Understanding Crime Data: Haunted by the Dark Figure (Crime and Justice Series)

Understanding Crime Data: Haunted by the Dark Figure (Crime and Justice Series)

by Clive Coleman (Author)

Synopsis

* What are the main ways of acquiring numerical information about crime and offenders? * How can we understand this information and avoid the various pitfalls of interpretation? * What does the evidence tell us about the relationships between offending and age, sex, race, class, unemployment, and trends in crime over the years? This clear and practical text breathes life into an essential subject that students have at times found uninspiring. It provides a guide to crime data for those with little background in the subject and at the same time, it will provide a source of reference for more experienced researchers. The authors have, for example, minimized as far as possible the presentation of detailed figures and complicated tables, but they have not avoided some of the more difficult issues that arise in interpreting and using such data. Understanding Crime Data begins by locating the study and use of crime data within the theoretical and historical development of criminology, a subject that has long been haunted by the dark figure of hidden crime and offenders. Readers are guided through the development, limitations and uses of the three main sources of numerical crime data, and selected key issues in the interpretation of crime data are examined. The characteristics of offenders are discussed with reference to the key variables of age, sex, race and class, and the difficulties involved in interpreting long and short term trends in the crime rate are highlighted. The authors assess what crime data can tell us about the relationships between crime and unemployment, and they conclude the book with their personal evaluation and prognosis of the field. Understanding Crime Data is a well structured text for students of criminology, and it includes annotated further reading, lists of basic concepts, and a glossary for ease of reference. It will also have considerable appeal to professionals in criminal justice, probation and social work.

$4.34

Save:$32.07 (88%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 192
Edition: Annotated
Publisher: Open University Press
Published: 01 Sep 1996

ISBN 10: 0335195180
ISBN 13: 9780335195183

Media Reviews
...this is as good and as readily understandable on the subject of crime statistics as you are ever likely to find. -New Law Journal
Author Bio
Clive Coleman is a lecturer in criminology in the Centre for Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Hull. His publications include Understanding Crime Rates, and a number of articles on crime statistics and policing.

Jenny Moynihan teaches social policy and criminology in the Department of Social Policy at the University of Hull, from which she graduated in 1991. She has been involved in research projects concerned with crime prevention and the evaluation of policing by the public.