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Crime in America

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6. Larceny. 7. Motor Vehicle Theft. 8. Arson (added in 1978) UCR II. PART II. Petty Larceny. Simple Assault. Vandalism. Drug Abuse. Sex Offenses. Fraud. Drunkenness ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Crime in America


1
Crime in America
  • PSCI 2481

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Definitions
  • Crime
  • An act for which society provides formally
    sanctioned punishment.
  • Distinctions among types of crime
  • Felony vs. Misdemeanor
  • Violent vs. Property
  • Victim vs. Victimless
  • Blue-Collar vs. White Coillar

3
How much crime exists? Who keeps track of crime?
  • In 1929, the International Chiefs of Police
    Association (IACP) recommended that the Federal
    Bureau of Investigation (FBI) define and maintain
    a national system for gathering crime statistics.
  • In 1930, the FBI created the Uniform Crime Report
    (UCR) system.

4
The FBI Uniform Crime Report (UCR) (An
Official Typology of Crime)
  • PART I (The INDEX)
  • Violent Crimes
  • 1. Homicide
  • 2. Rape
  • 3. Robbery
  • 4. Assault (Aggravated)
  • Property Crimes
  • 5. Burglary
  • 6. Larceny
  • 7. Motor Vehicle Theft
  • 8. Arson (added in 1978)

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UCR II
  • PART II
  • Petty Larceny
  • Simple Assault
  • Vandalism
  • Drug Abuse
  • Sex Offenses
  • Fraud
  • Drunkenness
  • Disturbing the Peace
  • Gambling
  • Status Offenses
  • Prostitution

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Problems with the UCR
  • Its focus is on reported crime. (Why is this a
    problem?)
  • The original reports provided no detailed. All
    crimes were lumped together in a single number.
  • It provides no additional information about the
    crime.
  • It requires both the local police and citizens to
    cooperate in providing accurate information.
  • Its open to abuse. Agencies responsible for
    reducing crime have an incentive to misreport
    crime.
  • It is sensitive to reform in the wrong
    direction. (Better reporting increases the
    reported crime rate.)
  • Its biased toward blue collar crime.
  • The base for evaluating crime is questionable.
    (NYC auto thefts the crime rate is high if
    were calculating thefts per car or low if were
    reporting thefts per person)

12
Does the UCR measure the effectiveness of the
criminal justice system?
  • As the number of police increase, what impact do
    we expect theyll have on crime?
  • If we put more police out on the streets to
    fight crime we expect fewer crimes to occur.
  • What do we observe?
  • As the number of police increase, the number
    of reported crimes increase.

13
Alternative Measures of Crime The National
Crime Victimization Survey
  • In 1966, the Presidents Commission on Law
    Enforcement and the Administration of Justice
    sponsored surveys of crime victims.
  • In 1968, Congress enacted the Omnibus Crime
    Control and Safe Streets Act that created the
    National Criminal Justice Information and
    Statistical Service (NCJISS).
  • In 1972, NCJISS established the National Crime
    Survey (NCS) to be conducted every 6 months by
    the US Census Bureau. NCS was a survey of 60,000
    households and 39,000 businesses designed to
    measure crime, reported and UN-reported.
  • Today the NCS is known as the National Crime
    Victimization Survey (NCVS). The Census Bureau
    conducts interviews with about 134,000 persons
    age 12 and older in 77,200 households twice each
    year about their victimizations from crime.

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