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Measuring Crime and Sources of Crime Data

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FBI's national data series. Summary-based measure of crime. Collected since 1930 (voluntary) ... FBI and BJS joint effort to convert UCR to NIBRS. Incident ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Measuring Crime and Sources of Crime Data


1
Measuring Crime and Sources of Crime Data
  • Stephanie Halter
  • 1/26/05

2
  • VARIABLES logical groupings of attributes
  • gender
  • ATTRIBUTES are characteristics or qualities that
    describe some object
  • male and female

3
  • DEPENDENT VARIABLE the variable assumed to
    depend on or be caused by another variable
  • INDEPENDENT VARIABLE the variable assumed to
    cause or determine a dependent variable

4
Criminal Justice Research
  • CRIME OR DELINQUENCY
  • Most often key dependent variable
  • What causes crime?
  • Why are some individuals/groups more prone to
    crime?
  • How much crime in a certain area?
  • But can also be independent variable
  • How does level of neighborhood crime affect
    individuals fear of crime?

5
Issues in Measuring Crime
  • TYPE OF OFFENSE
  • UNITS OF ANALYSIS what or who is to be
    described or analyzed (i.e. individuals, groups,
    countries, organizations, cities, social
    artifacts)
  • Offender
  • Victim
  • Offense an individual criminal act (a theft)
  • Incident one or more offenses committed by the
    same offender, or group of offenders acting in
    concert, at the same time and place. (FBI, 1998)

6
  • PURPOSE OF MEASURING CRIME
  • Monitoring
  • Agency accountability
  • Research

7
Available Measures of Crime
  • CRIMES KNOWN TO POLICE
  • Based on police records
  • Uniform Crime Reports (UCR)
  • FBIs national data series
  • Summary-based measure of crime
  • Collected since 1930 (voluntary)
  • Purpose to indicate fluctuations in the level of
    crime in America and aid law enforcement in
    administration, operation and management
  • Annual Publication Crime in the United States
    (CIUS)

8
UCR
  • Index Offenses/Part I Crimes counted if reported
    to and recorded by police
  • Murder and nonnegligent manslaughter
  • Forcible rape
  • Robbery
  • Aggravated assault
  • Burglary
  • Larceny-theft
  • Motor vehicle theft
  • Arson (since 1978)

9
  • Part II Offenses are counted only if a person
    has been arrested and charged with a crime
  • Arrest data for
  • Shoplifting, drug sales and use, fraud,
    prostitution, simple assault, vandalism,
    receiving stolen property, and all other
    nontraffic offenses
  • Varying definitions of crimes from state to state
  • Hierarchy Rule

10
Incident-Based Police Records
  • Supplementary Homicide Reports
  • (SHR)
  • Incident-based
  • National-Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS)
  • FBI and BJS joint effort to convert UCR to NIBRS
  • Incident-based
  • Group A 46 offenses
  • Group B arrest data
  • No hierarchy rule
  • More accurate measure of crime

11
Victim Surveys
  • Asks people if they have been the victim of a
    crime
  • Surveys
  • Measures victimizations
  • Advantage-measures crimes not reported to police
  • National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)
  • Census Bureau since 1972
  • Nationally representative survey of households
  • Dark figure of unreported crime

12
NCVS
  • Homeless
  • Status offenses
  • Crimes against children
  • Not good measure of
  • Crimes against businesses
  • Victimless crimes
  • Homicide/manslaughter
  • Respondent recall errors or reluctance to admit

13
Surveys of Offending
  • Self-Report Surveys
  • asks people about crimes they committed
  • National Household Survey on Drug Abuse
  • National sample of households (12) by US Dept.
    of Health and Human Services since 1971
  • Lifetime use, current use, and heavy use
  • Monitoring the Future (MTF)
  • National Institute on Drug Abuse since 1975
  • Annual survey of high school students
  • (12th all years, 10th 8th grades-since 1991)

14
Drug Surveillance Systems
  • Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM)
  • National Institute of Justice (NIJ), since 1997
  • Replaced Drug Use Forecasting (DUF)
  • Quarterly sample of arrestees in certain cities
  • Self-Report Interviews and Urine Samples
  • Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN)
  • Nationwide sample of hospitals and medical
    examiners in major cities since early 1970s
  • Emergency room medical reports for drug
    episodes
  • Emergency room visits due to illegal/non-medical
    drug use
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