Extent of Crime and Victimization
Order ID 53563633773 Type Essay Writer Level Masters Style APA Sources/References 4 Perfect Number of Pages to Order 5-10 Pages Description/Paper Instructions
Extent of Crime and Victimization
Chapter 2
Extent of Crime and Victimization
How much crime is there in the United States?
What are the victimization trends in the United States?
Are there differences by race?
Where can we find answers to these questions?
How reliable and valid are crime statistics in empirical research?
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Gabbidon, Race and Crime, 5e. © SAGE Publishing, 2019.
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Extent of Crime and Victimization
The Bureau of Justice Statistics is the primary statistical agency in the U.S. Department of Justice
Some of the research that relies on crime statistics leads to misperceptions about race and crime
Although crime statistics were not initially designed to label certain groups of people as criminals, this is exactly what has occurred
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History of Crime and Victimization Statistics in the United States
The history of crime statistics in the United States dates back to the 19th century
Several state legislatures mandated the collection of statistics on crime and criminals.
Judicial statistics
Prison statistics
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New York (1829) and Pennsylvania (1847) required clerks of the courts to submit transcripts or statements of convictions and/or criminal business. In 1832, Massachusetts mandated that the attorney general report his work and the work of the district attorneys to the legislature. In Maine (1839), county attorneys were required to report the number of persons prosecuted and their offenses to the attorney general who also was required to submit a report to the governor. Twenty-five states legislated the collection of judicial criminal statistics between 1829 and 1905 (L. N. Robinson, 1911).
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The Uniform Crime Reporting Program
In 1930, the FBI began collecting data from police departments
Seven offenses comprised the crime index:
Murder/nonnegligent manslaughter
Forcible rape
Robbery
Aggravated assault
Burglary
Larceny/theft
Motor vehicle theft
In 1979, arson was added
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The Uniform Crime Reporting Program, cont.
In 1980, the UCR renamed arrest race categories to include American Indian or Alaskan Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander
During the 1980s, efforts to modernize the UCR program resulted in the implementation of the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS)
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The NIBRS has several advantages over the UCR program, although not all states participate in it. It is scheduled to replace the UCR on January 1, 2021.
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Victimization Surveys
In 1972, the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration implemented the NCVS (National Crime Victimization Survey)
The survey includes collected information from a representative sample of households on victims of nonfatal violent and property crimes in the United States
Early surveys included approximately 100,000 persons and 50,000 households
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In 2000, questions were added to the NCVS to identify victims of hate crimes.
Enhanced screening questions are believed to have improved recall of respondents about domestic violence, rape, and sexual attacks, which has led to higher estimates of some victimization rates.
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Limitations of Arrest and Victimization Data
Crime statistics are unreliable because they cannot tell us how much crime takes place, how many persons were arrested, or how many crime victims there are
Definition of racial categories is limited
Racial categories do not account for ethnic differences within groups (e.g., Jamaican, Haitian, and African)
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Gabbidon, Race and Crime, 5e. © SAGE Publishing, 2019.
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Defining Racial Categories
Despite efforts to improve racial/ethnic categories, they are fatally flawed for two reasons
They are unable to capture intraracial and intraethnic heterogeneity
How racial categories and ethnicity are determined is questionable and often inaccurate
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Variations in Reporting and Recording
For various reasons, citizens do not report, and police do not record, all crimes
Police selectively enforce the law, which might contribute to variations by race
Variations in crime categories
Recording only the most serious crimes is also problematic for the UCR
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Using a sample of 810 randomly selected adults from Pennsylvania in 2010, Gabbidon and Higgins (2013) asked respondents two questions on race and crime statistics: first, “Do you support law enforcement agencies’ recording of arrest statistics by race”; and second, “Please indicate your level of agreement with the following statement: The recording of arrest statistics by race promotes racial stereotypes.” On the first question, the results showed that more than 50% of the sample did not support the recording of race crime statistics. This result held true even after controlling for the race of the respondent. On the second question, the results showed that nearly 60% of the sample felt that recording race and crime statistics promotes racial stereotypes. On this question, non-Whites were more likely than Whites to believe that recording race and crime statistics promotes stereotypes.
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Utilization of Population, Crime, Arrest, and Victimization Estimates
Estimations are an important part of the methodology and findings reported in both the UCR and NCVS
The UCR uses population estimates to calculate the crime and arrest rates
The NCVS relies on a sample of the population to estimate crime victimizations
Though victimization statistics have their limitations, they have value for examining patterns and trends by race/ethnic categories
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Several of the problems with the NCVS samples:
First, representativeness of the samples.
Second, survey estimates are based on sampling units that may not adequately capture all racial groups in the population.
Third, for Asians and American Indians, the sample size is so small that it affects the reliability of the estimate.
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Arrest Trends
The UCR provide crime data for eight offenses (four violent crimes against the person and four property crimes)
In 2016, the violent crime rate was much lower than the property crime rate
Compared to earlier decades, the number of arrests have trended downward in all racial categories
Between 2012 and 2016, Whites and Blacks were mostly arrested for drug violations
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Recent trends show Whites arrested more often than Blacks for aggravated assaults and rapes.
There is no way to determine the number of Hispanics/Latinos still included in the White category because not all agencies report ethnicity data.
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Victimization Trends
The NCVS publishes other reports that present victimization trends and analyses of victimization within racial groups
Unlike the UCR, since 1977, the NCVS has included a separate category for “Hispanic/Latino” and, more recently, “Two or More Races”
Homicide victimizations are reported annually in the UCR Supplementary Homicide Reports and have been published in the NCVS as well
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Victimization Trends
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Gabbidon, Race and Crime, 5e. © SAGE Publishing, 2019.
Domestic Violence and Interpersonal Violence Victimization
Domestic violence victimization (DVV) refers to both fatal and nonfatal incidents that take place in families, between intimate partners, or with friends and acquaintances
Offenses occur regardless of one’s race, age, or class
2003–2012 rates of domestic violence are highest for persons between 18 and 24 years old
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Race and Human Trafficking
Human trafficking is defined as the recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or other services and for coercive commercial sex acts
According to the FBI’s Human Trafficking Reporting System (HTRS), in 2016, there were 916 adults arrested for human trafficking, with Whites (626) and Blacks (251) predominating the arrests
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Homicide Victimizations
Homicide is one of the more accurately measured offenses
Arrest trends for murder/nonnegligent manslaughter can be analyzed by type of jurisdiction where the arrest occurred
Between 2012 and 2015, Blacks arrested for murder outnumbered Whites arrested in cities
In metropolitan and nonmetropolitan counties and suburban areas, the number of Whites arrested for murder outnumbered Blacks
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Gabbidon, Race and Crime, 5e. © SAGE Publishing, 2019.
Hate Crime Trends
The terms hate or bias crimes refer to offenses committed against individuals because of their race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or disability
Lynching was one of the earliest types of hate crimes, though it was not always considered a criminal act
As long as hate/bias statistics have been available, most offenses reported are motivated by anti-Black bias
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According to the NCVS, half of victims of hate crimes reported perceiving race as the primary offender motivation.
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Hate Crime Trends
Hate crime is more likely than street crime to involve crimes against the person than crimes against property
Hate crime is also more likely to be interracial; the race of most known offenders is White
BJS study found that young offenders were responsible for most hate crimes
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Although there were fewer crimes against property, destruction/damage/vandalism ranked second to intimidation in hate/bias crime incidents.
The NCVS collects information on victims’ perceptions of incidents based on the offenders use of hate language and symbols
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Conclusion
For more than 70 years, the UCR has been the primary source of crime statistics
For over 30 years, the NCVS has provided victimization data
While the data provide information about race and crime, racial categorization in each data set is problematic
Although hate/bias crimes have occurred for several hundred years, the collection of hate crime statistics is rather recent
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Decades of comparisons made between Blacks and Whites as arrestees and victims have resulted in several misperceptions
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Conclusion, cont.
Crime statistics tell us either nothing (UCR) or little (NCVS) about the effects of class and crime
Fixation on violent crimes has contributed to the racialization of crime
Hate crimes reveal a dimension of race and crime that is often ignored
Blacks are more likely to be the victims of bias crimes than any other group
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Gabbidon, Race and Crime, 5e. © SAGE Publishing, 2019.
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