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Learn about UN-CTS, the global crime data initiative led by Enrico Bisogno. Explore its evolution, data contents, recent developments, challenges, and impact. Discover how technical support and improved data dissemination benefit global and regional crime analysis.
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To know each other • Self introduction (name, affiliation, an adjective) • Involved in data production and analysis? • Do you know about UN-CTS? • Do you provide country data to UN-CTS? • Do you provide country data to other international organisations? • In your office, is there a specific unit/person working full-time on data collection, analysis and dissemination?
Enrico Bisogno Team Leader Crime Statistics UNODC The UN-CTS, the global data collection on crime
A major undertaking • Started in 1977, following a resolution of the General Assembly (GA Res. 3021,1972) • Initially every 5 years, then every 3, 2 and now (since 2009) every year • Twelve UN-CTS waves so far
Recent developments • ECOSOC resolution 2009/25 asked UNODC to improve UN-CTS • As a result: • Annual periodicity • Electronic format (Excel) • Annual core module + rotating modules • Collection of metadata • Improved data collection system • Enhanced data processing system • Electronic dissemination of data • Improved analysis of data
The main driver • From a formal exercise of communication from countries to the United Nations to a sustainable gathering of usable data for further dissemination in user-friendly manner to facilitate global, regional and national analysis of crime trends and criminal justice systems operations
The contents • Data on crime event: • Data are collected on main conventional crimes (homicide, assault, sexual violence, rape, kidnapping, theft, vehicle theft, burglary, domestic burglary) • Police recorded data and, since 2010, victimisation surveys
The contents (cont.) • Data on criminal justice operations: • Police: persons brought into formal contact • Prosecutors: persons prosecuted • Courts: persons brought before criminal courts, persons convicted • Prisons: persons held in prisons • Data refer to, respectively, total crime, homicide and rape
The contents (cont.) • The modules • In 2010: • corruption • misuse of technology in the abuse of children • In 2011: • Homicide (typology, mechanism, victims) • foreign victims of crimes
The data collection process OAS EU UNODC PM’s at UNODC National focal point MFA Police Prosecutor Courts Prisons
Improving usability and comparability • Better metadata on collected data • From ‘Please explain’ to specific questions and drop-down menus • Improve crime definitions • In the CTS questionnaire • UNODC-UNECE Framework classification on crime
UNODC/UNECE work on crime classification • An act/event-based classification of all crimes (and not on the legal provisions), on the basis of: • target of the act/event • seriousness of the act/event • intent of the perpetrator • modus operandi of the act/event • degree of completion of the act/event
Technical support to countries • Trainings/workshops, often in collaboration with other international organizations (such as OAS) • Development of training curricula, depository of documentation, analytical publications • INEGI-UNODC Centre of Excellence on Security Statistics
Dissemination of data • UNODC Website • UN-CTS Data /http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-and-analysis/statistics/crime.html • Homicide Statistics http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-and-analysis/homicide.html • OAS Alertamerica, Observatorio de seguridad ciudadana de la OEA http://www.oas.org/dsp/Observatorio/database/indicators.aspx?lang=es
Thank you. enrico.bisogno@unodc.org +43 1 26060 4426
Questions • Do you think UN-CTS is useful at country level? How? • Many challenges: questionnaire, definitions, metadata, collection process, institutional framework at country level, etc. : in your opinion are we going the right direction?