Barber Nigel
Aggress Behav. 2009 Jan-Feb;35(1):49-56. doi: 10.1002/ab.20291.
Violent crimes (murders, rapes, and assaults) are substantially higher in countries with a relative scarcity of men according to research using INTERPOL data [Barber, 2000a]. This is a paradox given that males are more criminally violent and likely reflects increased direct mating competition. The present research sought to confirm and extend Barber's [2000a] finding, using murder data from the United Nations and homicides from World Health Organization that are of higher quality than the INTERPOL data, and using more rigorous controls. In addition to level of economic development, control variables included, income inequality, urbanization, population density, the number of police, and whether the country was a major center of illegal drug trafficking. Regression analyses with all controls found that killings in both data sets increased with declines in the male proportion of the population. The findings are discussed in terms of direct reproductive competition and alternative explanations are considered.
根据一项使用国际刑警组织数据的研究[巴伯,2000a],在男性相对稀缺的国家,暴力犯罪(谋杀、强奸和袭击)的发生率要高得多。考虑到男性更容易实施暴力犯罪,这是一个悖论,而这可能反映出直接交配竞争的加剧。本研究旨在证实并扩展巴伯[2000a]的发现,使用来自联合国的谋杀数据和世界卫生组织的杀人数据,这些数据比国际刑警组织的数据质量更高,并且采用了更严格的控制变量。除了经济发展水平外,控制变量还包括收入不平等、城市化、人口密度、警察数量以及该国是否为非法毒品贩运的主要中心。对所有控制变量进行回归分析后发现,两个数据集中的杀人案件数量都随着男性在人口中所占比例的下降而增加。我们将从直接生殖竞争的角度讨论这些发现,并考虑其他解释。