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The Nature of Crime and Victimization

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They only measure crime reported to the police. All crime is not counted the same ... Tallies of crimes are not in synch, but trends reported are often quite similar. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Nature of Crime and Victimization


1
Chapter 2
The Nature of Crime and Victimization
2
Measuring Crime
  • Primary sources for measuring crime are
  • Official Data (Uniform Crime Reports)
  • Victim Surveys (National Crime Victim Survey)
  • Self-Report Surveys

3
Weaknesses of the Uniform Crime Reports
  • They only measure crime reported to the police
  • All crime is not counted the same
  • Indexed crimes are measured when reported
  • Non-indexed crimes are counted when an arrest is
    made
  • Reporting practices

4
Revising the Uniform Crime Reporting System
  • Definitions of crimes will be revised.
  • Counting method will be by the number of
    incidents.
  • More crimes will be included in each category.
  • Other changes to make the data more accurate.

5

National Crime Victim Survey
  • Data is gathered by the Bureau of Census and
    compiled by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
  • Sample includes 100,000 people in 50,000
    households.
  • Respondents are over the age of 12.
  • Respondents queried every six months about
    household and personal victimizations.

6
Self-Reported Crime Data
  • Asks respondents to tell about their criminal
    activities.
  • Measures the dark figure of crime.
  • Reveals that crime is a very common activity.
  • Demonstrates youth crime is spread throughout the
    social classes.
  • Is probably a reliable measure of trends over a
    period of time.

7
Compatibility of Crime Statistic Sources
  • Prominent crime experts have concluded that the
    data sources are more compatible than was first
    believed.
  • Tallies of crimes are not in synch, but trends
    reported are often quite similar.

8
Explaining Crime Trends
  • Factors that influence crime rate trends include
  • Social factors
  • Economic factors
  • Personal factors
  • Demographic factors

9
The Ecology of Crime
  • Crime is not equally spread across society.
  • Some factors that account for different crime
    patterns are
  • Day, season and climate
  • Population density
  • Firearms and crime
  • The Graduate Institute of International Studies
    in Geneva, Switzerland is the principle
    international source of public information on all
    aspects of small arms.

10
The Ecology of Victimization
  • Most victimization occurs in large urban areas.
  • Most incidents occur in the evening hours.
  • The most likely sites are open public areas.
  • An overwhelming number involve only one victim.
  • Most serious crimes take place after 6 p.m.

11
Social Class and Crime
  • A still-unresolved issue in criminology is the
    relationship between social class and crime.
  • Traditional crime has been thought of as a
    lower-class phenomenon (instrumental and
    expressive crime).
  • Methodologies used to measure the phenomenon vary
    widely.

12
Gender and Crime
  • Three data-gathering statistics tools support the
    theory that male crime rates are much higher than
    those of females.
  • Explanations include
  • Masculinity hypothesis
  • Chivalry hypothesis
  • Socialization
  • Development
  • Liberal feminist theory

13
Race and Crime
  • Official crime data indicate that minority
    groups members are involved in a
    disproportionate share of criminal activity.
  • Critics of these data argue police bias in the
    arrest process creates the differences.
  • Some critics believe institutional racism creates
    economic deprivation which leads to more crime.
  • Other researchers focus on family dissolution as
    an explanatory factor.

14
Careers and Crime
  • Most offenders commit a single criminal act and
    upon arrest discontinue their antisocial
    activity.
  • Some commit a few less serious crimes.
  • Career criminals or chronic offenders account for
    a majority of all criminal offenses.
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