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Self-defense and Battered Women Who Kill: A New Framework Robbin S. Ogle

Self-defense and Battered Women Who Kill: A New Framework By Robbin S. Ogle

Self-defense and Battered Women Who Kill: A New Framework by Robbin S. Ogle


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Summary

In that context, Ogle and Jacobs posit a social interaction perspective for understanding the situational, cultural, social, and structural forces that work toward maintaining the battering relationship and escalating it to a homicidal end.

Self-defense and Battered Women Who Kill: A New Framework Summary

Self-defense and Battered Women Who Kill: A New Framework: A New Framework by Robbin S. Ogle

Details a new social interaction theory and teaches judges, attorneys, advocates, and academics how to apply it in a trial setting. Battering relationships often escalate to a point where the battered woman commits homicide. When such homicides occur, attention is usually focused on the final violent encounter; however, Ogle and Jacobs argue, while that act is the last homicidal encounter, it is not the only one. This important study argues that the battering relationship is properly understood as a long-term homicidal process that, if played out to the point that contrition dissipates, is very likely to result in the death of one of the parties. In that context, Ogle and Jacobs posit a social interaction perspective for understanding the situational, cultural, social, and structural forces that work toward maintaining the battering relationship and escalating it to a homicidal end. This book details this theory and explains how to apply it in a trial setting. Elements of self-defense law are problematic for battered women who kill their abusers. These include imminence, reasonableness of the victim's perception of danger, and reasonableness of the victim's choice of lethal violence and their proportionality. Social interaction theory argues that, once contrition dissipates, imminence is constant. The victim functions in an unending state of extreme tension and fear. This allows us to understand the victim's view of the violence as escalating beyond control, thereby increasing her reasonable perception of danger and lethality. After social resources, for whatever reason, fail to end the violence, it is then reasonable for the victim to conclude that she will have to act in her own defense in order to survive.

About Robbin S. Ogle

ROBBIN S. OGLE is Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

SUSAN JACOBS is Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

Table of Contents

An Overview; Introduction; The Test Case as Originally and Traditionally Tried; A Brief Review of the Relevant Literature; Battering as a Slow Homicide Process: A Social Interaction Perspective; The Law of Self Defense and Battered Women; The Traditional Test Case Re-Visited; Application of These Theoretical Ideas to Gay and Lesbian Battering; Conclusion.

Additional information

NPB9780275967116
9780275967116
0275967115
Self-defense and Battered Women Who Kill: A New Framework: A New Framework by Robbin S. Ogle
New
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
2002-08-30
222
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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