Violence
Intentional Injury
Factors Contributing to Violence
What Makes Individuals Prone to Violence
Different Crimes
100

Intentional use of physical force or power.

Violence

100

Intentional use of physical force or power against other persons by an individual or small group of individuals.

Interpersonal Violence

100

Involvement in gangs is an example of:

Societal Factors

100

Aggression that is goal-directed.

Primary

100

Crime committed against a person, property, or group of people that is motivated by the offender's bias against race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, or ethnicity.

Hate Crime

200

Include injury, death, or psychological harm caused by violence with intent to harm.

Intentional injuries

200

The instrumental use of violence by people who identify themselves as members of a group--whether this group is transitory or has a more permanent identity--against another group or set of individuals, in order to achieve political, economic, or social objectives.

Collective Violence
200

Sharp surge of harassment, attacks, and violent threats targeting public officials and their families.

Political Factors

200

Aggression that is part of an emotional reaction.

Reactive
200

Violence based on prejudice and discrimination among ethnic groups in the larger society.

Bias Crime

300

Include injury, death, or psychological harm often as a result of circumstance. 

Unintentional injuries.

300

Multiple ways in which social, economic, and political systems expose particular populations to risks and vulnerabilities leading to increased morbidity and mortality.

Structural Violence

300

Stress and depression resulting in potential substance abuse.

Mental Health Factors

300

An act of racism towards everyone of a race, gender or group

Macroagression


300

Keeping your operating system up to date protects you from what kind of crime?

Cyber Crime