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Section 1
Warning Behavior:
Third Party for which You have the Duty to Warn

Question 1 | Test | Table of Contents

UW School of Law

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-Karwaki, T. E., JD, LLM, PhD, Greenberg, J., JD, LLM, Weiss, A., LLM & Keene, G., JD. (December 1, 2017). Volk v. DeMeerleer Study. UW School of Law Center for Law, Science and Global Health. 5-13.

Update
Duty to Warn

- Gorshkalova, O., & Munakomi, S. (2022). Duty to Warn. In StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing.



Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
Hendrix, J. A., Planty, M. G., & Cutbush, S. (2022). Leakage warning behaviors for mass school violence: An analysis of tips reported to a state school safety tip line. Journal of Threat Assessment and Management, 9(1), 33–51.

Ohtsubo, Y., Sasaki, S., Nakanishi, D., & Igawa, J. (2018). Within-individual associations among third-party intervention strategies: Third-party helpers, but not punishers, reward generosity. Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences, 12(2), 113–125.

Slemaker, A. (2022). Studying mass shooters’ words: Warning behavior prior to attacks. Journal of Threat Assessment and Management.

QUESTION 1
To characterize a potential third party victim for which you have the Duty to Warn, what victim descriptions can be used? To select and enter your answer go to Test.