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Three types of parents most likely to raise a murderer

Are you an anti, an uber or a passive type?

Olivia Petter
Friday 01 September 2017 14:09 BST
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The victim was found early Sunday morning in west London
The victim was found early Sunday morning in west London (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

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How do you know if you’re more likely to raise a killer than your neighbour?

Whether it’s a question you’ve considered only in playful terms or not, it’s a matter worth pondering, and a doctor of criminology at Birmingham City University has pointed out that there are three distinctive types of mothers that might be more likely to raise a murderer.

After examining 10 murder cases in the UK series Murderers and their Mothers, Dr Elizabeth Yardley began to demystify the psyche of killers by looking closely at their maternal relations.

Debunking accusations of sexism by explaining that mothers “matter more” in the making of murderers due to the “inherently gendered nature of society”, she used a blog on the Huffington Post, Yardley explained that care-giving and nurturing connotations can be taken for granted when it comes to motherhood.

The criminology professor and podcaster deems the killers’ mothers behaviour as a contributing factor in their actions.

“The mothers of the Fred West, Robert Black, Joachim Knychala, Leszek Pekalski and Richard Kuklinksi created environments where brutality was everyday and expected,” she writes. “They actively abused or neglected their children, creating deviant value systems in which the abnormal became normal.”

Yardley believes that each of these renowned murderers’ maternal figures fall into one of three categories, which thrive respectively due to social insistences that how we raise our children is a private issue and is not talked about openly.

“Privacy can be valuable as it allows us to restrict who has access to our family places and spaces and enables us to control who knows what about our families. However, it can also be the barrier behind which violence, abuse, neglect and denial can thrive - and the making of a murderer can begin,” she writes.

Anti-mothers

These women are typically victims of abuse themselves, hailing from brutal upbringings which prevented them from ever experiencing a happy and healthy home life. Whilst the majority of neglected and abused mothers will go on to raise normal families, in the hope of taking back the control they lacked as children, some will recreate their childhood experiences as adults and become the very aggressors they had once loathed, Yardley explained.

Uber-mothers

For uber-mothers, the issues begin outside of the home, as they usually come from traditional and stable families. They are fiercely protective of their children, determined that they will not be restricted by labels that might’ve held them back in the past such as poverty and minority. “They are the gatekeepers that hold off the outside world,” reveals Yardley, “protecting their child from scrutiny as their behaviour becomes increasingly deviant.”

Passive-mothers

Passive mothers live in fear of being judged by society. Due to their quiet and subdued nature, when their children show any moral ineptitudes or deficiencies in school and beyond, they will respond through denial i.e. they will brush any issues under the carpet in the hope that their troubles will simply go away.

Murderers and their Mothers will be returning to CBS Reality on Sunday 3rd September.

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