-----Original Message-----
From: silklist [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Deepa Mohan
Sent: 01 July 2014 10:24
To: Intelligent Conversation
Subject: Re: [silk] A woman's reaction to England's world cup knock-out

On Tue, Jul 1, 2014 at 2:49 PM, SS <[email protected]> wrote:

> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbISE9IM5Sk


​There is no explanation of how that statistic, 38% rise in domestic 
violence...women being knocked about as a direct result of England being 
knocked out, was arrived at. ​

I am getting warier and warier of internet statistics and data....the net seems 
to be our modern equivalent of the vedas...ask not any question, but accept 
unhesitatingly...

Deepa.


The video itself doesn't cite sources for the statistics but it was covered 
extensively in the GB press.  

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/jun/08/police-fear-rise-domestic-violence-world-cup

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2671696/Clip-woman-anxiously-watching-football-reveals-domestic-violence-rises-England-exit-World-Cup.html

Most articles cite the University of Lancaster study that looked at 
correlations in police reports from 2002, 2006 and 2010.  

http://www.research.lancs.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/can-the-fifa-world-cup-football-soccer-tournament-be-associated-with-an-increase-in-domestic-abuse(c773c37b-8f97-48a8-8238-9d6f6c381b35).html

Abstract
This study aims to establish whether empirical evidence exists to support the 
anecdotal view that the FIFA world cup football (soccer) tournament can be 
associated with a rise in reported domestic abuse incidents, when viewed 
remotely via television. 

Methods
A quantitative analysis, using Poisson and negative binomial regression models 
looked at monthly and daily domestic abuse incidents reported to a police force 
in the North West of England across three separate tournaments (2002, 2006, 
2010). 

Results
The study found two statistically significant trends. A match day trend showed 
the risk of domestic abuse rose by 26% when the English national team won or 
drew, and a 38% increase when the national team lost. Secondly a tournament 
trend was apparent, as reported domestic abuse incidents increased in frequency 
with each new tournament. 

Conclusions
Although this is a relatively small study it has significant ramifications due 
to the global nature of televised football (soccer) tournaments. If replicated 
it presents significant opportunities to identify and reduce incidents of 
domestic abuse associated with televised soccer games.

Rgds,
Keith


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