Phillipa Donaldson
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Phillipa Donaldson
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Measuring Crime and the Prevalence of Crime

Question 1 of 13

1

What are some limitations of police-reported crime?

Select one or more of the following:

  • police data only provide information on those criminal offenses that have come to the attention of police

  • Jurisdictions have the same rules for recording crime

  • not all crimes reported to police are actually recorded by police

  • data is limited to the particulars of information collected by police and the level and accuracy of detail recorded in respective systems

  • different recorded crime rates may be a reflection of policing practices and community attitudes

  • not all crimes committed are reported to the police

  • changes in recorded crime rates may be a reflection of changes in policing practices and community attitudes

  • concerns about reliving the event by retelling the storing

Explanation

Question 2 of 13

1

What is 'the dark figure of crime' ?

Select one of the following:

  • Information of criminal offences that have come to the attention of police

  • Crime that is not detected or reported

Explanation

Question 3 of 13

1

National Crime statistics (measurements of crime) are generally taken from two major sources. Which of the following consist of these?

Select one or more of the following:

  • The Uniform Crime Report- information formally recording crime from a whole population e.g. the International Crime Survey

  • Administrative data - including records maintained by the police, courts, corrective services and hospitals

  • National Database- ongoing statistics recorded and accumulated daily on database

  • Crime victimisation surveys - these survey the general population and seek to obtain information including which crimes are reported to police and those that are not and why

Explanation

Question 4 of 13

1

What is crime measured in?

Select one of the following:

  • number

  • sample

  • ratio

  • correlational statistics

  • rate

Explanation

Question 5 of 13

1

What is a "victimless" crime?

Select one of the following:

  • Rarely reported crime: drug offenses, copyright, white collar crime

  • When the victim is not at fault: sexual abuse (rape), domestic violence

Explanation

Question 6 of 13

1

Why do victims of crimes choose not to report?

Select one or more of the following:

  • the belief that the incident was too trivial or unimportant

  • fear they may be at fault

  • that the offence was a personal matter or would take care of it themselves

  • cultural barriers

  • worry for their own safety

  • concerns about reliving the event by retelling the story

  • fear of police and their reactions

  • expectations around police reaction

  • lack of understanding the criminal justice system

Explanation

Question 7 of 13

1

Current State of Crime

Select one of the following:

  • Fallen since 1900's. 18th year of falling rates. All crimes have gone down.

  • Fallen since the 1980's. 17th year of falling crime rates. Crime have gone up.

Explanation

Question 8 of 13

1

What are some advantages of crime statistics?

Select one or more of the following:

  • Help understand macro crime patterns

  • Give an indication of where laws should be implemented

  • For comparison of previous years to discover trends in crime

  • Basis for where criminologists to explain crime

  • Help understand micro crime patterns

  • Show where police should concentrate resources to reduce crime

  • Give statistics that are accessible to all departments and current affairs

Explanation

Question 9 of 13

1

What are the disadvantages of official crime statistics?

Select one of the following:

  • 1. Not all crime is reported or recorded
    2. Police interpretations/bias/activity
    3. Laws vary from state to state
    4. Changing definitions of crime and the role of government/policy

  • 1. Not all crime is reported or recorded
    2. Police position/relationship/bias/activity
    3. Laws vary from state to state
    4. Changing definitions of crime and the role of government/policy

  • 1. Not all crime is reported or recorded
    2. Fear of police reinforcements
    3. Laws vary from state to state
    4. Changing definitions of crime and the role of government/policy

  • 1. Not all crime is reported or recorded
    2. Police interpretations/bias/activity
    3. Laws vary from state to state
    4. Consequences of government/policy

  • 1. Not all crime is reported or recorded
    2. Police interpretations/bias/activity
    3. Laws vary from state to state
    4. Media attention and reporting

Explanation

Question 10 of 13

1

What is a victimisation survey?

Select one of the following:

  • A national survey where offenses are recorded and documentation over a period of time.

  • A sample of the population, either locally or nationally, is asked which offenses have been committed against them over a period of time.

  • Where victims of crime record their account of offenses over a period of time.

  • Statistic from a population, either locally or nationally, where offenses are recorded by people who have have been subject to them over a period of time.

Explanation

Question 11 of 13

1

What are some advantages of victimisation surveys?

Select one or more of the following:

  • Uncover selected offenses

  • Overcomes the "dark figure" of crime

  • Overcomes the "hidden figure" of crime

  • Allows to measure the extent of crime in community and reasons for not reporting

  • Gives a picture of the extent and patterns of victimisation

  • Trends over time

  • Dependent upon people who are aware of being victims in crime

Explanation

Question 12 of 13

1

What are some disadvantages of victimisation surveys?

Select one or more of the following:

  • Recollections are biased or faulty

  • Does not reveal victim-perpetrator relationships

  • Fail to capture youth and homeless people

  • Accounts are incorrect

  • Not enough people are willing to report and therefore small sample size

  • Unwillingness to report

  • Categorise and overlook a range of crimes

  • Unreliable source

Explanation

Question 13 of 13

1

Which of the following issues impact on our ability to compare crime statistics across states and territories in Australia?

Select one of the following:

  • Offence definitions

  • Counting rules

  • Police recording practices

  • All of the above

Explanation