Contributed by criminal justice and sociology specialists from North America, the 13 chapters in this volume consider key issues and questions related to the sociology of violence and homicide, mainly in the US. They address the role of family and gender, including child murder, the Dallas Domestic Violence Task Force and its response to domestic violence, and female homicide offenders; institutions and identity aspects involved in violent crime, including the relationship between religion and violence in the context of the Manson Family, violence on college campuses, and serious forms of bias violence; the role of police and other state institutions, including trends in homicide clearances, police violence involving minority citizens, how police typically respond to instances of violence, and the role of the American Dream in racial violence; and global and comparative dimensions, including international trends of homicide, the role of poverty and homicide around the world, and strategies to address criminal homicide in Trinidad and Tobago.