Fatal Family Violence and the Dementias
Gray Mist Killings
Abstract
This book explores dementia-related aggression, violence, and homicide through a detailed analysis of “gray mist killings.” The term gray mist killing refers to intimate partner homicides (IPHs) committed by spouses/partners suffering from dementia, homicides of dementia sufferers committed by their caregiving spouses/partners or other family members, and IPHs attributable to the complications of caring for a co-resident family member suffering from dementia.
Killings by people with dementia raise questions about the role of biological, psychological, and sociological forces. This book therefore encourages discussions around the relative weighting of these interrelated forces, and why the criminal justice system and the courts have a hard time handling these killings. It also adds to our understanding of the social responses to people with dementia, the orchestration of services, the nature of caring, and the interaction between sufferers and those familial, community, and state actors that provide support and care. The vividly detailed case studies (from the US, UK and Australia) uniquely inform criminological debates about violence, homicide, and the social responses to these complex phenomena. They are organized around the apparent motives for the killing, such as mercy, theft, prior intimate partner violence, mental illness, and exhaustion. The social responses of families, communities, and state actors are examined and contextualized against what researchers and dementia specialists suggest are promising or best practices for intervention. Apparent triggers or circumstantial precipitants for the killings invite discussion of signals, risks, and preventive interventions. The book culminates in an attempt to make sense of gray mist killings, as well as a discussion of broader implications and significance in relation to globalization, violence against women, the rising prevalence of the dementias, declining birthrates, climate change, and sustainable economic development.
Drawing from a variety of disciplines, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of criminology, sociology, psychology, psychiatry, anthropology, gender studies, social work, law, public policy, and gerontology. It should also appeal to judges, prosecutors, lawyers, social workers, gerontologists, law enforcement, adult protective services, physicians, psychologists, and psychiatrists.
Keywords
intimate partner homicides (IPHs);Violence and Mental Illness;Dwight Lamon Jones;criminal justice system;sustainable economic development;Family ViolenceDOI
10.4324/9781003333869ISBN
9781032368078, 9781003333869, 9781003846598, 9781003846567Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2024Imprint
RoutledgeSeries
Routledge Studies in Criminal Behaviour,Classification
Psychological theory, systems, schools and viewpoints
Social, group or collective psychology
Crime and criminology
Psychotherapy
Psychology of ageing
Health, Relationships and Personal development
Personal and public health / health education
Medical sociology
Nursing
Social work
Legal aspects of criminology
Psychiatry
Anthropology
Human biology
Gender studies, gender groups
Sociology
Health, illness and addiction: social aspects
Criminal justice law
Criminal or forensic psychology
Violence and abuse in society