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Victim Surveys Part 2

Crime, Justice & Security Statistics. Victim Surveys Part 2. Produced in Collaboration between World Bank Institute and the Development Data Group (DECDG). How can the results be integrated with the data held by the police?.

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Victim Surveys Part 2

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  1. Crime, Justice & Security Statistics Victim Surveys Part 2 Produced in Collaboration between World Bank Institute and the Development Data Group (DECDG)

  2. How can the results be integrated with the data held by the police? • Calculate total victimization estimates • Share these results with police statisticians • Try to reconcile survey results with police figures: gross up survey results using household numbers.- • There will be divergences. Typically 5 times as much crime takes place as is reported. • If the divergence is much more than this, then police recording systems may need to be changed or questions asked differently in the surveys • CSO should publish results together in its annual social statistics publications, to encourage public discussion.

  3. Mauritius - 2004 & 2007 Surveys and police data compared • The number of households that were victims of household burglary, including attempts, decreased from 16,200 in 2004 to 13,600 in 2007. • The number of households that were victims of vehicle theft, decreased from 13,500 in 2004 to 9,800 in 2007. • For personal theft, the number increased from 4,800 to 5,400. • The total number of offences reported at the police in 2007 was about 194,000, of which 72.1% were contraventions (mainly road traffic offences), 22.1% misdemeanors, 3.5% crimes punishable by penal servitude and/or a fine exceeding Rs5,000, and 2.3% drug related offences. • From 2006 to 2007, the number of offences reported at the police increased by about 3,500 or 1.9%; drug related offences increased by 15.9%, reported crimes by 15.6%, and misdemeanors by 10.2% while contraventions decreased by 1.4%.

  4. South Africa • UNICRI Survey 1993: Institute for Security Studies in 2003. • http://www.iss.co.za/pubs/Monographs/No101/Contents.html • Feelings of safety have declined markedly since 1998: • About a third personally know someone who makes a living from crime in their area • Few take additional measures to protect themselves or their property, • 23% of South Africans were victims of a crime in 2002-3 • 5.6% had been asked to pay a bribe in 2002-3. • Of every 100 burglaries, 60 are reported to the police and only 50 recorded by them; so official figures are underestimates.

  5. Comparison of safety in various African Cities Crime in Dar Es Salaam, Results of a city victim survey, July 2000

  6. Crime prevention in Dar Es Salaam, in 2000 Crime in Dar Es Salaam, Results of a city victim survey, July 2000

  7. Examples of victim surveys • The next six slides are for reference and further reading: eg. • Victim surveys carried out in Mauritius, UK, Tanzania and South Africa • The International Victimization Survey carried out in around 39 countries • The UN guidelines on victim surveys • These references include examples of • questionnaires used, • methodology employed • results obtained from the victim surveys.

  8. Victim survey - Mauritius • The Mauritius CSO carries out victim surveys by including questions on victimisation within their annual household survey, a stratified, two- stage cluster sample. • At the first stage, primary sampling units (PSUs) are selected from the PSU master sample with probability proportional to size. At the second stage of the sampling process, a fixed number of households are selected from each selected PSU. The number of households interviewed was 11,280 in 2007. • Results can be found on their CSO web site at http://www.gov.mu/portal/goc/cso/report/natacc/crime07/crime.pdf

  9. Victim survey – UK • The British Crime Survey is carried out within the British Home Office: • In the year 2007-8 one individual aged 16+ was selected from each of 47,000 households • Methodology and results can be found at: http://rds.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/bcs1.html • The results are extensive and include: • Victimization suffered • Reasons for not reporting • Satisfaction with the police and justice agencies • Reported illegal drug-taking • Victimization numbers are compared with crimes reported to the police

  10. Victim Survey - Tanzania • Surveys on Crime in various cities in East Africa are carried out by Safer Cities Tanzania within the Dar Es Salaam city authority • These surveys are part of wider programmes to improve the security situation for particularly young people in large cities in East Africa • Typically samples are drawn from records maintained by local city authorities • Results are published on the website http://www.unhabitat.org/list.asp?typeid=15&catid=375

  11. Victim Survey South Africa • The Institute of Security Studies has carried out victim surveys in South African in the period up to 2003. • A survey of crime in Greater Pretoria in 1998 was published on their web site at: http://www.iss.co.za/pubs/PTAVICSURVEY/Ptavictim.html and http://www.iss.co.za/pubs/PTAVICSURVEY/Contents.html • This covered burglary, car theft, car hijacking, mugging and robbery, assault, sexual assault, sexual harassment, and murder • However, such surveys have not been carried out recently and the results are now out of date. More up to date surveys of crime against businesses are carried out privately: see http://allafrica.com/stories/201003040254.html

  12. International Crime Victimization Survey • This survey is conducted about once every 5 years • Any country can participate but must pay for the survey itself • Around 30 countries participated in 2005 and results were also obtained from a further 33 cities. • Sample sizes of around 1,000-2,000 are recommended and a standard questionnaire is proposed • Key findings, including methodology, questionnaire and results from the latest 2005 survey can be found on a Dutch web site http://english.wodc.nl/onderzoeksdatabase/icvs-2005-survey.aspx?cp=45&cs=6798

  13. UN Guidelines for victim surveys UNODC produced guidelines for victims surveys in 2009 and these can be found on their web site http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-and- analysis/Manual-on-victim-surveys.html, They are examples of good practice from a body of expert statisticians, with considerable experience. The following areas are covered: • Methodological issues • Sampling • Content of the survey • Data collection and capture operations • Questionnaire design • Interviewing • Data processing and analysis • Data dissemination and documentation

  14. Other victims who could be surveyed • It may also be of policy or operational interest to find out the victimisation of other groups than householders. • Examples of groups that could be sampled in a similar way are: • Tourists ( to know the extent to which criminals target visitors) • Commercial properties ( How much crime do Factories and shops experience) • Public sector premises (How much crime do hospitals and schools experience)

  15. Telephone Surveys • Discussion has so far been about household interviews but in the developed world more use is now made of telephone surveys • These are cheaper to conduct but require good lists of telephone subscribers • One disadvantage is that the questionnaire has to be shorter • Another is that landline interviews are easier but many countries have low landline use • It has been shown there are very different results depending on the balance between land-line ownership and mobile ownership.

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