TY - SER AU - Zeoli, April M. AU - Malinski, Rebecca AU - Brenner, Hannah TI - The intersection of firearms and intimate partner homicide in 15 nations PY - 2017/// PB - Sage, KW - DOMESTIC VIOLENCE KW - GUNS KW - HOMICIDE KW - INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON KW - INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE KW - MEN KW - STATISTICS KW - STRANGULATION KW - VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE KW - WEAPONS KW - WOMEN KW - WOMEN'S USE OF VIOLENCE KW - PACIFIC KW - AFRICA KW - AUSTRALIA KW - CANADA KW - DENMARK KW - EUROPE KW - FIJI KW - FINLAND KW - GHANA KW - ISRAEL KW - THE NETHERLANDS KW - NEW ZEALAND KW - PORTUGAL KW - SOUTH AFRICA KW - SWEDEN KW - TURKEY KW - UNITED KINGDOM KW - UNITED STATES N1 - Trauma, Violence & Abuse, 2017, Advance online publication, 2 November 2017 (12 pages) N2 - "Intimate partners commit approximately one in three homicides against women worldwide. Little is known about situational factors that contribute to intimate partner homicides (IPH) and how they may differ across nations. This article provides a cross-national exploration of one situational factor, the use of firearms in the commission of homicides, and considers whether nations have laws designed specifically to keep firearms out of the hands of batterers. We conducted a systematic search of peer-reviewed research and governmental and nongovernmental reports for data on weapon use in IPH. Data were located for 15 nations and subnational areas, which varied from firearms being involved in no IPHs in Fiji to 59% in Antalya, Turkey." (From the authors' abstract). Data extracted from studies from New Zealand, Australia, Fiji, Canada, South Africa, the United Kingdom (England and Wales), the United States, three Scandinavian countries, The Netherlands, Portugal, Israel, Ghana and a province in Turkey were selected in this review. In New Zealand, data from the Family Violence Death Review Committee (2009-2012) identified 41 female and 11 male homicides. In male to female homicides (N=40), method used were identified as: guns, 17.5%; sharp force, 2.5%; other, 10%; blunt force, 2.5%; strangulation/suffocation, 7.5%; overkill, 60%. In incidents where a female victim kills a male aggressor (N=10), methods used were identified as: sharp force, 80%; guns, 10%; blunt force, 10%. In incidents where a female aggressor kills a victim (N=2), methods were identified as: blunt force, 50%; overkill, 50%. See Table 1 for data from the other 14 countries. Record #5691 UR - https://doi.org/10.1177%2F1524838017738725 ER -