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Original Articles

Sources of Support for African-American Family Members of Homicide Victims

Pages 197-216 | Published online: 11 Oct 2008

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (2)

Camille Hannays-King, Annette Bailey & Mahlon Akhtar. (2015) Social support and Black mothers’ bereavement experience of losing a child to gun homicide. Bereavement Care 34:1, pages 10-16.
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Articles from other publishers (24)

Dayan Hava. (2023) An Ecological Review of Homicide Bereavement’s Risk Factors: Implications for Future Research. Trauma, Violence, & Abuse 25:1, pages 413-429.
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Lauren A. Magee, Daniel Semenza, Sami Gharbi & Sarah E. Wiehe. (2023) Addressing Mental Health Needs of Secondary Homicide Survivors through a Social Determinants of Health Framework. Homicide Studies 27:4, pages 435-453.
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Kendall G. Morris & Judith C. Scott. (2022) “No One Can Feel My Pain”: The Experience of Black Women Survivors of Homicide Victims and System Agents’ Perspectives on the Impact of Homicide in the Boston Area. Homicide Studies, pages 108876792211395.
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Marieke Saan, Floryt van Wesel, Sonja Leferink, Joop Hox, Hennie Boeije & Peter van der Velden. (2022) Social network responses to victims of potentially traumatic events: A systematic review using qualitative evidence synthesis. PLOS ONE 17:11, pages e0276476.
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Jennifer K. Wesely & Susan Dewey. (2022) “I Want That Money Saved for ‘Real’ Victims”: Homicide Detectives’ Perceptions of Victims and Impacts on Advocacy and Services for Loss Survivors. Homicide Studies, pages 108876792211083.
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Camille Huggins & Glenda Hinkson. (2020) Signs of Traumatic Grief, Lack of Justice, Magnitude of Loss, and Signs of Resilience Following the Homicidal Loss of Their Adult Child Among Caribbean Black Mothers. OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 84:3, pages 914-934.
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Shona Robinson-EdwardsShona Robinson-Edwards. 2022. Faith, Identity and Homicide. Faith, Identity and Homicide 43 62 .
Travonne Edwards, Tanya Sharpe, Antonia Bonomo & Notisha Massaquoi. (2021) Exploring research on the coping strategies of black survivors of homicide victims: a scoping review protocol. BMJ Open 11:11, pages e049784.
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Jocelyn R. Smith Lee, Andrea G. Hunter, Fernanda Priolli & Veronica J. Thornton. (2020) “Pray that I live to see another day”: Religious and spiritual coping with vulnerability to violent injury, violent death, and homicide bereavement among young Black men. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology 70, pages 101180.
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Jocelyn R. Smith Lee & Michael A. Robinson. (2019) “That’s My Number One Fear in Life. It’s the Police”: Examining Young Black Men’s Exposures to Trauma and Loss Resulting From Police Violence and Police Killings. Journal of Black Psychology 45:3, pages 143-184.
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Larissa Saco & Danielle Dirks. (2018) Closure and Justice: A Qualitative Study of Perspectives From Homicide Survivorship Experts. Violence and Victims 33:5, pages 830-854.
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Tanya L. Sharpe, Derek Kenji Iwamoto, Johari M. Massey & Lynn Murphy Michalopoulos. (2018) The Development of a Culturally Adapted Pilot Intervention for African American Family Members of Homicide Victims: A Preliminary Report. Violence and Victims 33:4, pages 708-720.
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Jocelyn R. Smith Lee. 2016. Boys and Men in African American Families. Boys and Men in African American Families 85 92 .
Jennifer Connolly & Ronit Gordon. (2014) Co-victims of Homicide. Trauma, Violence, & Abuse 16:4, pages 494-505.
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Neil J. Vincent, Joy McCormack & Susan Johnson. (2014) A Comprehensive Conceptual Program Model for Supporting Families Surviving a Homicide Victim. Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal 32:1, pages 57-64.
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Tanya L. Sharpe. (2013) Understanding the Sociocultural Context of Coping for African American Family Members of Homicide Victims. Trauma, Violence, & Abuse 16:1, pages 48-59.
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Catherine A. Simmons, Malissa Duckworth & Erica Tyler. (2014) Getting By After a Loved One’s Death by Homicide: The Relationship Between Case Status, Trauma Symptoms, Life Satisfaction, and Coping. Violence and Victims 29:3, pages 506-522.
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Tanya L. Sharpe, Philip Osteen, Jodi Jacobson Frey & Lynn Murphy Michalopoulos. (2014) Coping With Grief Responses Among African American Family Members of Homicide Victims. Violence and Victims 29:2, pages 332-347.
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Margaret K. Nelson. (2013) Fictive Kin, Families We Choose, and Voluntary Kin: What Does the Discourse Tell Us?. Journal of Family Theory & Review 5:4, pages 259-281.
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Karen D. Lincoln, Robert Joseph Taylor & Linda M. Chatters. (2012) Correlates of Emotional Support and Negative Interaction Among African Americans and Caribbean Blacks. Journal of Family Issues 34:9, pages 1262-1290.
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Tanya L. Sharpe, Sean Joe & Katie C. Taylor. (2013) Suicide and Homicide Bereavement among African Americans: Implications for Survivor Research and Practice. OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 66:2, pages 153-172.
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Jan Breckenridge & Kerrie James. (2013) Therapeutic Responses to Communities Affected by Disasters: The Contribution of Family Therapy. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy 33:3, pages 242-256.
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Patricia Grant & Robyn L. Diehl. (2012) Participatory Behavior at Homicide Scenes: Crowd Formation or Community Continuity?. American Journal of Criminal Justice 37:3, pages 471-484.
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Tanya L. SharpeJavier Boyas. (2011) We Fall Down: The African American Experience of Coping With the Homicide of a Loved One. Journal of Black Studies 42:6, pages 855-873.
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