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- <text id=93TT1442>
- <title>
- Apr. 19, 1993: Seeking the Roots of Violence
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 19, 1993 Los Angeles
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 52
- Seeking the Roots of Violence
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The search for biological clues to crime is igniting a brutal
- political controversy
- </p>
- <p>By ANASTASIA TOUFEXIS--With reporting by Hannah Bloch/New York
- and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It's tempting to make excuses for violence. The mugger
- came from a broken home and was trying to lift himself out of
- poverty. The wife beater was himself abused as a child. The
- juvenile murderer was exposed to Motley Crue records and
- Terminator movies. But do environmental factors wholly account
- for the seven-year-old child who tortures frogs? The teenager
- who knifes a teacher? The employee who slaughters workmates with
- an AK-47? Can society's ills really be responsible for all the
- savagery that is sweeping America? Or could some people be
- predisposed to violence by their genes?
- </p>
- <p> Until recently, scientists had no good way to explore such
- questions--and little incentive: the issue was seen as so
- politically inflammatory that it was best left alone. But
- advances in genetics and biochemistry have given researchers new
- tools to search for biological clues to criminality. Though
- answers remain a long way off, advocates of the work believe
- science could help shed light on the roots of violence and offer
- new solutions for society.
- </p>
- <p> But not if the research is suppressed. Investigators of
- the link between biology and crime find themselves caught in
- one of the most bitter controversies to hit the scientific
- community in years. The subject has become so politically
- incorrect that even raising it requires more bravery than many
- scientists can muster. Critics from the social sciences have
- denounced biological research efforts as intellectually
- unjustified and politically motivated. African-American scholars
- and politicians are particularly incensed; they fear that
- because of the high crime rates in inner cities, blacks will be
- wrongly branded as a group programmed for violence.
- </p>
- <p> The backlash has taken a toll. In the past year, a
- proposed federal research initiative that would have included
- biological studies has been assailed, and a scheduled conference
- on genetics and crime has been canceled. A session on heredity
- and violence at February's meeting of the American Association
- for the Advancement of Science turned into a politically correct
- critique of the research; no defenders of such studies showed
- up on the panel. "One is basically under attack in this field,"
- observes one federal researcher, who like many is increasingly
- hesitant to talk about his work publicly.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the distrust is understandable, given the tawdry
- history of earlier efforts to link biology and crime. A century
- ago, Italian physician Cesare Lombroso claimed that sloping
- foreheads, jutting chins and long arms were signs of born
- criminals. In the 1960s, scientists advanced the now discounted
- notion that men who carry an XYY chromosome pattern, rather than
- the normal XY pattern, were predisposed to becoming violent
- criminals.
- </p>
- <p> Fresh interest in the field reflects a recognition that
- violence has become one of the country's worst public-health
- threats. The U.S. is the most violent nation in the
- industrialized world. Homicide is the second most frequent cause
- of death among Americans between the ages of 15 and 24 (after
- accidents) and the most common among young black men and women.
- More than 2 million people are beaten, knifed, shot or otherwise
- assaulted each year, 23,000 of them fatally. No other
- industrialized nation comes close: Scotland, which ranked second
- in homicides, has less than one-fourth the U.S. rate.
- </p>
- <p> This cultural disparity indicates that there are factors
- in American society--such as the availability of guns,
- economic inequity and a violence-saturated culture--that are
- not rooted in human biology. Nevertheless, a susceptibility to
- violence might partly be genetic. Errant genes play a role in
- many behavioral disorders, including schizophrenia and manic
- depression. "In virtually every behavior we look at, genes have
- an influence--one person will behave one way, another person
- will behave another way," observes Gregory Carey, assistant
- professor at the University of Colorado's Institute for
- Behavioral Genetics. It stands to reason that genes might
- contribute to violent activity as well.
- </p>
- <p> Some studies of identical twins who have been reared apart
- suggest that when one twin has a criminal conviction, the other
- twin is more likely to have committed a crime than is the case
- with fraternal twins. Other research with adopted children
- indicates that those whose biological parents broke the law are
- more likely to become criminals than are adoptees whose natural
- parents were law-abiding.
- </p>
- <p> No one believes there is a single "criminal gene" that
- programs people to maim or murder. Rather, a person's genetic
- makeup may give a subtle nudge toward violent actions. For one
- thing, genes help control production of behavior-regulating
- chemicals. One suspect substance is the neurotransmitter
- serotonin. Experiments at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in
- North Carolina suggest that extremely aggressive monkeys have
- lower levels of serotonin than do more passive peers. Animals
- with low serotonin are more likely to bite, slap or chase other
- monkeys. Such animals also seem less social: they spend more
- time alone and less in close body contact with peers.
- </p>
- <p> A similar chemical variation appears to exist in humans.
- Studies at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
- Alcoholism conclude that men who commit impulsive crimes, such
- as murdering strangers, have low amounts of serotonin. Men
- convicted of premeditated violence, however, show normal levels.
- As for aggressive behavior in women, some researchers speculate
- that it might be tied to a drop in serotonin level that normally
- occurs just before the menstrual period. Drugs that increase
- serotonin, researchers suggest, may make people less violent.
- </p>
- <p> Scientists are also trying to find inborn personality
- traits that might make people more physically aggressive. The
- tendency to be a thrill seeker may be one such characteristic.
- So might "a restless impulsiveness, an inability to defer
- gratification," says psychologist Richard Herrnstein of Harvard,
- whose theories about the hereditary nature of intelligence
- stirred up a political storm in the 1970s. A high threshold for
- anxiety or fear may be another key trait. According to
- psychologist Jerome Kagan, also of Harvard, such people tend to
- have a "special biology," with lower-than-average heart rates
- and blood pressure.
- </p>
- <p> Findings like these may be essential to understanding--and perhaps eventually controlling--chronic wrongdoers, argue
- proponents of this research. "Most youth or adults who commit a
- violent crime will not commit a second," observes Kagan. "The
- group we are concerned with are the recidivists--those who
- have been arrested many times. This is the group for whom there
- might be some biological contribution." Kagan predicts that
- within 25 years, biological and genetic tests will be able to
- pick out about 15 children of every thousand who may have
- violent tendencies. But only one of those 15 children will
- actually become violent, he notes. "Do we tell the mothers of
- all 15 that their kids might be violent? How are the mothers
- then going to react to their children if we do that?"
- </p>
- <p> It is just such dilemmas that have so alarmed critics. How
- will the information be used? Some opponents believe the
- research runs the danger of making women seem to be "prisoners
- of their hormones." Many black scholars are especially
- concerned. "Seeking the biological and genetic aspects of
- violence is dangerous to African-American youth," maintains
- Ronald Walters, a political science professor at Howard
- University. "When you consider the perception that black people
- have always been the violent people in this society, it is a
- short step from this stereotype to using this kind of research
- for social control."
- </p>
- <p> The controversy began simmering more than a year ago, when
- Louis Sullivan, then Secretary of Health and Human Services,
- proposed a $400 million federal research program on violence;
- 5% of the budget would have been devoted to the study of
- biochemical anomalies linked to aggressive behavior. The program
- was shelved before being submitted to Congress, and one reason
- may have been the reaction to an unfortunate statement by Dr.
- Frederick Goodwin, then director of the Alcohol, Drug Abuse and
- Mental Health Administration. Commenting about research on
- violence in monkeys, Goodwin said, "Maybe it isn't just the
- careless use of the word when people call certain areas of
- certain cities `jungles.' " African Americans were outraged. The
- ensuing furor forced Goodwin to resign, though Secretary
- Sullivan then appointed him to head the National Institute of
- Mental Health, a job he still holds.
- </p>
- <p> Soon after that episode, the federally endowed Human
- Genome Project agreed to provide the University of Maryland with
- $78,000 for a conference on violence. When the program's
- organizers announced that the session would look at genetic
- factors in crime, opponents torpedoed the meeting. "A scandalous
- episode," charges Harvard's Herrnstein. "It is beneath contempt
- for the National Institutes of Health to be running for cover
- when scholars are trying to share their views."
- </p>
- <p> Dr. Peter Breggin, director of the Center for the Study of
- Psychiatry in Bethesda, Maryland, who led the opposition that
- scuttled the conference, has no apologies. "The primary problems
- that afflict human beings are not due to their bodies or
- brains, they are due to the environment," he declares.
- "Redefining social problems as public health problems is exactly
- what was done in Nazi Germany."
- </p>
- <p> Some critics see the current interest in heredity as part
- of an ugly political trend. ``In socially conservative times,"
- argues political scientist Diane Paul of the University of
- Massachusetts at Boston, "we tend to say crime and poverty are
- not our fault and put the blame not on society but on genes."
- </p>
- <p> Even staunch believers in heredity's influence do not
- discount environment. In fact, the two are intimately entwined,
- and separating cause and effect is not easy. Biology may affect
- behavior, but behavior and experience also influence biology.
- Serotonin levels, for example, are not only controlled by genes
- but, according to research in monkeys, they can be lowered by
- regular exposure to alcohol. By the same token, says Kagan, a
- child with a fearless personality may turn into a criminal if
- reared in a chaotic home, but given a stable upbringing, "he
- could well become a CEO, test pilot, entrepreneur or the next
- Bill Clinton."
- </p>
- <p> No one thinks that discovering the roots of violence will
- be simple. There may be as many causes as there are crimes. The
- issue is whether to explore all possibilities--to search for
- clues in both society and biology.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-