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Counting Crime Methods for Counting Crime?

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Presentation on theme: "Counting Crime Methods for Counting Crime?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Counting Crime Methods for Counting Crime?
Current Crime Numbers/Trends Explaining the Crime Drop

2 Methods of Measuring Crime
Uniform Crime Reports Self- Report Surveys Victim Surveys

3 Uniform Crime Reports Based on Crimes Reported to the Police
Based on a population unit of 100,000 people Divided into two representative categories: Indexed and non-Indexed Reported for U.S., Cities, and SMSA’s Crimes known / Arrest = Clearance Rate

4 Uniform Crime Reports Violent Crime Non-violent Crime
Part I “Index” Crimes Criminal Homicide Forcible Rape Robbery Aggravated assault Burglary Larceny/theft Motor vehicle theft Arson Part II Crimes All others except traffic Non-violent Crime

5 Criticisms and Limitations of the UCR
Cannot capture the “dark figure” of crime Methodological Hiccups Counting Rule Reporting Practices Attempted vs. Completed Crimes

6 The Future of the Uniform Crime Reports
National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) Maintained by the F.B.I. Twenty-two crime categories More information on each crime in each category Data compiled based on incidents, not arrests.

7 Self-Report Surveys Get at “Dark Figure of Crime” “Victimless Crimes”
Participants (usually juveniles) reveal information about their violations of the law Advantages Get at “Dark Figure of Crime” “Victimless Crimes” Compare to “official data” Measure theoretical concepts and connect with criminal behavior

8 Self-Report Surveys Disadvantages
May underestimate “chronic offenders” People Can Lie Survey Methodology Problems Seriousness of Offense

9 National Crime Victimization Survey
1. Asks victims about their encounters with criminals 2. Nationally representative sample 3. May also describe people most at risk 4. Limitations: Little information about offenders Cannot assess some crimes Limitations of Survey Research

10 REVIEW UCR Self-report NCVS
Aggregate Data (see trends), Crimes known to police Self-report Individual level data, links offender characteristics to criminal offending NCVS Aggregate Data (see trends), victimizations

11 Crime Trends and Correlates of Crime
Is crime increasing, decreasing or stable? Why? Correlates of Crime What factors are related to crime? Geographic location, Age, Race, Gender, Social Class?

12 Crime Trends UCR and NCVS data reveal a steady decrease in violent crime since the mid 1990s The decrease is being driven by a sharp decline in violent crime among juveniles. NCVS indicates a long term trend of decreasing property crime Some difference with UCR data

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17 Duluth Violent Crime

18 Duluth Violent Crime

19 MN vs. National Violent Crime (per 100,000 citizens)

20 Explaining Crime Trends
The usual suspects Age Composition The Economy Social malaise Guns—Availability Justice Policy—Police or Prisons Reality? Difficult to predict trends

21 The Crime Drop (1990s-present)
Again, think young males in inner city areas Decline of the “Crack Cocaine” wars The “blunt” era Change in inner city culture Mass incarceration Freakonomics: Was it Abortion?

22 Correlates of Crime Demographics Age Sex Race

23 GENDER AND CRIME UCR, NCVS, and SR data all indicate that females are more likely than males to commit criminal acts Socialization? Biological differences? Feminist explanations

24 RACE AND CRIME SR weak if any relationship
Official data  strong relationship Is relationship due to bias? How police patrol and interact with minorities Disparity in how CJS processes minorities? NCVS data confirms some “true” race-crime relationship. Why does race predict crime? Relationship to class, neighborhood, culture

25 The Age-Crime Curve

26 Age and Crime Crime is “young” persons game HOWEVER
There is a group of “chronic” offenders that persist in crime after adulthood The “Chronic” 6%

27 Continuity of Crime Cohort studies clearly show that
most chronic juvenile offenders continue their law-violating careers as adults. Then and ………….. NOW

28 Crime Victimization Criminals and victims tend to look the same demographically Most crime is intraracial Victimization for most crimes most likely among Young Male Urban

29 What is counted counts We have no “UCR” mechanism to gauge white collar crime How to assess insider trading, environmental crimes, corporate crime? Most large corporate crime prosecutions in in a settlement


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