Fear of Crime in the EU-15 & Hungary Assessing the Vulnerability, Victimization & Incivilities Model

Similar documents
RESEARCH NOTE. The Frequency of the Fear of Crime

Mapping fear of crime dynamically on everyday transport: SUMMARY (1 of 5) Author: Reka Solymosi, UCL Department of Security & Crime Science

A methodology for an EU cross-country comparison?

Untangling the relationship between fear of crime and perceptions of disorder:

EU-SILC 2013 MODULE ON WELL-BEING DESCRIPTION OF SILC SECONDARY TARGET VARIABLES Version 5 March 2012

Professor Claire Wallace Professor Pamela Abbott

LINKING FAMILY STRUCTURE AND PERCEIVED VICTIMIZATION RISK: AN INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON

5. Are Neighbourhood Incivilities Associated with Fear of Crime?

Social Work BA. Study Abroad Course List /2018 Faculty of Humanities, Institute of Social Work Department of Community and Social Studies

Emily Gray, Jonathan Jackson and Stephen Farrall Reassessing the fear of crime

Drugs in Figures III Study of public expenditure on the drug phenomenon

UNTANGLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FEAR OF CRIME AND PERCEPTIONS OF DISORDER: EVIDENCE FROM A LONGITUDINAL STUDY OF YOUNG PEOPLE IN ENGLAND AND WALES

UNTANGLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FEAR OF CRIME AND PERCEPTIONS OF DISORDER. Evidence from a Longitudinal Study of Young People in England and Wales

Economic Recession and Health: the Case of Greece

Crime proofing and threat assessment - a methodological approach - differences and similarities

CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF QUALITATIVE STUDIES

Filtering Fear? On the Use of Filter and Frequency Questions in Crime Surveys. Jonathan Jackson, Stephen Farrall, & David Gadd.

Households: the missing level of analysis in multilevel epidemiological studies- the case for multiple membership models

Leeds, Grenville & Lanark Community Health Profile: Healthy Living, Chronic Diseases and Injury

Criteria for the evaluation of crime prevention practices

Preliminary Report on Simple Statistical Tests (t-tests and bivariate correlations)

INSECURITY. Food. Though analyses at the regional and national levels

Abstract. The current study aims to clarify the relationship between fear of crime and risk perception,

OECD work on Subjective Well-being

Full module title: Psychology, Crime and the Popular Imagination. Module code: 6CRIM005W Credit level: 6 Length: One semester

Measurement framework of violence against women in the EU

LEARNING. Learning. Type of Learning Experiences Related Factors

MARK SCHEME MAXIMUM MARK: 60

Wellbeing and communities Builth Wells 27 Feb 2018 Ingrid Abreu Scherer

Summary. Mental health and urbanization

ENDEMIC REPRESENTATIONS OF SECURITY CULTURE IN THE ROMANIAN PUBLIC SPHERE

HAPPINESS AND CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATION

BACHELOR S DEGREE IN SOCIAL WORK. YEAR 1 (60 ETCS) Fundamentals of Public and Private Law Sociology. Practicum I Introduction to Statistics

ESS Workshop, The Hague, March

Suicide Eating Disorders

Modelling the causes and consequences of perceptions of personal safety on public transport ridership

47: 202: 102 Criminology 3 Credits Fall, 2017

Holas, Jakub et al. Regionální kriminalita a její odraz v kvalitě života obyvatel Regional crime and its impact on quality of life Summary

How was your experience working in a group on the Literature Review?

Identifying best practice in actions on tobacco smoking to reduce health inequalities

Sociology 3308: Sociology of Emotions. Prof. J. S. Kenney. Overheads Class 23: Emotions and Micro Social Processes I: Theodore Kemper

SCIF. Social Cohesion Indicators Flanders IS SOCIAL COHESION ONE LATENT CONCEPT?

Adjustment to Retirement: The Moderating Role of Attachment. Dikla Segel, Peter Bamberger

Teacher stress: A comparison between casual and permanent primary school teachers with a special focus on coping

Alcohol use Among Adolescents in Europe

SOCI SOCIOLOGY. SOCI Sociology 1. SOCI 237 Media and Society

Social capital and fear of crime in Brisbane

Women s Empowerment Framework: Adapted for Zimbabwe Case Study

Principles of Sociology

IS THE SHADOW OF SEXUAL ASSAULT RESPONSIBLE FOR WOMEN S HIGHER FEAR OF BURGLARY?

Creating an Index to Measure Wellbeing and Predict Life Satisfaction in Athens, Georgia Series 1: January 2018

The human security approach

Risk factors for suicidal behaviour in developed and developing nations

The EURO-PREVOB Project

SPOTLIGHT for policy-making

GCSE EXAMINERS' REPORTS

PATHWAYS. Age is one of the most consistent correlates. Is Desistance Just a Waiting Game? Research on Pathways to Desistance.

Time to Invest: Building the case for investment in contraception

Not all empathy is equal: How empathy affects charitable giving

Use of Home Protection and Worry About Burglary

Identifying local harm reduction priorities: involving drug users and professionals

Age of hope or anxiety? Dynamics of the fear of crime in South Africa

A Blueprint for Exploring International Differences in Well-Being

Well-Being on Planet Earth

Identifying Problem Gamblers in Gambling Venues

Chapter 3 Research Methods and the Practice of Emergency Management

RESPECT Project CASE STUDY

Other Roads to Nowhere

Reducing fat stigma in health: A flexible intervention drawing on post-structuralism. Dr Jenny Setchell

Fairfield Public Schools Social Studies Curriculum Sociology Grades 11-12

Making sense of published research Two ways: Format Argument

School of Law and Criminology

SOCIAL CLASS AND HAPPINESS: FOCUSING ON THE MODERATING EFFECTS OF PROSPECT OF UPWARD MOBILITY

Hierarchical Linear Models: Applications to cross-cultural comparisons of school culture

BOR 3305 PERSPECTIVES ON CRIME IN AMERICA. Eight Week Course TEXTBOOK:

On the Importance of Representative Online Survey Data : Probability Sampling and Non-Internet Households

Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index

Predicting Fear of Crime using a Multilevel and Multi-Model Approach: A Study in Hillsborough County

The detection and management of pain in patients with dementia in acute care settings: development of a decision tool: Research protocol.

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHILDHOOD POVERTY AND DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY. A Quantitative Analysis. Tyra Smith

Precaution and the Affirmation of Risk The EMF Case

Opinion. Vaccination Programmes and Health Systems in the EU. Expert Panel on Effective Ways of Investing in Health

CHAPTER 1 Understanding Social Behavior

Understanding the effects of crime on women: fear and well-being in the context of diverse relationships

Programme Specification

San Diego Center for the Treatment of Mood Disorders 1

Connected Communities

City of Syracuse Department of Audit Minchin G. Lewis City Auditor

The Center for Community Studies at Jefferson Community College. Presentation of Results: Nineteenth Annual JEFFERSON COUNTY

Investigate whether and how personal and community SOC function as salutary factors according to cultural rules in explaining stress reactions.

SOCIOLOGY, SOCIAL POLICY & CRIMINOLOGY

Terrorism and Depression: An Overview

Appendix D: Statistical Modeling

Income s Association with Judgments of Life Versus Feelings

Subjective Well-Being Study

1. Family context. a) Positive Disengaged

Linkages Between Employment Patterns and Depression Over Time: The Case of Low-Income Rural Mothers

Emotions and Moods. Robbins & Judge Organizational Behavior 13th Edition. Bob Stretch Southwestern College

Annotated Bibliography: Employers and Justice- Involved Veterans

Transcription:

Fear of Crime in the EU-15 & Hungary Assessing the Vulnerability, Victimization & Incivilities Model Christophe Vandeviver 11 th Annual Conference of the ESC Rethinking crime and punishment in Europe Panel session: Fear of crime Vilnius, September 2011 1

Overview 1. Introduction 2. Theoretical framework 3. Methodology 3.1. Data 3.2. Variables 3.3. Analysis 4. Findings 4.1. Descriptive statistics 4.2. Prevalence of fear of crime 4.3. Frequency of fear of crime 4.4. Intensity of fear of crime 5. Limitations 6. Conclusion and discussion 2

1. Introduction Fear of crime research Vague global measures Need for new measures that acknowledge the complexity and deliver insight in the prevalence, frequency and intensity of fear of crime (Farrall & Gadd 2004; Farrall 2004; Gray, Jackson & Farrall 2008) Prevalence: In the past year, have you ever actually felt fearful about the possibility of becoming a victim of crime [yes; no] Frequency: If yes, how frequently have you felt like this in the last year? [count] Intensity: If yes, on the last occasion, how fearful did you feel? [not very fearful; a little bit fearful; quite fearful; very fearful] Current research Theory driven approach on measurement of fear of crime Focus on emotional dimension of fear of crime (cf. Ferraro & LaGrange 1987; Hardyns & Pauwels 2010) Description of fear of crime in EU-15 and Hungary Explore how vulnerability characteristics, victimization experience and incivilities perception relate to fear of crime prevalence, frequency and intensity 3

2. Theoretical framework Vulnerability Those perceiving themselves as vulnerable will feel more fearful Women, elderly, socio-economic disadvantaged, ethnic minorities Victimization Prior victimization makes one more fearful Doubts on the fear-victimization relationship remain Incivilities Those perceiving incivilities will feel more fearful 4

3. Methodology (1) 3.1. Data European Crime and Safety Survey 2005 (ECSS) (EUICS 2007) EUICS Consortium led by Gallup Europe Sample N = 31563 Residents of EU-15 & Hungary, aged 16 or older Eurostat-database 5

3. Methodology (2) 3.2. Variables Dependent variables Prevalence, frequency and intensity of fear of crime Independent variables Individual-level Vulnerability: age, gender, household combined annual income after tax deduction Victimization: personal crimes, property crimes Incivilities: contact with drug related problems in past 12 months Country-level Proportion of victims, incivilities concentration, GDP per capita, unemployment rate 6

3. Methodology (3) 3.3. Analysis Generalized linear multilevel modeling Multilevel modeling because of multilayered ECSS-data Generalized linear modeling because of categorical nature of dependent variables Analytic strategy Intercept-only models All 3 individual-level models are independently specified All 3 individual-level models are combined into a single individual-level model Country-level variables are added to the combined individual-level model 7

4. Findings (1) Fear of crime is not widespread in the EU-15 & Hungary Approx. 10% felt fearful in past 12 months Those feeling fearful did so on irregular occasions Last fearful episode is rarely experienced as very fearful cf. Farrall & Gadd (2004) and Gray, Jackson & Farrall (2008) 8

4. Findings (2) Prevalence of fear of crime Inverse effect of age: not unsurprising (cf. Chadee & Ditton 2003; Kanan & Pruitt 2002) Victimization: important predictors (cf. debate on victimization-fear nexus) No contextual effects 9

4. Findings (3) Frequency of fear of crime Vulnerability: only effect of age Victimization: important predictors Contextual effect of victimization risk As risk of victimization increases, so does the likelihood of frequently feeling fearful 10

4. Findings (4) Intensity of fear of crime Inverse effect of gender: interesting in light of previous research that suggests men downplay and women exaggerate their experienced fear of crime (e.g. Sutton & Farrall 2005; 2009) Victimization: important predictors No contextual effects 11

5. Limitations Measurement Vulnerability and proxy-measures (cf. Killias & Clerici 2000; Jackson 2009) Incivilities and a single proxy-measure (drug problem perception) Exploratory nature of study Frequency and intensity measures and the logic of the vulnerability, victimization and incivilities model? Representativity of findings Weights were dropped 12

6. Conclusion Fear of crime prevalence Vulnerability, victimization and incivilities variables are related with fear of crime prevalence and behave more or less as expected Fear of crime frequency and intensity General ideas of victimization and incivilities model hold Arguments of vulnerability cannot be straightforwardly extended Victimization Victimization of property and personal crimes were consistent predictors of prevalence, frequency and intensity 13

References Chadee, D. & Ditton, J. (2003). Are Older People Most Afraid of Crime? Revisiting Ferraro and Lagrange in Trinidad. British Journal Of Criminology, 43(2), 417-433. EUICS (The European Union International Crime Survey Consortium) (2007). European Crime and Safety Survey 2005 [Data file]. Retrieved from: contact@gallup-europe.be. Farrall, S. & Gadd, D. (2004). The Frequency of the Fear of Crime. British Journal of Criminology, 44(1), 127-132. Farrall, S. (2004). Revisiting Crime Surveys: Emotional Responses? Or: Look Back at Anger. International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 7(2), 157-171. Ferraro, K. F. & LaGrange, R. (1987). The Measurement of Fear of Crime. Sociological Inquiry, 57(1), 70-97. Gray, E., Jackson, J. & Farrall, S. (2008). Reassessing the Fear of Crime. European Journal of Criminology, 5(3), 363-380. Hardyns, W. & Pauwels, L. (2010). Different Measures of Fear of Crime and Survey Measurement Error. In Cools, M., De Ruyver, B., Easton, M., Pauwels, L., Ponsaers, P., Vande Walle, G., Vander Beken, T., Vander Laenen, F., Vermeulen, G. & Vynckier, G. eds. Governance of Security Research Papers Series III, New Empirical Data, Theories and Analyses on Safety, Societal Problems and Citizens Perceptions. Antwerp: Maklu, pp. 19-39. Kanan, J.W. & Pruitt, M.V. (2002). Modeling Fear of Crime and Perceived Victimization Risk: The (In)significance of Neigborhood Integration. Sociological Inquiry, 72(4), 527-548. Killias, M. & Clerici, C. (2000). Different Measures of Vulnerability in their Relation to Different Dimensions of Fear of Crime. British Journal of Criminology, 40(3), 437-450. Sutton, R.M. & Farrall, S. (2005). Gender, Socially Desirable Responding and the Fear of Crime: Are Women Really More Anxious about Crime? British Journal of Criminology, 45(2), 212-224. Sutton, R.M. & Farrall, S. (2009). Untangling the Web: Deceptive Responding in Fear of Crime Research. In Lee, M. & Farrall, S. eds. Fear of Crime: Critical Voices in an Age of Anxiety. London: Routledge Cavendish, pp. 108-124. 14