In the United States, there are two main sources of criminal justice
statistics, one based on reported crime, the other on surveys of
the population:
(1) The Uniform Crime
Report, administered by Federal Bureau of Investigation,
compiles data of crimes reported to local police. The UCR was
established
in the early 1930s. Because it is based on local information, the UCR
permits
statistical analysis for local areas. You can download some data
from their site in
spreadsheet format as well as pdf, which makes is easy for
analysis.
The accuracy of the UCR varies with the likelihood that people will
report crimes to the police. The UCR is most accurate for murders,
which
are almost always reported or noticed, but may be less accurate for
crimes
that are not reported as often, such as rape or assault. In addition,
for
crimes such as theft, the UCR tends to underrepresent the
frequency
of offenses (because people do not always report minor theft), but over
represent
the value of thefts (because people are more likely to report major
thefts).
Long-term analyses of UCR data are also questionable because computers
have permitted better police record keeping in the last 20 years.
Therefore,
increases in UCR crime rates partly result from improved recording of
crimes
by police. Still, the UCR is the standard & most widely cited
method
of measuring crime in the US. A big advantage of this data is
that it is available for each jurisdiction that reports to the FBI.
(2) The
National Crime Victimization Survey, begun in 1973, is administered
by US Census Bureau. This measure is a representative telephone
sampling
of approximately 40,000 households to determine how many people were
victimized
by one of seven crimes in past year. The crimes recorded are rape,
robbery,
assault, personal theft, household theft, burglary, and motor vehicle
theft;
the NCVS does not measure murder rates because the victims cannot be
surveyed.
The NCVS employs a national survey, so it cannot break down data by
state
or locality. Samuel Walker and most criminologists see the NCVS as more
accurate than the UCR; people will acknowledge that they have been
victims
of a crime to an anonymous survey, even they did not report the crimes
to police.
(3) A third method which is just beginning to be used is to collect
data from hospital emergency rooms on crimes such as aggravated assault
and spousal abuse. This gets information on crimes not reported
to the police.
Determining rates of crime (generally, per 1000 people or 100,000 people) requires that the number of offenses (the numerator) be divided by an accurate count of the population (the denominator). The results of the decennial United States Census are conventionally used as the sources of population data.
[Adapted from Steven R. Donziger, ed., The
Real War on Crime: The
Report of the National Criminal Justice Commission (NY: Harper,
1996).]
The Bureau
of Justice Statistics provides information on CJ
statistical sources. as well as interesting time series graphs on
CJ trends. It also sponsors the Source Book
of Criminal Justice Statistics. Their Crime & Justice
Online page provides links to data from states and cities. You
can also find data on specific jurisdictions in many of the other
sources including the following:
They also offer other statistical reference products online--
State and Metropolitan Area Data Book --Comprehensive data for states and metropolitan areas
USA Counties --Over 5,000 data items for all counties
County and City Data Book -- Data for all counties and cities with a population of 25,000 or more
State & County QuickFacts -- Quick, easy access to Census facts about people, business, and geography
MapStats -- Profiles with data from many Federal sources for your state, county, and city
You can also download data sets and do your own analyses. This allows you to answer questions not addressed in public statistics, if the questions you need were asked in a survey or the information was recorded by police officers.Today, crime data are most often accessed on line,
although paper publications and cd-roms are also available. An
advantage of on line sources is that the data are continuously
updated. Finding the most recent data is often important.
Finding data for small geographic jurisdictions is also a challenge.
A good place to look for data is the Statistical Abstract of the
United States, an annual volume available on paper and cd-rom, but
more conveniently on
line. The files open in pdf format, however, not in
spreadsheet form. Section 5: Law Enforcement, Courts and
Prisons, provides the CJ data. It gives the sources for much of
the data in other US government publications which are available online
or in libraries.