Title: Violent Crime
1Violent Crime
2Definition - What do we mean by violent crime ?
- Popular notions of violent crime
- violence in public places and violence against
the police... they seldom refer to violence in
the home, to vehicular assaults..., to accidents
at work, or to violence by the police - (Levi, p295-296)
- The hegemonic image (is) that real violence
and crime is something that occurs on the street,
in public, and is committed by strangers - (Stanko,1994,p34)
- Need to distinguish between intentional violence
and unintentional and between instrumental
violence and expressive violence.
3Legal Definitions
- The Home Office distinguishes between
- More serious offences e.g. Murder,
Manslaughter, Causing death by dangerous driving,
wounding etc. - and
- Less serious offences e.g. Possession of
weapons, Harassment, Assault on a constable,
Cruelty or neglect of children - But it does not include
- (i) sexual assault (classified under sexual
offences) - or
- (ii) non-indictable offences e.g. common
assault or assault on a police officer. These
are summary offences and dealt with by
Magistrates Court.
4The benefits of a legal definition.
- We get a category which can be used to collect
data. - This produces Official Statistics on crime trends
official snapshot - Comparative data can tell us how things may
change - By Type
- Over time
- By Victim etc
5Official Snapshot on crime
- (Notifiable Offences recorded by the police in
2000) - Since the 1950s violent crime has been on the
increase even when general crime has dropped.
6The most common recorded violent crimes in
England Wales
- (a) Street brawl
- (b) Domestic violence
- (c) Pub brawl
- (d) Attack on public servant
- Davidoff Greenhorn (1991)
- N.B. Murder is very rare in UK but assault is
common.
7Patterns of victimisation
- By group (age, gender, ethnicity, sexuality etc).
- By weapon (Gun crime and Knife crime on the
increase in major cities a specific crime
within a specific criminal culture Tony Blair
2007). - By country Scotland (3) has the highest level
of assault in the developed world. England and
Wales (2.8). USA (1.2). Italy (0.2) Japan
(0.1). - (UN Report see The Times 19/9/05)
- By region or city Glasgow, Liverpool,
Manchester, London, Nottingham etc
8The limitations of official snapshots
- Official definitions are conventionally
delimited and ignore MOST crime (Levi). - Emphasises the extreme and overlooks the
normality of everyday violence (Baumeister). - Reveals only reported and recorded levels of
violence. - Interpretation (by victims and CJS crucial).
- Dark figure of hidden violence is problematic.
- Violent crime can be a catchall which does
not differentiate between the levels of
seriousness. - These snapshots tell us nothing about the
physical and psychological effects of
victimisation.
9Crime Surveys
- The British crime surveys (since 1982) suggest
that increased rates of violent crime may reflect
real increases of violence in society e.g. BCS
1989 - violent crime of wounding, robbery or
sexual offences 6 of all crime - (almost identical to Official proportional
estimates ). - A lot more crime but much of it petty.
- Increases have been less steep than official
- Stranger danger on the increase.
- 'Risk' is on average low especially for women and
elderly despite their greater fears. - Public fear of crime is high exaggerates risk
of violent crime (see moral panics)
10Public fear of violent crime
- 1 in 10 men in the Scottish Crime Survey (1992)
gave crime as a reason for not going out on foot
compared to 1 in 3 women. - In the BBC Radio 4 series The Violence Files
(White Knuckles) 75 of the sample surveyed
thought they were more at risk today than they
were in the past (approx 1995). - Random violence appears to be directed at young
men - But, women are more likely to fear violent
attack. - But is all this a response to a moral panic
over violent crime (If it Bleeds it Leads)? - Media coverage may create climates of unsafety
(Stanko) - See also Dutton who challenges the validity of
some of these survey results.
11Is Violent Crime really getting worse? (Levi pp
318-321)
- Murder rate is actually half what it was in the
17th century. - General public violence - decline in U.S.
Britain in the 19th century but post 1950s
clear increase. - Measured by both O.S. and C.S. there seems
little doubt that there was a substantial
increase in violent crime during the 1980s in
England. - Assaults on the police
- 1850s - 1914 - fell by 64
- Today even lower (approx 12 of force are
assaulted every year). - Murders of police have remained same since 1964 -
46 officers in 26 years. - Violent Crime Reduction Act 2006 attempts to
tackle violent crime involving alcohol, guns and
knife crime.
12But some groups are right to be concerned because
they are more at risk
- Racial attacks
- See Hate Crime also Skellington (1992) Race in
Britain Today - chp. 3 and Modood (1997) chpt8 -
Asians, Afro-Caribbean - Social Class
- The poor at risk (Is part of life a culture
of violence and defence of territory)
13Occupation Risk
- The staff most at risk were those dealing with
members of the public in descending order of
risk they are - Police Officers
- Social / Welfare workers
- Probation Officers
- Publicans and Bar Staff
- Security Guards.
- (in OConner, N Violence at Work in The Safety
Health Practicioner April 2000 ) - NHS - 95,500 incidents of violence and aggression
were recorded in 2001-2002. - Nurses were most likely to be the victims, and
mental health workers were least likely to report
incidents. - Teaching Nigel Nagruci (NAUWT) on teachers as
victims - more violence over past 20 years,
especially past 5. - New trends girls as well as boys, offenders are
getting younger, increased use of weapons,
exacerbated by closure of special schools
14Age
- Very young at risk - child abuse
- Teenagers - assault and rape.
- In general young people are more at risk of
becoming victims of any form of violence except
spouse abuse and this is related to the general
patterns of life they lead, including the kinds
of group drinking and quarrels in public places
they get into - (Levi p309)
- Below 40s - at risk
- Over 40 - very rare
15Gender
- From an early age girls are more at risk than
boys from sexual assault and abuse. But for
random violence and murder males are the victims
as well as the perpetrators, - Murder - England Wales (1990)MF381228Whether by
acquaintance or stranger234181By aquaintance - Virtually all violence is committed by men.
- Male violence may even outrank disease and
famine as the major source of human suffering - (Archer Male Violence p1).
- Women have been recorded as committing
significant numbers of assaults 8 - 14 and
some murders, but this is still rare.
16Male v female views on violence
- In her text, 'Out of Control', Campbell (1993)
notes a clear distinction in the ways in which
men and women view their own violence women, she
claims, perceive outbursts of anger and displays
of aggression as a 'loss of control'. Men, on the
other hand, view their acts of aggression as a
means of 'gaining control'. - Both sexes see an intimate connection between
aggression and control, But for women aggression
is the failure of self-control, while for men it
is the imposing of control over other - (From Brookman 2000 Dying for Control).
17Gender offending
- Sex difference explains more variance in crime
across nations and cultures than any other
variable. - (Collier 19982)
- The goal of feminism is not to push men out so
as to bring women in but rather to gender the the
study of crime - (Renzetti 1993232)
- The Man Question - The maleness of crime has
been so taken for granted as to be rendered
invisiblestudies have tended to be on men as
offenders rather than offenders as men. - (Smith 2005353)
18The Man Question
- The statistics support the traditional view of
the problem as a male one. - This tends to be supported by a naturalistic view
of the aggressive male which comes from
socio-biology.
19But it may also be explained
- The profiles of violent and abusing men are
indistinguishable from men in general. - So what then is masculinity? Is it something
biological or is it a social construction?
20The masculine turn masculinity culture
- Socialisation processes gender is learned and
so are the behaviours which lead boys into
trouble. - Power Control men exert their dominance
through violence, intimidation, abuse as Smith
says the one emotion men do allow themselves is
anger. - Masculinity and identity work writers such as
Connell (1995) and Messerschmidt (1993) have
argued that there is an hegemonic masculinity
which is based upon notions of dominance and
toughness and which criminal activity and risk
taking are closely linked with traditional
notions of being a man. Doing crime can be seen
as a form of identity work. - In certain situations, men are likely to engage
in criminal behaviour as a mechanism for
constructing their masculinity - (Copes and Hochstetler 2003)
21Masculinity as a social construction
- Boys and girls are socialised into different
patterns of behaviour interaction thought
language and emotional response. - Real men Emotional toughness
- The instability of male identity
- The profiles of violent and abusing men are
indistinguishable from men in general.
22The costs to men?
- A restricted range of feelings
- Living in a world of distorted relationships
- Emotional illiteracy
- Distant communicating.
23The costs to society
- What we know about the nature of violent crime
is that males predominate as both offenders and
victims, at all levels (from the working class
man on the street to the powerful world leaders
who wage war). It is almost as if violence
belongs to men. Women very rarely use violence to
the same extent, or arguably, for the same sorts
of reasons as their male counterparts. As Collier
(1998, p.2) notes Sex difference explains more
variance in crime across nations and cultures
than any other variable. - (Fiona Brookman 2000)
24Masculinity domestic violence
- The centrality of competitiveness, competence,
aggression and objectification creates a
masculinity characterised by anxiety and
instability. Failure to impress, compete or
acknowledge competence particularly in areas of
sexuality may well lead to inadequacies and fears
which, not surprisingly, can then be projected
onto women and children - (Bates, 1997220)
- D. Violence tended to dominate early feminist
critique (1970s onwards)
25Male on male violence
- The masculine turn in the 1990s turned
attention to male interpersonal violence. - In Brookmans case study (2000) Male violence is
a means of asserting identity through toughness
control which may also be pleasurable - violence sometimes serves no other goal than to
exercise the feelings of power and pleasure that
are derived from an ability to control other
individuals. For some men, controlling others
enhances their self-esteem and feelings of
powerfulness and as such violence can be
pleasurable - Available online Dying for control
26Criticisms of hegemonic masculinity
- It ignores the possibility of biological and
psychological factors. - It overlooks the fluid nature of masculinity
- Masculinity is a problematic term is it
describing reality or an ideal type? - Emphasis on the negative aspects of masculinity
- What about alternative masculinities?
- See Newburn (2007) Chapters 15 32
- Hale et al (2005) Chapter 17.