Wilson M, Daly M
Department of Psychology, McMaster University.
Violence Vict. 1993 Spring;8(1):3-16.
Frequencies of homicide victimization of wives and husbands, while cohabiting and when separated, are reported for all spousal homicides known to the police in Canada (1974-1990), in New South Wales, Australia (1968-1986), and in Chicago (1965-1990). In all three data sets, the degree to which spousal homicide victimization was female-biased was significantly greater when the couple were estranged than when they were coresiding. Victim counts and population-at-large estimates of coresiding and separated now-married spouses were combined to estimate differential homicide rates incurred by coresiding and estranged married persons. Wives in all three countries incurred substantially elevated risk when separated as compared to when coresiding.
报告了加拿大(1974 - 1990年)、澳大利亚新南威尔士州(1968 - 1986年)以及芝加哥(1965 - 1990年)警方所知的所有配偶间杀人案件中,夫妻同居及分居时妻子和丈夫遭受杀人侵害的频率。在所有这三个数据集中,夫妻分居时配偶间杀人侵害偏向女性的程度显著高于同居时。将同居和分居的初婚配偶的受害者人数及总体人口估计数相结合,以估算同居和分居的已婚者遭受杀人侵害的差异率。与同居时相比,所有这三个国家的妻子在分居时面临的风险大幅升高。