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A victim is a victim is a victim?: chronic victimization in four sweeps of the British crime survey.

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posted on 2005-12-15, 17:54 authored by Dan Ellingworth, Graham Farrell, Ken Pease
Current study reveals that the British Crime Survey underestimates the number of repeat crimes that occur in the same areas to the same people. In 1992, the survey reported 63% of all property crimes and 77% of all personal crimes were committed against people who had already suffered such crimes in the same time period. This is an underestimate because the survey limits the number of victim forms which a victim can complete. Current crime statistic gathering methods do not reflect this fact of repeat crime victimization.

History

School

  • Social Sciences

Department

  • Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies

Research Unit

  • Midlands Centre for Criminology and Criminal Justice

Pages

18715 bytes

Citation

ELLINGWORTH, D., FARRELL, G. and PEASE, K., 1995. A victim is a victim is a victim?: chronic victimization in four sweeps of the British crime survey. British Journal of Criminology, 35(3), pp. 360-365

Publisher

© Oxford University Press

Publication date

1995

ISSN

0007-0955

Language

  • en

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