Sensation Seeking in Street Violence: A Micro-Sociological Reassessment

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperFormidling

Standard

Sensation Seeking in Street Violence : A Micro-Sociological Reassessment. / Heinskou, Marie Bruvik; Liebst, Lasse Suonperä.

2016. Paper præsenteret ved ASA: American Sociological Association, Seattle, USA.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperFormidling

Harvard

Heinskou, MB & Liebst, LS 2016, 'Sensation Seeking in Street Violence: A Micro-Sociological Reassessment', Paper fremlagt ved ASA: American Sociological Association, Seattle, USA, 18/08/2016 - 23/08/2016.

APA

Heinskou, M. B., & Liebst, L. S. (2016). Sensation Seeking in Street Violence: A Micro-Sociological Reassessment. Paper præsenteret ved ASA: American Sociological Association, Seattle, USA.

Vancouver

Heinskou MB, Liebst LS. Sensation Seeking in Street Violence: A Micro-Sociological Reassessment. 2016. Paper præsenteret ved ASA: American Sociological Association, Seattle, USA.

Author

Heinskou, Marie Bruvik ; Liebst, Lasse Suonperä. / Sensation Seeking in Street Violence : A Micro-Sociological Reassessment. Paper præsenteret ved ASA: American Sociological Association, Seattle, USA.

Bibtex

@conference{cb8a5448bfea4427849b6182fa970c34,
title = "Sensation Seeking in Street Violence: A Micro-Sociological Reassessment",
abstract = "Sensation seeking leads to violence—runs an influential hypothesis in the social scientific study of violent behavior. Although studies confirm that violence is sometimes structured by sensation-seeking motives, the literature seldom comments on the limits to this explanation of violence. The present study examines the scale of violence motivated by sensation seeking and the degree to which there are several distinct forms of sensation seeking motives operative in violence, rather than a sensation-seeking motive in the singular. The study draws on a sample of situations from Copenhagen involving street violence, which are coded quantitatively and qualitatively. Our analysis shows that sensation seeking only seldom seems to play a role in the structuring of street violence. Moreover, the data indicate that sensation seeking finds expression in street violence situations in two different ways: Besides egoistic pleasure in exerting violence against the other, sensation seeking is expressed as social enjoyment in being part of a violent interaction with the other. Implications from these findings, limitations and suggestions for further research are discussed. ",
author = "Heinskou, {Marie Bruvik} and Liebst, {Lasse Suonper{\"a}}",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
note = "ASA: American Sociological Association : Annual Meeting ; Conference date: 18-08-2016 Through 23-08-2016",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Sensation Seeking in Street Violence

T2 - ASA: American Sociological Association

AU - Heinskou, Marie Bruvik

AU - Liebst, Lasse Suonperä

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Sensation seeking leads to violence—runs an influential hypothesis in the social scientific study of violent behavior. Although studies confirm that violence is sometimes structured by sensation-seeking motives, the literature seldom comments on the limits to this explanation of violence. The present study examines the scale of violence motivated by sensation seeking and the degree to which there are several distinct forms of sensation seeking motives operative in violence, rather than a sensation-seeking motive in the singular. The study draws on a sample of situations from Copenhagen involving street violence, which are coded quantitatively and qualitatively. Our analysis shows that sensation seeking only seldom seems to play a role in the structuring of street violence. Moreover, the data indicate that sensation seeking finds expression in street violence situations in two different ways: Besides egoistic pleasure in exerting violence against the other, sensation seeking is expressed as social enjoyment in being part of a violent interaction with the other. Implications from these findings, limitations and suggestions for further research are discussed.

AB - Sensation seeking leads to violence—runs an influential hypothesis in the social scientific study of violent behavior. Although studies confirm that violence is sometimes structured by sensation-seeking motives, the literature seldom comments on the limits to this explanation of violence. The present study examines the scale of violence motivated by sensation seeking and the degree to which there are several distinct forms of sensation seeking motives operative in violence, rather than a sensation-seeking motive in the singular. The study draws on a sample of situations from Copenhagen involving street violence, which are coded quantitatively and qualitatively. Our analysis shows that sensation seeking only seldom seems to play a role in the structuring of street violence. Moreover, the data indicate that sensation seeking finds expression in street violence situations in two different ways: Besides egoistic pleasure in exerting violence against the other, sensation seeking is expressed as social enjoyment in being part of a violent interaction with the other. Implications from these findings, limitations and suggestions for further research are discussed.

M3 - Paper

Y2 - 18 August 2016 through 23 August 2016

ER -

ID: 153044096