1st Edition
Fatal Family Violence and the Dementias Gray Mist Killings
Part 1
Chapter 1: Gray Mist Killings
Chapter 2: Dementing Illness: A Brief Introduction
Part 2
Chapter 3: Dementing Illness and Abnormalities of Mind
Chapter 4: Mercy and Exhaustion
Chapter 5: Prior Intimate Partner Violence and Abuse
Chapter 6: Thieves and Fraudsters
Part 3
Chapter 7: Problematic Contemporary Responses
Chapter 8: The Fiction of Prediction: Risk and Danger
Part 4
Chapter 9: Making Sense of Gray Mist Killings
Chapter 10: Global Implications
Biography
Neil Websdale is Director of the Family Violence Center at Arizona State University and Director of the National Domestic Violence Fatality Review Initiative (NDVFRI). He has published work on domestic violence, the history of crime, policing, social change, and public policy. His books include: Rural Woman Battering and the Justice System: An Ethnography (1998), which won the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Outstanding Book Award in 1999; Understanding Domestic Homicide (1999); Making Trouble: Cultural Constructions of Crime, Deviance, and Control (co-edited with Jeff Ferrell, 1999); Policing the Poor: From Slave Plantation to Public Housing (2001), winner of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Outstanding Book Award in 2002 and the Gustavus-Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights Award in 2002; Familicidal Hearts: The Emotional Styles of 211 Killers (2010). Professor Websdale’s social policy work involves helping to establish networks of domestic violence fatality review teams across the United States and elsewhere. His extensive fatality review work has contributed to the NDVFRI receiving the prestigious 2015 Mary Byron Foundation Celebrating Solutions Award. He has also worked on issues related to community policing, full faith and credit, and risk assessment and management in domestic violence cases. Professor Websdale trained as a sociologist at the University of London, England and currently lives and works in Flagstaff, Arizona.
"Fatal Family Violence and the Dementias is a must read for general readers, clinicians and academics interested in the violence against people with dementia and perpetrated by people with dementia. It takes an amazingly deep dive into 100 cases representing three continents. The writing is outstanding and riveting." - Virgil Hancock III M.D., M.P.H.
"This book tackles an understudied phenomenon that is likely to grow as our population ages: dementia-involved homicides. Websdale delves deeply into the dynamics that can lead people with dementia to become involved in homicide, either as victim or perpetrator. Websdale also calls for better criminal justice responses to these unique cases. This book, the first I have seen on this topic, promises to become a classic." - Sherry Hamby, University of the South, Director, Life Paths Research Center
"Neil Websdale is an incredibly gifted author who can weave together his academic brilliance with his compassion in the tragic and humane stories of family homicides and dementia. This book shines a light on the unique impact of aging on domestic violence that has been ignored for far too long. Ageism tried to shut the door on these discussion before Neil Websdale came along." - Peter Jaffe, Professor Emeritus, Faculty of Education, Western University (London, Canada) and author of Preventing Domestic Homicides






