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Ethnicity, victimisation and worry about crime

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Domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking: Findings from the British Crime Survey Research, Development and Statistics (CRCSG) Jonathan Allen – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethnicity, victimisation and worry about crime


1
Domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking
Findings from the British Crime Survey
Research, Development and Statistics (CRCSG)
Jonathan Allen Crime Surveys Section Strategic
Data Flows
BUILDING A SAFE, JUST AND TOLERANT SOCIETY
2
THE BRITISH CRIME SURVEY
  • The British Crime Survey (BCS)
  • Household survey of peoples experiences and
    perceptions of crime in England and Wales
  • First conducted in 1981
  • Continuous since 2001
  • Sample size
  • Alternative to police recorded crime

3
SURVEY STRUCTURE
4
2001 BRITISH CRIME SURVEY
  • IPV module
  • (n-s domestic violence, sexual victimisation,
    stalking)
  • AIMS
  • most accurate estimates of extent and nature
  • national level male sexual assault
  • most detailed distinctions between forms of
    sexual assault
  • overlaps between domestic violence, sexual
    victimisation, stalking

5
2001 IPV
  • DESIGN
  • previous BCS studies
  • disclosure and self-completion
  • 16-59 year olds
  • question design
  • nationally-representative
  • piloting

6
Extent of domestic violence, sexual assault and
stalking
  • Inter-personal violence is both widely dispersed
    and it is concentrated
  • some experience of domestic abuse, sexual
    victimisation or stalking for 36 of people
  • a minority, largely women, suffer multiple
    attacks, severe injuries, experience more than
    one form of IPV and serious disruption
  • Overall, 45 of women and 26 of men aged 16-59
    could recall being subject to domestic abuse,
    sexual victimisation or stalking at least once in
    their lifetime

7
Experience since age 16
  • 21 - women and 10 - men experienced ns domestic
    violence (threat or force)
  • 17 - women and 2 - men had been sexually
    victimised in some way
  • 5 - women had suffered a serious sexual assault,
    4 had been raped
  • Overall, 0.5 of men had suffered a ssa, with
    0.4 reporting rape
  • 19 - women and 12 - men experienced stalking or
    harassment at some point

8
Prevalence of domestic violence (non-sexual
since age 16)
9
Experience in the 12 months prior to interview
  • 13 - women and 9 - men had been subject to IPV
  • 4 - women and 2 - men were subject to dv
  • Among women subject to dv in the last year, mean
    - 20, 28 experienced one incident only. For
    men, the mean - 7, one incident - 47
  • 190,000 incidents of ssa and an estimated 47,000
    female victims of rape
  • 0.2 - men were subject to any form of sexual
    assault
  • 8 - women and 6 - men were stalked

10
The most heavily abused
  • Women were the overwhelming majority of the most
    heavily abused group
  • Among people subject to four or more incidents of
    dv from the perpetrator of the worst incident
    (since age 16), 89 were women.
  • 32 of women had experienced dv from this person
    four or more times compared with only 11 of men
  • 3.3 - women and 0.3 - men were subject to all
    3 forms of IPV (by one or more perpetrators) at
    some point

11
Experience of IPV impact and meaning
  • The following findings refer to
    the worst incident
  • Last year dv, 46 - women sustained a minor
    physical injury, 20 moderate, 6 severe. For
    31 it resulted in mental/emotional problems.
    Among men, the figures were 41, 14 ,1 and 9
  • Female ssa, for 52 - depression, attempted
    suicide - 5 and pregnancy - 4
  • Among employed women who suffered dv in the last
    year, 21 took time off work and 2 lost their
    jobs. For men, 6 took time off, 2 lost jobs
  • 64 - women and 94 - men subject to last year dv
    did not think it was a crime. Two-thirds of
    women who had been victimised many times did
    think it was

12
Relationship of offender to victim for rape and
serious sexual assault
13
Seeking help
  • 31 - women and 63 - men had not told anyone
    about the worst incident of dv suffered during
    the last year
  • 40 - women told no one about their worst
    experience of rape
  • 25 of those women that were raped in their worst
    incident and classified it as such, told no one
  • Among victims of stalking last year, 9 women
    and 17 men told no one
  • In less than one in four (23 women 8 men) of
    the worst cases of dv in the last year did the
    police come to know
  • In cases of sexual assault the police came to
    know in less than one in seven of the worst cases

14
Developments
  • The 2004/05 BCS IPV module - redesign
  • Repetition of format
  • Broadening of domestic violence definition
  • Restrictions
  • Level of detail and timing
  • Analytical streamlining core victimisation
    module
  • Change in nature of follow-up information, shift
    from worst incident focus
  • Focus on partner abuse in last 12 months
  • Comparability to 2001 prevalence information
  • Piloting

15
Developments conti
  • First results from 2004/05 BCS
  • 2005/06 core module nature of sexual assault
    follow up
  • 2006/07 core module only
  • Future directions

16
CONTACT DETAILS
  • Home Office
  • 5th Floor
  • Peel Building
  • 2 Marsham Street
  • London, UK
  • E-mail bcsadhoc_at_homeoffice.gsi.gov.uk
  • Website www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/bcs1.html
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