Title: Victimization Theories
1Victimization Theories
- Victim Precipitation
- Life Style
- RAT
2Crime Victim
- The term "crime victim" generally refers to any
person or group who has suffered injury or loss
due to illegal activity - The harm can be physical, psychological, or
economic
3Victimization Theories
- What makes someone a victim? Look at
criminal-victim dyad - Victim as agent provocateur
- Victim characteristics contribute to
victimization - Situational context
- Spatial characteristics
- Can we decrease our chances of being victimized?
4Victimization and situational setting
- Individual behavior is a product of an
interaction between the person and the setting - Most criminological theories pay attention only
to the first, asking why certain people might be
more criminally inclined or less so - This neglects the important features of social
setting
5Benjamin Mendelsohn (1956)
- Father of victimology coined term victimology
- Discovered strong relationship between
victimization and social setting - Classification based on legal considerations of
the degree of the victims blame - 1. completely innocent (being in the wrong place
at the wrong time) - 2. victims with minor guilt/due to ignorance
- 3. victim as guilty as offender/voluntary victim
6Victim Precipitation
- The degree to which victim is responsible for own
victimization - Wolfgang (1958) first to empirically investigate
victim precipitation - Investigated homicides in Philly from 1948-1952
- Common factors
- Often victim and offender know each other
- Alcohol plays role
- Incident often escalates from minor altercation
to murder
7Victim Precipitation
- 60 of cases where women killed their husbands as
victim precipitated - 9 of incidents where men killed their wives as
victim precipitated
8Wolfgangs Study
- Victim was the first to slap, punch, stab..
- The prevalence of victim precipitation in murder
and assault is contrary to the popular image
victims as totally innocent
9Victim Precipitation and Homicide
- Interpersonal dispute is a dominant
characteristic of many homicides - Five stages of escalation for typical homicide
- 1. Victim makes a direct offensive verbal attack
against the offender (40 of victims initiate
the homicide drama by verbal threat)
10Victim Precipitation and Homicide
- 2. The offender interprets the victims words and
deeds as offensive - 3. The offender makes the opening to pay back
the victim for the previous insult - 4. The eventual victim stands up to the
offenders opening, responding with increased
hostility
11Victim Precipitation and Homicide
- 5. Commitment to battles ensues, the victim is
left dead or dying (35 of offenders carry gun or
knives, and nearly 65 leave the crime scene to
obtain weapons)
12Amirs analysis or rape
- Police records on rape incidents in Philly from
1958-1960 - 19 of all forcible rapes were victim-precipitated
- Factors alcohol, seductive actions by victim,
wearing revealing clothing, using risque
language, bad reputation - Offenders interpretation of actions is what is
important not what victim actually does
13Provocative dress - active precipitation
Female victims contribute to their attacks by
provocative dressing/behavior
14Do you believe in victim precipitation?
15Passive Precipitation
- Occurs when the victim exhibits some personal
characteristic that either threaten or encourages
the attacker - Related to power
- Group of immigrants arriving to the community and
compete for job - Love interest, promotion
16Problems with Victim Precipitation
- Assumption that behavior of victim can explain
criminal act - Responsibility Placed on Victim
- Creates Culturally Legitimate Victim
- Excuses Offenders Behavior
17Victimology Today
- Aim to search for the causes of victimization
- Search for remedies or prevention
- Concerned with
- How victims are defined
- How definitions are applied by victim by social
scientists, by community - How victims react to experience
- How society responds to victims systems for
dealing with victims
18Lifestyle Theory
- Victimization is the function of the victims
lifestyle - Going out in public places late at night, living
in urban areas - High-risk lifestyles drinking, taking drugs,
getting involved in crimes, leaving household for
a long time, etc - Do WSU students have high-risk lifestyles?
-
19Lifestyle Theory
- How to decrease your own victimization?
20Lifestyles Theory
- Micro-level theory
- Variations in lifestyle affect situations with
high victimization risks that an individual may
experience - People associate with
- Working outside of the home
- Leisure activities
- Someone who has drug dealer as friend more likely
to be victimized than someone with prosocial
friends
21Empirical Tests
- General findings homes that are well-guarded are
less likely to be burglarized, people who stay
out late and drink heavily are more likely to be
crime victims - Schwartz and Pitts (1995) study of college women
at Ohio University - Most likely to be victim
- Number of nights go out drinking (suitable
target/absence of guardianship) - Whether have friends who get women drunk for
purpose of having sex (motivated offender) - Experiencing uncomfortable advances in bar
(suitable target, motivated offenders, absence of
capable guardianship)
22Dangerous Times
- Nighttime and weekends are the peak times for
most violent crimes, property offenses, and
public order violations - Darkness is a criminogenic condition (fewer
people are around, higher rates of drug and
alcohol use, greater anonymity)
23Dangerous places
- Dangerousness of particular physical locations
changes according to crimes - Victims homes (homicide, assault, sexual
offenses) - Streets around victims homes and deserted areas
near parking lots and entertainment
establishments (muggers and auto thieves)
24Dangerous Times and Places for Homicide and
Aggravate Assault
- Homicide
- Evening hours (6pm-6a.m) (70)
- Weekends (39)
- Home/residence (35)
- Street/alley (39)
- Vehicle (10)
- Commercial places (6)
- Aggravated Assault
- Evening hours (6p.m. midnight) (49)
- Within 1 mile of residence (54)
- Streets/parking lots (34)
- In or near victims home (28)
- Schools (5)
- Home of friend/relative/neighbor (9)
25Victim profile in homicide and aggravated assault
- Homicide victims
- Male (76)
- White (50) African american(48)
- 13-24 years old (32)
- Same race of victim and offender (89)
- Single and never married (54)
- Urban resident (54)
- Employed (56)
- High risk occupations
- 1. Taxicab driver and Chauffeurs
- 2. Police/Law enforcement officials
- 3. Hotel clerks
- 4. Garage service station employee
- 5. Stock handlers and baggers
Aggravated assault victims Male (68) White
(77) African american(19) 16-24 years (17 per
100,000) Never married (13 per 100,000) Divorced/S
eparated (13 per 100,000) Family income lt7,500
(20 per 1,000) Urban resident (11 per
1,000) One-Victim incident (90) Victim tried to
protect self (74) Victim physically injured
(25) Average rate (7.5 per 100,000)
26Sociodemographic Characteristics of Offenders
Overrepresented for Each Crime Type
27Time and Place Elements of Crime Profiles
28Situational Elements of Crime Profiles
29Routine Activity Theory
- Cohen, Felson (195)
- Opportunity makes the thief
- RAT argues that when a crime occurs, three
things happen at the same time and in the same
space - 1. a suitable target is available
- 2. there is the lack of a suitable guardian to
prevent the crime from happening - 3. motivated offender is present
30Routine Activity Theory
31A Suitable Target
- The first condition for crime is that a suitable
target must be available - There are three major categories of target
- a person
- an object
- a place
32Potential Targets
- Four things make a target suitable to an offender
and these use the acronym VIVA - Value. The offenders value the target for what
they gain or value the effect they have on it - For example, a burglary might occur because the
burglar wants the stolen items or wants the money
made from selling them - Offender might damage a bus stop, because he/she
gets satisfaction (value)
33Potential Targets
- Inertia. The size or weight of an item can effect
how suitable it is. For example, items such as
CDs and watches are suitable targets for
shoplifters because they are small and portable. - Visibility. How visible a target is can affect
its suitability. For example, items left in view
of a window or someone counting money near a cash
point machine are visible targets. - Access. If a target is easy to get to, this
increases its suitability. So, goods displayed
outside shops, or someone walking through a
deserted street alone at night are accessible.
34Absence of a Capable Guardian
- A capable guardian is anything, either a person
or thing, that discourages crime from taking
place - Police patrols, security guards, Neighbourhood
Watch schemes, locks, fences, barriers, lighting,
alarm systems, vigilant staff and co-workers,
friends - A guardian can be present, but ineffective. For
example a CCTV camera is not a capable guardian
if it is set up or sited wrongly - Staff might be present in a shop, but may not
have sufficient training or awareness to be an
effective deterrent
35Likely Offenders
- Gain/Need poverty, to feed a drug habit, greed.
- Society/Experience/Environment living in a
culture where crime is acceptable, because of
peer pressure, coercion, lack of education, poor
employment prospects, envy, as a rebellion
against authority. - Beliefs a belief that crime in general or
particular crimes arent wrong, as a protest on a
matter of principle, prejudice against certain
minority/ethnic groups.
36The offender profile in burglary
- Male (88)
- White (68), African American (30)
- lt25 years old (64)
- Prior arrest record (79)
- Prior felony arrest record (68)
- Little offense specialization
37The victim profile in household burglary
- Highest
- lt19 years old head of household
- African American/Latino
- Incomelt15,000
- Urban resident
- Renter
- Six or more people in households
- Resident for less than 6 months
- Multifamily unit
- Lowest
- 65 or older head of household
- White/non-Latino
- Income gt75,000
- Rural/Suburban
- Owner
- Live alone
- Residents for more than 5years
- Single-family unit
38Benett and Wright (1984)
- Found that burglars use a variety of cues in
selecting targets (empirical test of RAT) - Surveillability refers to the extent to which a
house is overseen by neighbors or passerby
39How to chose a target
- Signs of occupancy (internal lightening, cars
in a garage, seeing resident in the house, noise,
voices) - Accessibility refers to easy of entry without
detection (alarms, window and door bars, security
entrances, etc)
40Empirical Validity of RAT
- Sherman (1989) hot spots study
- He focused on criminology of place and used
Minneapolis police call data - Most crime reports (calls) came from only 3 of
all locations in the city - Those places attracted offenders (absence of
guardians)
41Evaluation of RAT
- RAT is not a theory of criminal behavior, it is a
theory of criminal victimization - Theory does not explain why some persons are
motivated to commit crime - Does not explain why informal/formal control
exercised to prevent crime - It just assumes that informal/formal guardians
are not present or able to prevent crime, then
crime will occur - Theory of common sense (Akers, 2000)
- Sit at home, watch television, decrease chance of
being victimized
42Policy Implications
- Situational Crime Prevention stop crime by
preventing the intersection in time and space of
offenders and targets that lack guardianship - Make target less attractive and offenders will
choose not to commit crime