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  Vol. 28 No. 5, May 1973 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Assassination in Laos

Its Psychosocial Dimensions

Joseph Westermeyer, MD, PhD

Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1973;28(5):740-743.


Abstract

Ten cases of assassination in Laos were extensively researched using standard anthropological field techniques. These cases could be readily classified into three groups: criminal recidivism, dyssocial behavior (witchcraft), and abuse of power by nonelected officials. In addition to the differences among the three categories, there were also certain functional similarities among them. Behavior of the victims in all three groups had been deviant in regard to the community's norms, and it was deviant in such a way that it threatened community well-being in a major way. Assassination also served as a negative sanction to reinforce deference and amiability in interpersonal relations. In addition, it provided a problem-solving function when other means were not available for social problem resolution.

Assassination in Laos was compared to political homicide in the United States. In many respects, the former resembled the classic vigilantism of the American frontier, wherein extralegal execution was infrequently required for community survival. Presidential assassination appeared to have evolved from "neovigilantism," a form of homicide with personal, ethnic, religious, and political overtones.



Author Affiliations

Minneapolis

From the Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.


Footnotes

Accepted for publication Feb 5, 1973.

Reprint requests to University Hospitals, Box 393, Mayo Memorial Bldg, Minneapolis 55455.



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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Psychiatry in Indochina: Cultural Issues during the Period 1965-1975
Westermeyer
Transcultural Psychiatry 1977;14:23-38.
 





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