Preventing Violence Essays

  • Preventing Violence in healthcare

    794 Words  | 2 Pages

    Preventing Violence in Healthcare Ever seen a nurse who is afraid to return to work? What about a nurse that comes home on crutches, has bruises, or even just comes home with an emotional break down? These are all results of workplace violence in a healthcare setting. It is a very real issue that is currently on the rise. This sort of violence can result from an angry patient, visitor, or even another nurse on a variety of units. Unfortunately, because the healthcare setting can become very hostile

  • Preventing Workplace Violence

    4931 Words  | 10 Pages

    Preventing Workplace Violence Violence is all around us; we see it portrayed in one form or another everyday. It has become commonplace to see it on TV and in our own environment. To the average person this has become an acceptable part of life, along with taking personal precautions to prevent it from happening to them. However, there are a small few that need attention and see violence as a way to get their message across. Unfortunately, the media is right there to dramatize it for all

  • Preventing Teen Violence

    1058 Words  | 3 Pages

    Violence is defined as the intentional use of force to harm a human being. Its outcome is injury (whether physical or psychological, fatal or nonfatal). Violence among teenagers is on the rise, and has been since the early 1980's. In my opinion this is due to the increase of violence in the media, the astounding availability of firearms and the lack of proper guidance in the home. Northeastern University's College of Criminal Justice reports that from 1985 to 1993 murders committed by people over

  • Preventing Domestic Violence Essay

    949 Words  | 2 Pages

    Domestic violence can be defined as intimidation, physical violence, sexual assault, physical assault, battery, or any abusive patterns of power and control by one person against another. It can also include psychological violence and emotional abuse. Domestic violence often results in injury, trauma, and death resulting in emotional and physical devastation. Identifying domestic violence is not always easy to determine and may manifest over a period of time. Preventing domestic violence can be done

  • Preventing Domestic Violence In America

    731 Words  | 2 Pages

    In our society today, domestic violence is the not so good new trend Americans are facing and the women around the world as well. Domestic violence has been around for centuries and back then this topic hasn't been a big issue until Post-traumatic stress disorder became a mental health condition and depression can lead to suicide. The death rates and sexual assault have continued to increase. My experience with this sensitive topic has been overwhelming because it brings back the past I wanted

  • Preventing Violence Against Children

    1553 Words  | 4 Pages

    The nonfiction book Protecting Children from Violence: Evidence- Based Interventions, by Jim Lampinen and Kathy Sexton- Radek, contains staggering past and current research findings on the issue of atrocities against children. Jim Lampinen holds a PhD in cognitive psychology. Kathy Sexton- Radek is a licensed clinical psychologist in the state of Illinois. This writer chose the title as part of a psychology class writing assignment. After reading the contents of the book, this student could not help

  • Preventing Intimate Partner Violence

    569 Words  | 2 Pages

    Intimate partner violence is still a common issue that affects women from all walks of life. It is an issue that is too often ignored until the violence has become deadly. In the book “Women: Images and Realities a Multicultural Anthology,” chapter seven entitled “Violence Against Women” includes pieces that cover the issue of intimate partner violence. In Michele McKeon’s piece “Understanding Intimate Partner Violence” she states that “In 1994 the Violence Against Women Act was passed, revolutionizing

  • James Gilligan Preventing Violence Summary

    694 Words  | 2 Pages

    James Gilligan is an American psychiatrist who presents the causation and prevention of violence from his point of view of working in US prisons for decades in his book “Preventing Violence”. Gilligan provides readers with a multitude of data and theories, but his book (or at least the first four chapters) boils down to the fact that violence towards other is caused by shame. He calls upon his many years of interaction with prison inmates and explains how inmates who committed violent crimes often

  • Evaluation Jane Ellen Stevens' Article

    1440 Words  | 3 Pages

    So how are we, as viewers, affected by these stories? In her article, "The Violence Reporting Project: A New Approach to Covering Crime", Jane Ellen Stevens focuses on the effects the media have on the viewers and the people within a community. I agree with Stevens when she states that the media fails to provide viewers with information on community violence and violence prevention. Without the knowledge of the violence that is going on in our neighborhoods, we are led to not being able to distinguish

  • Preventing Bar Violence: A Study on Australian Drinking Culture

    1992 Words  | 4 Pages

    Violence in bars is a growing area of concern in modern day society, particularly in Australian culture where the consumption of alcohol is socially acceptable. Recently, the Australian media has been dominated by an alarming incidence of “king hit” attacks, suggesting that alcohol is a major cause for the increase in violence. By mapping the location of such crimes, studies have shown that they concentrate in particular places and at certain times. The fact that these crimes are thus non-random

  • Book Censorship: Good or Bad?

    866 Words  | 2 Pages

    not “protected” when unable to read books that contain adult material. Kids need to be exposed to things like sex and violence because if they are unfamiliar with these “adult” topics, when they come upon them in the uncensored, real world, their reactions will be unpredictable. Censoring reading material about murder, for example, may seem like a good solution to preventing violence among the future adult generation. But if a child did not understand the concept of taking another per...

  • Diversity in Video and Computer Games

    1905 Words  | 4 Pages

    races, right? Well, that’s what I’m here to examine. Violence and Gaming Up to this point, the majority of research based on video games was directed toward the two major concepts of gender and violence. The existence of violence in games is not up for debate; from Donkey Kong throwing barrels and Pac-Man eating ghosts during the birth of home gaming, to samurai Samanosuke slicing up demons in Playstation 2’s Onimusha series, violence has been prevalent in gaming. In fact, a study claims that

  • We Must Do More to Prevent School Violence

    3481 Words  | 7 Pages

    are many warning signs and ways to prevent this violence from taking place, it is just a matter of using money more wisely and creating more programs for preventing violence before it erupts in schools. There is no excuse for students to feel unsafe in an environment which the government forces them to be in. It is necessary that more action take place and that more training take place in order for schools to be safer, and in the event where violence does occur, the staff of the school is equipped

  • Argumentative Essay: Preventing Gun Violence In Schools

    658 Words  | 2 Pages

    child. Things never get back to the way they were.” -Dwight D. Eisenhower, the 34th U.S president. In Us, since 2013, there has been more than 300 school shooting. Since the 1999 Columbine shooting, more than 187000 students have been exposed to gun violence. To prevent the school shooting, one of the suggestion was to provide teachers with guns. The student’s don’t want guns in their school, and it’s not safe for the teachers to be armed with guns and teacher’s can misuse the gun. The student’s don’t

  • Workplace Violence

    1385 Words  | 3 Pages

    Workplace Violence In today's fast paced, stress riddled work environment it is no surprise that the workplace can become a foreground for violence. Employers must be extra careful when hiring and firing employees and stay aware with what is happening in the work environment that surrounds them. Extra precautions must be taken to ensure the safety of all employees in the workplace. Too many times employers do not take the proper steps in preventing workplace violence and the consequences are

  • Shame The Emotions And Morality Of Violence By James Gilligan Summary

    1082 Words  | 3 Pages

    sees this psychological perspective, and comes out with a different conclusion. In the article “Shame: The Emotions and Morality of Violence,” Gilligan emphasizes that shame is the reason why most people commit crimes, and they tend to “diminish the intensity of shame” by violence.(44) He explains the concept of preconditions, which are key elements for violence to happen, to discuss the origins of violent crimes. Gilligan suggests that violent men are “shameful to feel ashamed about themselves

  • Sexual Violence On College Campuses: Annotated Bibliography

    1081 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nguyen Hoang Anh CO 150- Fall 2016 9.27.2016 P3: Annotated Bibliography 1. “Campus Sexual Violence: Statistics”, RAINN, https://www.rainn.org/statistics/campus-sexual-violence. Accessed 27 September 2016. From the title, it is easily to see that the report talks about the statistics related to the campus sexual violence topic. It includes any things that you need to know, from the percentage of students having experience sexual assault to how campus law enforcement proves its usefulness in helping

  • A Wicked Problem

    1544 Words  | 4 Pages

    researching and analyzing the reality of domestic violence in Australia, the relevant of the statement above will be illustrated clearly. Wikipedia defines: “A wicked problem is a problem that is difficult or impossible to solve because of incomplete, contradictory, and changing requirements that are often difficult to recognize. The use of the term "wicked" here has come to denote resistance to resolution, rather than evil”. And domestic violence is an example of a wicked problem not only in Australia

  • Essay On School Violence

    1440 Words  | 3 Pages

    Preventing School Violence The number of extremely violent crimes occurring in schools has been increasing over the last three years. Incidents that deal with school violence occur 16,000 per school day, which is equivalent to once every six seconds (Kipnis 11). School violence has been around since the1950's, but back then it was more an issue of juvenile delinquency than violent behavior (Baker 3). Crime in and around schools is threatening the well being of students, as well as the staff

  • Media

    662 Words  | 2 Pages

    culture as a whole, we see that violence does exist in vast amounts. The problem of violence is compounded by the constant saturation that media coverage often provides. The media creates an almost artificial world for young people who do not have a single family member or extended family member to provide any small measure of love and kindness towards them. Naisbitt suggests that the boys involved in the Columbine shootings were absorbed in an environment full of violence. By means of television, movies