1 / 42

Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics (SNS) and the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD)

Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics (SNS) and the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD). Matt Perkins Office of the Chief Statistician Scottish Government. 13 th August 2008. SNS Website functionality SIMD Background Crime domain What next?. WHAT IS THE PROJECT ?.

damisi
Download Presentation

Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics (SNS) and the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics (SNS)and theScottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) Matt Perkins Office of the Chief Statistician Scottish Government 13th August 2008

  2. SNS • Website functionality • SIMD • Background • Crime domain • What next?

  3. WHAT IS THE PROJECT ? • Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics is the Scottish Government's on-going programme to improve the availability, consistency and accessibility of small area statistics in Scotland. • Contains 2800 indicators at different geographical levels and across policy areas eg education, health, benefits etc • Most at Data Zones level, crime data mainly at Local Authority

  4. OTHER FUNCTIONALITY

  5. SNS • Website functionality • SIMD • Background • Crime domain • What next?

  6. Background • The Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation identifies small area concentrations of multiple deprivation across all of Scotland • Stable ‘data zone’ geography • Administrative data sources across 7 domains • Rank 1 = most deprived, 6,505 = least deprived

  7. SIMD Crime • Data published for the first time (2004) • Relevant to Neighbourhood Deprivation • ‘SIMD crime’ not ‘Total Crime’ • Crimes of violence • Drug Offences • Domestic Housebreaking • Minor Assault • Vandalism • Does not include crimes in/near police station • Total populations – rate per 10,000

  8. The index does … • ….pick out area concentrations of multiple deprivation • ….provide a ‘scale’ of deprivation The index does not… • ….describe how much more deprived one area is than another • ….make absolute comparisons over time, BUT individual indicators and the employment domain can be used • ….measure affluence – least deprived areas are not necessarily ‘rich’ areas • ….pick out deprived individuals - Not all deprived people live in the most deprived areas, and not all those living in deprived areas are deprived • ….answer all deprivation questions See SIMD 2006 Guidance Leaflet for advice on appropriate use of the index

  9. SIMD 2006 Results Local authority areas with the largest nationalshare of the 15% most deprived in SIMD 2006 are • Glasgow City (34 per cent) • North Lanarkshire (9 per cent) • Edinburgh, City of (6 per cent) • South Lanarkshire (6 per cent) Local authority areas with the largest localshare of the 15% most deprived in SIMD 2006 are • Glasgow City (48 per cent) • Inverclyde (38 per cent) • Dundee City (30 per cent) • West Dunbartonshire (28 per cent)

  10. Website: overview

  11. Interactive Mapping – Crime Domain

  12. SNS • Website functionality • SIMD • Background • Crime domain • What next?

  13. What next? • SIMD 2009 (Autumn) • 9 month preparation • 6 months to finalise indicators • Crime data relevant to deprivation • Several years of data • By data zone • SNS • More small area crime data

  14. Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics (SNS)and theScottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) Contacts: Neighbourhood Statistics Team (SNS or SIMD) Email: neighbourhood.statistics@scotland.gsi.gov.uk Phone: 0131 244 0442 Matt Perkins Email: matt.perkins@scotland.gsi.gov.uk Phone: 0131 244 0443

More Related