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Psychoactive Substances and Violence
by Jeffrey A. Roth
Series: Research in Brief, US Dept. of Justice
Published: February 1994
19 pages
Issues and Findings
Discussed in the Research in Brief: The current status of research on the links
connecting violence to alcohol and illegal psychoactive drugs, and evaluations of
interventions to prevent violence related to these substances.
Key issues: Correlations between violence and psychoactive substances; the social,
economic, cultural, psycho-social, neurobehavioral, and other factors that explain the
correlations; and prevention strategies for reducing the violence associated with these
substances.
Key findings:
- Research has uncovered strong correlations between violence and psycho-active
substances, including alcohol and illegal drugs, but the underlying relationships differ
by type of drug.
- The links between violence and psychoactive substances involve broad social and economic
forces, the settings in which people obtain and consume the substances, and biological
processes that underlie all human behavior. These factors interact in chains of events
that may extend back from an intermediate triggering event such as an argument to
long-term predisposing processes that begin in childhood.
- Of all psychoactive substances, alcohol is the only one whose consumption has been shown
to commonly increase aggression. After large doses of amphetamines, cocaine, LSD, and PCP,
certain individuals may experience violent outbursts, probably because of preexisting
psychosis. Research is needed on the pharmacological effects of crack, which enters the
brain more directly than cocaine used in other forms.
- Alcohol drinking and violence are linked through pharmacological effects on behavior,
through expectations that heavy drinking and violence go together in certain settings, and
through patterns of binge drinking and fighting that sometimes develop in adolescence.
- The most promising strategies for reducing alcohol-related violence are to reduce
underage drinking through substance abuse preventive education, taxes, law enforcement,
and peer pressure.
- Illegal drugs and violence are linked primarily through drug marketing: disputes among
rival distributors, arguments and robberies involving buyers and sellers, property crimes
committed to raise drug money and, more speculatively, social and economic interactions
between the illegal markets and the surrounding communities.
- The most promising strategy for reducing violence related to illegal drugs appears to be
reducing the demand that fuels violent illegal markets. Promising tactics include
preventive education, pretrial monitoring of arrestees through urinalysis and, for
convicted violent offenders, in-prison therapeutic communities integrated with postrelease
treatment followup.
- In the future, medications may reduce violence by reducing cocaine craving and by
blocking the aggression-promoting effects of opiate withdrawal and alcohol consumption.
Target audience: State and local policymakers, court administrators, law enforcement
and juvenile justice practitioners, and drug treatment program staff.
As noted by the Panel on the Understanding and Control of Violent Behavior, the
character of violence presents simultaneous challenges to understanding and opportunities
for prevention. First, violence is diverse. Acts as different as spontaneous drive-by
shootings and met-iculously planned serial killings, for example, are both included in the
legal and statistical category of murder. Second, the causes of violence are complex,
involving a very wide variety of factors. The panel found it useful to classify these
factors in terms of four levels of analysis at which they are usually studied:
- Broad social and economic forces (macrosocial).
- Encounters between people in particular settings (microsocial).
- Individual behavioral development from childhood through adulthood (psychosocial).
- Neurobehavioral and other biological processes that underlie all human behavior
(neurobehavioral).
Factors at these four levels operate and interact in chains of events that may begin
long before the violent event that results. Therefore, the panel's classification
framework also categorized causal factors in terms of their temporal proximity to the
violent event itself: from the immediate triggering mechanism (for example, a response to
an insult), back through the situation that led up to the triggering event, to
predisposing factors that months or years earlier increased the risk of a future violent
event.
This diversity and complexity might at first glance seem to discourage efforts to
prevent violence. In fact, however, they create promising opportunities. Merely
acknowledging the diversity breaks the overall "violence problem" into separate
problems that may be preventable through interventions by different public agencies.
Recognizing the causal complexity expands the list of options for preventing a particular
violence problem by highlighting all the points at which chains of events leading to it
may be breakable. Problem-solving initiatives--programs that involve design and evaluation
of preventive interventions at various links in these chains of events, that revise these
interventions in light of the evaluation findings, and that replicate the
evaluations--have the potential to simultaneously reduce violence and increase the
understanding of its causes.
Many chains of causal events for violence include links to alcohol or to illegal
psychoactive drugs. The panel found these links worth exploring in depth for at least
three reasons. First, statistics consistently demonstrate correlations between violent
events and involvement with alcohol and other psychoactive drugs. Second, the variety of
potential causal links between violence and different psychoactive substances--alcohol,
opiates, cocaine in smokable and powdered form, amphetamines, hallucinogens, and other
illegal drugs--presents an especially rich example of the panel's classification
framework. Third, preliminary evidence from research and evaluations suggests that certain
interventions related to psychoactive substances should be considered in developing
strategies for controlling violence.
Correlations between violence and psychoactive substances
Research supported by the National Institute of Justice and other organizations has
repeatedly found strong correlations between violence and psychoactive substances:
- For at least the last several decades, alcohol drinking--by the perpetrator of a crime,
the victim, or both--has immediately preceded at least half of all violent events,
including murders, in the samples studied by researchers.
- Chronic drinkers are more likely than other people to have histories of violent
behavior.
- Criminals who use illegal drugs1 commit robberies and assaults more frequently than do
nonuser criminals, and they commit them especially frequently during periods of heavy drug
use.
- In a study of New York City murders in 1988, researchers classified more than half the
homicides (53 percent) as drug-related: 39 percent in the course of drug distribution, 8
percent through pharmacological effects on the offender, 2 percent while the offender was
obtaining money to buy drugs, and 4 percent through more than one of these links.2
Data from the National Institute of Justice Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) program, which
tests for drug use among booked arrestees in 24 sites nationwide, showed the following
patterns in 1989:
- Most males and females who were interviewed after arrest for a violent crime reported
drinking alcohol within 72 hours before the crime for which they were arrested.
- About 60 percent of arrestees booked for violent crimes were confirmed by laboratory
test to have used at least one illegal drug3 in the hours before arrest.
Explaining the correlations
While these statistical patterns strongly suggest that psychoactive substances play
significant roles in acts of violence, they do not explain the nature of those
relationships. In trying to sort out links between violence and psychoactive substances,
the panel categorized potential links in terms of the four levels noted above:
o Social and economic forces (macrosocial):
Processes that affect large social units such as nations or communities. Examples
include cultural practices related to alcohol use and, in the United States, economic and
social processes surrounding the illegal markets in which psychoactive drugs other than
alcohol are sold.
o Encounters between people (microsocial):
Characteristics of encounters between people. Examples include group drinking in
settings where violence is expected and socially acceptable; arguments that are begun or
aggravated because the participants are under the influence of drugs or alcohol; and
disputes involving organizations, buyers, and sellers in illegal drug markets.
o Psychosocial:
Influences on individuals' behavior patterns, which begin developing in early childhood
and continue to evolve throughout adulthood. Examples include patterns of heavy drinking
and aggression that develop during adolescence and psychoses that predispose a few
individuals toward violent psychotic episodes while under the influence of certain drugs.
o Neurobehavioral:
Processes in the brain that underlie all human behavior and that may be altered by
pharmacological effects of alcohol and other drugs. Examples include effects of substance
abuse during pregnancy on fetal development, effects of chronic substance abuse on brain
functioning, and temporary neurological effects of being "high" or
"blue."
These and other examples of links at all four levels between violence and alcohol or
other drugs are displayed in table 1. Much of the evidence for specific links is
suggestive rather than conclusive. One challenge in understanding and verifying the links
is the complexity of interactions among factors at different levels. It would be difficult
at best to sort out such interactions. What makes the challenge even greater is that most
studies measure factors at only one or two levels at a time, so that the full range of
interactions is rarely observed in a single study. In addition, it is difficult to study
violent events using methods that yield generalizable conclusions. Controlled experiments
under laboratory conditions produce the strongest confirmation of factors that influence
behavior, but practical and ethical constraints generally limit those methods to studies
of behaviors that are far milder than the potentially lethal violence that occurs in homes
and communities. At present, therefore, there are only fragments of scientific evidence
providing partial support for the existence of many causal links between psychoactive
substances and violence. These findings neither explain definitively how the links
interact nor provide a basis for ranking them in order of importance in explaining
variation in violence related to alcohol or other drugs.
Neurobehavioral explanations
Research on humans and many animal species suggests there are several neurobehavioral
links between violence and psychoactive substances:
- Expectant mothers' use of psychoactive substances during pregnancy adversely affects
fetal development. The resultant damage causes learning and communication problems that,
in turn, increase the risk of early grade school failure, a well-documented precursor of
violent behavior.
- Alcohol is the only psychoactive drug that in many individuals tends to increase
aggressive behavior temporarily while it is taking effect. However, factors at other
levels--behavior patterns when people are not drinking, the setting in which people drink,
and local drinking customs, for example--influence the strength of this relationship.
- Among alcohol abusers, those who also abuse other psychoactive substances, who are
diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder, and whose parents have been diagnosed as
alcohol abusers are at especially high risk of chronic violent behavior. Some researchers
have suggested that a genetic process may contribute to this relatively rare pattern.
- Marijuana and opiates temporarily inhibit violent behavior, but withdrawal from opiate
addiction tends to exaggerate both aggressive and defensive responses to provocations.
Individual humans and animals deviate widely from these "average" behaviors.
For example, the aggression-promoting effects of alcohol are strongest in animals having
high blood levels of testosterone, the principal male hormone that distinguishes males
from females; humans may or may not exhibit the same pattern. A study of violent Finnish
alcohol abusers suggests that the alcohol-violence link may be associated with abnormally
low levels of blood sugar (that is, hypoglycemia) and of metabolites of the brain chemical
serotonin. Another study suggests that the alcohol-violence link is especially strong in
people who exhibit certain abnormal brain wave patterns, both at rest and while responding
to outside stresses.
Common Assumptions Called Into Question
On the other hand, several common assumptions about connections between drugs and
violence are called into question by research findings:
- There is no evidence to support the claim that snorting or injecting cocaine stimulates
violent behavior. However, research is urgently needed on the behavioral effects of
smoking cocaine in crack form, which affects the brain more directly.
- Anecdotal reports notwithstanding, no research evidence supports the notion that
becoming high on hallucinogens, amphetamines, or PCP stimulates violent behavior in any
systematic manner. The anecdotes usually describe chronic users with histories of
psychosis or antisocial behavior, which may or may not be related to their chronic use of
drugs.
- Occasional anecdotes about " 'roid rages"--violent outbursts by men who use
anabolic steroids to accelerate muscle growth--appear to describe isolated coincidences
rather than any common, systematic effect.
Psychosocial links
Evidence from research on animals and humans indicates that patterns of substance abuse
and aggressive behavior reinforce each other. It cannot be said that one
"causes" the other. For example, alcohol may trigger violent episodes in
aggressive animals and people, but rarely in submissive ones.
Patterns of aggressive behavior and substance abuse often become intertwined starting
in childhood. Early childhood aggression is a predictor of later heavy drinking, and the
combination is associated with an above-average risk of adult violent behavior, especially
among those who also abuse other psychoactive drugs.
Research suggests at least four possible explanations for the link between substance
abuse and violent behavior in adolescents. First, adolescents may chronically use
psychoactive substances to help them temporarily escape from such feelings as rage, guilt,
worthlessness, or depression--emotions that often precede aggressive behavior. Second,
repeated family arguments over teenage substance abuse may eventually take on a violent
character. Next, underlying family problems or socially expected responses may lead some
adolescent males to patterns of heavy drinking and fighting as ways to demonstrate their
masculinity. Last, boys who regularly observe older males fighting while drinking may
learn to expect that violent behavior accompanies alcohol use. All of these processes may
be at work, but their roles, interactions, and importance as explanations have not yet
been sorted out.
Preexisting psychosis appears to account for occasional violent outbursts by people who
are under the influence of amphetamines or hallucinogens, especially PCP. While these
drugs are well known to cause disorganized, bizarre behavior, they trigger violence in
very few people who are not also psychotic. In studies of laboratory mice and monkeys,
bizarre behavior on the part of animals under the influence of PCP fairly commonly
provokes violent attacks by others in the group. Anecdotal information and newspaper
accounts report similar attacks on humans using alcohol, amphetamines, powdered cocaine,
or LSD, but this relationship has not been systematically studied in humans.
Encounters between people
In a variety of ways, alcohol and drugs modify encounters between people in ways that
make these substances greater hazards for violence. In the case of alcohol, these hazards
tend to be related to use, while for illegal psychoactive drugs they tend to be related to
distribution and purchase.
Alcohol use and sexual violence. Some therapists who treat violent sex offenders have
reported that their patients tend to have both histories of alcohol abuse and high blood
levels of testosterone. Without comparisons to men who are not violent sex offenders,
these clinical observations cannot demonstrate that alcohol abuse or high testosterone
levels cause sexual violence. Studies of many animal species suggest a causal
connection--that alcohol reduces testosterone levels but has stronger aggression-promoting
effects in individual high-testosterone animals. However, that relationship has not yet
been tested in humans. The frequent involvement of alcohol in acquaintance rapes suggests
that social expectations may also be at work; that is, young men who expect to have sex
after drinking may try to satisfy their expectations, sometimes forcibly if they encounter
resistance.
Illegal drug markets. Illegal drug markets operate outside the world of contract law,
courts and mediators for resolving disputes, and business customs that distinguish
socially acceptable from unac- ceptable approaches to buying and selling. Illegal markets
often develop substitute mechanisms that involve the threat or actual use of violence.
Examples include:
- Violence by drug distributors in the course of territorial disputes between rival
organizations, threats of violence to make "staff" obey organizational rules,
violent punishment of rulebreakers to keep the threats credible, battles with police, and
protection of sellers or drugs on the street.
- Violence between buyer and seller during a drug transaction, caused, for example, by
attempted robbery of one or the other, failure to hand over drugs or money, or
"honest" misunderstandings of local rules of the game on the part of buyers and
sellers.
- Violence involving people other than buyers and sellers who are found around drug
markets--third parties such as innocent bystanders and people operating in related illegal
markets for "protection," guns, or prostitution.
As places where violence tends to occur for the reasons listed above, illegal drug
markets may also serve as "magnets." As such, they attract valuable drugs and
cash, weapons, and people who are accustomed to violence. The mix of these ingredients
creates hazardous conditions for robberies and other forms of violence that may not be
directly related to drugs.
Obtaining drug purchase money. In some settings, the need for money to buy drugs also
increases the chance of a violent encounter. A taxi driver carrying a passenger late at
night, for example, is presumably at greater risk of being robbed if the passenger wants
to buy drugs but lacks the cash to do so. While robbery is still a common way to obtain
money to buy drugs, it has been replaced by drug selling in some large cities.
Using alcohol and drugs. If alcohol caused violence only by making individuals behave
more aggressively, violence would be equally common in all places where drinking occurs.
In fact, however, most drinking places are rarely scenes of violence. A few acquire
reputations as "animal houses" or "fighting bars," where people expect
drinking and violence to go hand in hand.
Just what characteristics of a drinking place make it a hazard for violence are not
precisely known, but there is supporting evidence for several possible explanations.
People who drink in fighting bars may behave violently in order to "fit in" or
to advance socially. People who experience anger or frustration may seek out such
settings, because they believe that drinking in these types of establishments means social
permission to engage in violent behavior. One study of a group of young men who were
observed during an evening of drinking illustrates this by suggesting that behavior
patterns and situational influences may play off each other. As the evening progressed,
the group began both to behave more aggressively and to move on to establishments where
aggressive behavior was more socially acceptable.
Connections between drinking and violence have been identified by researchers in many
countries with predominantly European cultures. But they have not been found in many
tribal and folk societies, even where binge drinking is common. For reasons not yet known,
expectations that violence follows drinking have failed to develop in those cultures.
Finally, it seems likely that substance abuse is indirectly related to violence in ways
that are difficult to identify and count. Examples of indirect relationships include
robberies committed to replace household money spent on drugs or alcohol, or spouse
assaults arising from disputes over money or time spent away from home drinking or taking
drugs.
Violence is related to the distribution, purchase, and use of illegal drugs or alcohol
in a wide variety of human interactions. Unfortunately, the difficulty of counting such
interactions makes it also difficult to rank them in order of importance. Better counts
would help in focusing violence prevention strategies on the most common interactions in
which drug- and alcohol-related violence occurs.
Social and economic forces
If the patterns of behavior discussed above were the only links between illegal drug
distribution and violence, every city that experienced a crack epidemic in the 1980's
would also have seen a substantial increase in homicide at the same time. Indeed,
policymakers have occasionally claimed a "uniform, straight line relationship"
between illegal drug use and murder.4
The reality is more complex. The murder rate increased 350 percent in Washington, D.C.,
and by a smaller amount in New York City as their crack epidemics unfolded. However,
during the crack epidemics in Detroit and Los Angeles these cities experienced decreases
in the murder rate. This suggests that the relationships between illegal drug market
activity and lethal violence are intertwined with social and economic processes in the
surrounding community.
What are these processes? Because causal patterns at the social level are especially
difficult to establish, the answers are necessarily speculative. Fragments of evidence
suggest that some or all of the following factors may influence the relationship between
levels of violence and illegal drug market activity:
- Stability of drug market control: Situations that produce violent encounters--fights
over territorial allocations or misunderstandings between buyers and sellers, for
example--arose relatively infrequently in markets controlled by old, stable organizations
that had developed operating rules decades ago and enforced them through a standing threat
to punish violators violently. Where the spread of crack manufacturing technology
encouraged new organizations to enter the markets, the resulting destabilization may
temporarily have increased the frequency of violent encounters.
- Community access to legitimate economic opportunities: Where the rise of crack markets
followed the exodus of legitimate economic opportunities from central cities, economic
rewards shifted away from skills valued by legitimate employers to those valued by crack
distribution organizations; these included the ability to threaten and use violence.
- Strength of informal violence controls: Where the exodus of legitimate economic
opportunities from urban communities took with it many people committed to legal,
nonviolent values, those people were no longer available for roles in preventing
drug-related violence. They were not available, for example, as nonviolent role models for
adolescents, as passers-by who might discourage drug buyers or intervene in emerging
violent events, or as concerned individuals who might inform parents if their children
began drifting toward involvement in drug markets.
- Social status and moral authority: During crack epidemics in some communities,
successful young drug entrepreneurs either supplanted or intimidated neighborhood
"old heads"--unofficial community leaders who upheld traditional values and had
exercised moral authority in the neighborhood. Where this occurred, it tended to weaken
cultural restraints against violence in all contexts, including drug markets.
Because such relationships are difficult to verify, evidence supporting their influence
is only suggestive and fragmentary, and new research is needed to explore them more fully.
Preventive interventions
A number of intervention strategies for preventing violence related to psychoactive
substances have been proposed:
- Police disruption of illegal drug markets.
- Selectively longer incarceration of violent drug-using criminals.
- Reducing teenagers' access to alcohol.
- Substance abuse prevention.
- Drug abuse treatment.
- Pharmacological therapies to reduce drug craving and aggressive tendencies associated
with alcohol use and heroin addiction.
Some of these strategies have been evaluated to test their effectiveness in reducing
violence. Only a few have demonstrated success under any conditions; none have shown
universal effectiveness. Developing better interventions will require collaborative
problem-solving initiatives that involve representatives of criminal justice agencies,
providers of substance abuse treatment and other social services, and evaluation
researchers. These initiatives are needed to turn promising ideas into workable programs,
to evaluate the programs, and to refine them in light of the evaluation results. The
findings of evaluations conducted thus far are summarized in the following sections.
Disrupting illegal drug markets. Police attack illegal drug markets
through a number of tactics: undercover investigations leading to dealers' arrests;
cooperation with community antidrug efforts; and large-scale, high-visibility crackdowns.
Evaluations of these tactics in Birmingham, Alabama; Lawrence and Lynn, Massachusetts; New
York City; Oakland, California; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Washington, D.C., present
a mixed picture. Perhaps the strongest supportable statement is that their chance of
success is improved by intervening early in emerging markets, by creating a highly
committed police force, and by generating community receptivity and cooperation in
advance. NIJ's Drug Market Analysis (DMA) program is helping with the first
prerequisite--early detection of drug markets. Specific techniques for creating supportive
climates in police departments and the surrounding communities are less well understood,
although many approaches are now being tested as part of community policing initiatives.
Incarcerating violent drug-using criminals. Researchers have generally
found that compared to other violent offenders, those who use drugs tend to have higher
average frequencies of violent crimes such as robbery and assault. This finding raises the
possibility that sentencing drug-involved offenders who are convicted of these crimes to
longer prison terms might reduce violence. However, analyses suggest that this strategy of
"selective incapacitation" would reduce violent crime levels very little unless
it were accompanied by massive increases in prison populations.
A related strategy--monitoring pretrial releasees' drug use through urinalysis--showed
rather surprising effects in a Washington, D.C., evaluation. Although positive drug test
results did not predict significantly higher pretrial rearrest rates, failure to show up
for the test was a strong predictor of subsequent new crimes leading to rearrest.
Reducing teenagers' access to alcohol. Evidence is fairly clear that
increases in tax rates and other measures that reduce the availability of alcohol to
adolescents (social pressure and enforcement of underage drinking laws) in turn reduce
drinking and certain associated problems such as death rates due to auto collisions.
Therefore, these strategies may also reduce adolescents' disproportionate share of
violence. That conjecture remains to be tested, however.
Substance abuse prevention. By reducing the demand that fuels violent,
illegal drug markets, substance abuse prevention should, in theory, reduce violence
levels. Many substance abuse prevention programs have been evaluated, including the Drug
Abuse Resistance Education (DARE), which brings police officers into classrooms as
instructors. Evaluations of prevention programs have generally found them effective in
delaying the onset of tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use. Evaluations have not generally
found that education succeeds in preventing use of "harder" drugs, perhaps
because use of those drugs was rare even in the control groups that did not receive
preventive education. However, to the extent that minor drugs are "stepping
stones" to the harder ones,5 the programs may have meaningful, yet delayed, effects
for violence reduction.
Prevention may have an especially important role to play for one
category of adolescents--males whose behavior meets diagnostic criteria for antisocial
personality disorder and whose parents abuse alcohol. Research indicates that these two
factors, coupled with both alcohol and drug abuse, create a high-risk profile for violent
behavior in adulthood.
Drug abuse treatment. Successful drug treatment programs reduce
criminal activity among adult clients. For drug abusers who are not in prison, stays of at
least 3 months in therapeutic communities reduce the tendency to commit crime after
discharge. Up to about 18 months, longer stays in the therapeutic community produce
greater reductions.
For drug abusers in prison, treatment usually involves only individual or group
sessions a few times a week with no postrelease followup. Evaluations of this approach
have not found it sufficient to reduce criminal behavior following release. However, a
more intensive approach--combining inprison therapeutic communities, planning for
postrelease treatment, and postrelease treatment in the community--reduces overall
rearrest rates of inmates who complete the program. At least three programs have used this
approach: Stay 'n Out (in a New York prison), Cornerstone (in the Oregon State Hospital),
and the California Civil Addict Program.
In addition to these beneficial effects of drug treatment on offenders' behavior,
successful treatment may reduce aggregate levels of violence related to drug markets by
lowering the demand that fuels the markets. Such an effect would, however, be difficult to
measure.
Pharmacological interventions. Like other forms of drug treatment,
pharmacological therapies that reduce drug craving may also lower the demand that supports
violent drug markets. For decades, methadone and related chemicals have been used to
reduce craving for heroin. There is no analogue to methadone for treating addiction to
cocaine in powdered or smokable form. However, using animals as test subjects, researchers
have identified the receptors for certain subtypes of two brain chemicals, dopamine and
norepinephrine, as promising sites to begin developing such medications. Animal research
also suggests neurochemical starting points for developing medications that reduce
violence in other ways: by disrupting the aggression-promoting effects of alcohol and by
preventing aggression during withdrawal from heroin addiction.
Conclusion
Too few of the links between violence and psychoactive substances have been established
with enough certainty to advocate a comprehensive national policy for preventing violence
related to those substances. Instead, a program of testing and evaluating tactics for
implementing a variety of promising strategies is called for. Among these strategies,
criminal justice agencies have particular roles in developing and testing tactics to
disrupt illegal drug markets, in monitoring drug use of pretrial releasees, in
establishing drug abuse treatment for convicted criminals, and in creating effective
substance abuse prevention programs. Fulfilling these roles will require cooperation
between the criminal justice system and drug treatment, prevention, and education
authorities. Eventually, efforts to prevent drug-related violence may be assisted by
pharmacological therapies to reduce the aggression-promoting effects of alcohol and the
craving for other psychoactive drugs.
Notes
1. Among studies of this relationship, many group all illegal drugs together. Those
that distinguish among drugs usually list cocaine, heroin, amphetamines, barbiturates, and
hallucinogens other than marijuana. See, for example, Elliott, D.S., and D. Huizinga, The
Relationship Between Delinquent Behavior and ADM [Alcohol, Drug, and Mental Health]
Problems, National Youth Survey Report No. 26. Boulder, Colorado: Behavioral Research
Institute, 1984.
2. Goldstein, P.J., H.H. Brownstein, P.J. Ryan, and P.A. Bellucci, "Crack and
Homicide in New York City, 1988: A Conceptually Based Event Analysis," Contemporary
Drug Problems 16 (Winter 1989):651--687.
3. The DUF program uses urinalysis to confirm self-reports. The urine specimens are
tested for cocaine, opiates, marijuana, PCP, methadone, benzodiazepine (Valium),
methaqualone, propoxyphene (Darvon), barbiturates, and amphetamines. Samples are collected
at the time of arrest on a voluntary basis; an average of 80 percent of arrestees
voluntarily cooperate. Test criteria are set to detect use of most drugs in the preceding
24 to 48 hours, but marijuana and PCP can be detected in the urine several weeks after
use.
4. Isikoff, M., and K. Sawyer, "Thornburgh Says All Drug Abusers Fuel Nation's
Crisis," Washington Post, August 17, 1990.
5. Until recently, research on developmental pathways consistently found these drugs to
be "gateways" or "stepping stones" to cocaine use. Preliminary
findings, presented after the Panel completed its report, suggest that since the New York
City "crack epidemic" of the early 1980's, crack-using youth in increasing
numbers are skipping the gateway drugs and starting directly with crack.
Author's Biography
Dr. Jeffrey A. Roth served as study director for the Panel on the Under-standing and
Control of Violent Behavior. Currently he is research director in the Bethesda, Maryland,
office of the Law and Public Policy area of Abt Associates, Inc.
Sidebar 1
Panel on the Understanding and Control of Violent Behavior
Violence is universally recognized as a pervasive part of contemporary American society
and of our Nation's past as well. Many of the attempts to understand the phenomenon have
been made in response to specific situations, such as the lawlessness of the Prohibition
era, the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and the urban riots of the
mid-1960's. Other attempts at understanding violence singled out particular causes for
analysis. In none of these studies, however, was the full body of research on violence
reviewed comprehensively, and none of them took an interdisciplinary approach.
The Panel on the Understanding and Control of Violent Behavior was set up to meet the
need for a more comprehensive assessment of what is known about violent behavior. It was
established in response to a request made by three Federal agencies: the National Science
Foundation (NSF), the National Institute of Justice (NIJ), and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC). NSF asked for a review of current knowledge about the causes
of violent behavior and recommendations for future research. The other two agencies shared
these goals, but their areas of interest reflected their particular missions. As the
research arm of the U.S. Department of Justice, NIJ wanted to find out about means to
prevent and control violent crime. The CDC wanted assistance in setting priorities for
preventing injuries and deaths caused by violence.
Created in 1989, the panel reviewed research on "interpersonal
violence"--events involving at most a few perpetrators and victims. This limitation
excluded suicide and self-mutilation as well as large-scale collective and State violence.
The focus was on describing, understanding, and controlling violence in the United States.
Research in biomedical, psychological, and other social sciences was reviewed. The work of
the panel was intended both to help guide future research and evaluation projects aimed at
prevention and control and to suggest strategic directions for violence control policy.
The findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the panel were published in Volume 1
of Understanding and Preventing Violence, published by the National Academy Press. Three
volumes of background papers commissioned by the panel are forthcoming. The panel
concluded that numerous, often interacting factors give rise to violent events. Although
the underlying interactions are not well understood, attention to the factors suggests
many promising preventive interventions. Testing and evaluating these interventions
creates opportunities to prevent particular types of violence while gaining better
understanding of them. The panel made recommendations in a number of areas, among them
development of problem-solving initiatives to control and understand violence; better
statistical systems for measuring violence; and a program of research to identify
underlying causes. This Research in Brief is one of a series that summarizes the panel's
findings.
NIJ is committed to implementing the recommendations of the panel. Its commitment has
begun through support for the Program on Human Development and Criminal Behavior, a
longitudinal, multicommunity research project that is exploring the factors associated
with violence. In addition, the panel's recommendations have helped shape the goals of NIJ
research and evaluation activities and its long-range plans for research.
Copies of Understanding and Preventing Violence are available from the National Academy
Press, 2101 Constitution Avenue N.W., Washington, DC 20418 (800-624-6242).
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