide + suicide) exceeds lethal violence rates in other industrialized nations.
Article
The Vanishing Killer: Japans Postwar Homicide Decline
David T. Johnson, E-mail: davidjoh{at}hawaii.edu
![]()
Abstract ![]()
CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
D. T. Johnson The Homicide Drop in Postwar Japan Homicide Studies, February 1, 2008; 12(1): 146 - 160. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
